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Denison students took part in a national survey that indicates the college is providing an exceptional educational experience.
Holly Menninger ‘00 is on the forefront of a new trend called citizen science, a method of research that crowdsources data from the public.
by Antrim Ross ‘16
The John Alford Scholarship is for $30,000 a year and renewable for $120,000 over 4 years.
Hot off the press, the 2014 Student Development Outcomes Book.
Monica Edgerton ’14 is working with FoodCorps, teaching children about fresh, healthy food.
by Monica Edgerton
Through study abroad, internships and classroom experiences, Molly Fritz ’15 has been preparing herself for challenges beyond Denison.
by Molly Fritz
Assistant Professor Justine Law come to environmental studies through a passion for the outdoors.
Travis DeFraites ’13 is helping disadvantaged high school students to learn through an unlikely medium — film.
Columbus, Ohio, just 30 minutes from campus, affords Denison students quick access to a fast growing metropolis, the 15th largest city in America.
It’s a small world after all. A biology major Hannah Roodhouse ’16 tests museum objects and a microscopic world opens.
Denison University has a well-earned reputation for its commitment to accessibility and affordability.
Denison’s Big Red Weekend is a place and time to remembering the past, looking to the future — and most importantly, having fun.
Using lasers, physics students and professors have discovered a possible new path to explore antimatter.
This summer, Taylor Kessler Faulkner ‘16 and Will Brackenbury ‘15 worked with Ashwin Lall to design algorithms for computing representative databases.
Professor Sandra Mathern discovered that movement was the key to communication with her French-speaking colleagues in West Africa’s Burkina Faso.
When studying abroad, International Studies students are forced to immerse themselves in a completely different and unique culture.
The Huffington Post features Denison’s president on five important college considerations that simply aren’t “rankable.”
via Huffington Post
The New York Times lists Denison as one of America’s most economically diverse elite colleges-and that’s just part of the story.
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