![A horizontal shot of The Green on one of the first sunny days this spring term.](https://admissions.dartmouth.edu/sites/admissions.prod/files/styles/400x274_blog/public/admissions/content/blog-post/photos/blog_4032_x_3024_thegreenspring.jpg?itok=WVPlsJ09×tamp=1714395371)
Dartmouth's liberal arts curriculum pushes students to explore new departments and draw connections between seemingly disparate disciplines. Come explore my Economics, Physics, and Asian, Societies, Cultures, and Languages classes!
![Sydney Wuu '24](https://admissions.dartmouth.edu/sites/admissions.prod/files/styles/60x60_blog/public/admissions/content/blog-author/image/sydney_profilepicture_resized.jpg?itok=KL7oHNQy×tamp=1600710724)
Dartmouth's liberal arts curriculum pushes students to explore new departments and draw connections between seemingly disparate disciplines. Come explore my Economics, Physics, and Asian, Societies, Cultures, and Languages classes!
Spring is a new start, and I'm trying to apply this mentality to the way I approach this upcoming term!
However, as I conclude my junior winter and prepare for my last few terms at Dartmouth, I've realized that this has been one of my most fulfilling and gratifying terms at Dartmouth.
This winter, I thought it would be the perfect time to knock out my last core Economics class for the major, along with two fun Environmental Studies courses exploring Earth's cold regions and Indigenous Environmental Studies.
Today, I interviewed Gabe Gottesman. He is a '26 and an economics major who runs a podcast called "Big Green Economics," about the economics research professors and students are pursuing at Dartmouth.
Over the past few terms, I've realized just how much space Dartmouth's academic system gives students to customize their academic and intellectual journeys while preserving the comprehensiveness, breadth and depth of each academic discipline.
This week I interviewed my friend who is doing an exchange program in University College London, a popular study abroad program though the economics department.
Each new term brings the opportunity to academically challenge myself through new classes.
From what I've researched, Dartmouth doesn't offer any business degrees to undergraduates. What alternatives are there, and is it worth applying if there aren't any business-related options?
As you sit against the backdrop of an ever-changing digital world, you might wonder, "Dartmouth, an Ivy League gem, why the absence of a traditional undergrad business degree?" Allow me, your trusted Dartmouth diarist, with my quintessential green