
Dartmouth Humanitarian Engineering currently has three projects. First, there is the compost tea project, which I am working on. We are designing a low-cost aeration device that makes “compost tea.”

Dartmouth Humanitarian Engineering currently has three projects. First, there is the compost tea project, which I am working on. We are designing a low-cost aeration device that makes “compost tea.”
Hey Isabel, I’m interested in majoring in engineering but I’m not sure how that works at a liberal arts institution like Dartmouth. Could you explain?
It seems a bit odd that I would be calling myself eager to get back to coursework, but Winter term has a lot in store, and somehow, I can't wait to return to classes.
Follow me on my Environmental Engineering (ENGS 37) adventure to three sites over three days starting with a trip to the water reclamation plant.
To venture, to innovate, to create – all the quintessential undertakings of the entrepreneur.
This term, I am really excited to be enrolled in the Senior Design Challenge, a course that was created to bring together 20 seniors from all over campus for a two-term sequence of need-finding, problem-solving, and designing for a client.
Whenever I tell anybody that I'm a Human-Centered Design minor, I usually get hit with some form of the same question: "What the heck is that?" Well, for starters...
Freshmen year was one of the most exciting, and scary, years of my life. Moving away from home, adjusting to college athletics, and making friends were all incredible learning experiences.
I always try to stay in contact with my friends back home, it’s a great way to avoid homesickness and remember your roots. But lately, I’ve been receiving tons of texts inquiring about just how difficult an Ivy League education must be.