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A National Award for "Terching"

Prof. Julio Ramirez is the first-ever undergraduate educator to receive the Society for Neuroscience's "Award for Education," presented annually to someone who has made outstanding contributions to neuroscience education and training.

Ramirez's work focuses on memory function and may help with issues related to Alzheimer’s disease. Like other Davidson faculty, he involves students in his work, mentoring them in the lab and collaborating closely with them on research.

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Davidson's permanent art collection comprises more than 3,200 works spanning more than five centuries—sculptures, paintings, photographs, outdoor installations and more.
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Student Essays Bring Unique Voice to Art Collection

Davidson Collects: 100 Writers Respond to Art explores works from the college's extensive permanent art collection through the eyes of students.

Each of the 100 writers, chosen from across the spectrum of the college's liberal arts and science disciplines, spent time with a single work of art assigned by lottery. Artists included Arbus, Dali, Delacroix, Dürer, de Kooning, Munch, Picasso, Rodin, Sargent, Warhol and others.

The book offered students an unfiltered and direct personal adventure—an inquiry of spirit as well as of mind.

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A Place You'll Call Home

Davidson students get the best of all worlds—a vibrant campus community in a small, supportive college town close to a major metropolitan area.

Charlotte—North Carolina’s largest city—is just 20 minutes away, offering students easy access to professional arts and sports, museums, music venues, and great shopping and dining.

Charlotte provides a wealth of opportunities for Davidson students to tap into a thriving business community.

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The best way to get a sense of the campus and the people here is to visit. You'll be able to talk with current students, attend classes, and gain a better understanding of Davidson's academic and extracurricular opportunities.
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Location is Everything

Davidson’s 450-acre campus features stately, neoclassical architecture and picturesque, tree-lined, brick walkways. The college is located in a moderate climate that offers year-round appeal. It is ideally situated for the seasons; brilliant fall colors and the occasional winter snow, abundant spring flora and summers near Lake Norman.

Within two to four hours of Davidson, you can enjoy the Atlantic coast or Appalachian Mountains, wind surfing or snowboarding.

The college’s location and climate provide the perfect setting for academic inquiry and scholarship.

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Learn in Tangible and Meaningful Ways

Davidson students embrace education abroad. By the time a class graduates, about 65 percent of them have studied abroad for a year, a semester or a summer. Students have the opportunity to choose from more than 150 programs around the world.

The Dean Rusk International Studies Program serves as the organizing mechanism for expanding internationalism across the Davidson experience. Study abroad is an invaluable opportunity that supplements the Davidson undergraduate experience.

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Biology major Scarlett Murphy ’13 studied rainforest management in Queensland, Australia. In the Daintree Rainforest, Murphy immersed herself in field biology and rainforest ecology for her research project.
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Embrace Education Abroad

Davidson emphasizes understanding the world at large and prepares students for the challenges of national and international leadership.

The Dean Rusk International Studies Program, the organizing mechanism for expanding internationalism across the Davidson experience, embodies the belief that knowledge of other cultures and of the social, economic, political and scientific forces that shape our world are integral to a liberal arts education.

Approximately 80 percent of the student body study, travel, work or perform service in another country. Going abroad is an exhilarating, affirming and transformative experience.

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Kudzu vs. Goats

The cure for kudzu? It may be the common goat. Thirty of the persistent ruminants recently spent time on campus, the latest weapon in Davidson's efforts to curtail a 3.5-acre stand of kudzu on the cross-country trails. The initiative-completely sustainable!-was the brainchild of Rebecca McKee '14, who suggested the college adopt "goatscaping" after seeing it work at her high school.

The goats are just one example of the central role that sustainability plays in the academic and student life of the college.

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Harnessing the Sun

Two arrays of solar panels-one featuring 64 solar thermal collector panels, and another featuring 378 photovoltaic (PV) panels-were installed on the roof of Baker Sports Complex in 2011. The thermal panels provide energy to heat the showers and Cannon Pool, and the PV panels supply electricity for the building. Both systems will provide students with hands-on, up-close experience with the operation of a solar energy system.

Davidson College is a signatory of the American College and University Presidents' Climate Commitment, by which it pledges to reduce the college's carbon footprint in specific, measurable ways.

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What's Happening?

  • A Swellegant Affair: Celebrating Dean Clark RossMay 23, 2013 | 4:53 pm

    Fans of Vice-President of Academic Affairs and Dean of Faculty Clark G. Ross gathered Wednesday for a Clarkapalooza of a reception to honor his tenure in the dean’s chair these last 15 fine years. Heartfelt remarks were shared to great good applause all around, and gentle, loving fun was poked at the inimitable idosyncraci...

  • Sure Is Quiet Out There: Davidson Poised Between Semester and SummerMay 22, 2013 | 12:05 pm

    Summer reading kickoff: Random links that reveal Davidson in bits and pieces. Astronaut Tom Marshburn ’82 once described to me in an interview how it feels when the rocket engine of your space capsule suddenly stops thrusting you skyward and, with no fanfare although you know it’s coming, drops you into orbit. From m...

  • An Old Man’s Wish and a Wildcat FavorMay 14, 2013 | 9:06 am

    This from Gabrielle Wallace ’12 speaks—volumes—for itself. An Old Man’s Wish and a Wildcat Favor I cannot count the number of times older alumni mentioned the strong connection that we graduates share, and how the Davidson bond follows you wherever you go. “Great,” I thought to myself, “...

  • Viral Space Oddity: Ground Control to Dr. Tom (Marshburn ’82)May 13, 2013 | 11:00 am

    Expedition 35 Commander Chris Hadfield handed over control of the International Space Station yesterday to Expedition 36 command, as Canadian Hadfield, Russian Roman Romanenko and Davidson College Wildcat Astronaut Tom Marshburn ’82 prepare to close the hatch this afternoon at 3:50 p.m. and return to Earth. But first, Expe...

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What's Happening?

  • Cornelson Distinguished Lecture in Economics: Daren Acemoglu

    Daron Acemoglu, the Elizabeth and James Killian Professor of Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, delivers the annual Cornelson Distinguished Lecture in Economics. Professor Acemoglu was awarded the John Bates Clark Medal in 2005 as best economist under age 40, and was named one of Foreign Policy magazine...

  • Video Chat with NASA Astronaut Dr. Tom Marshburn ’82

    Davidson alumnus Astronaut Thomas Marshburn, M.D. '82, talks about his experiences aboard the International Space Station, 230 miles above Earth.

  • Nigel Biggar: “Christian Love and Forgiveness in the Context of Human Conflict”

    Professor Nigel Biggar, is the Regius Professor of Moral and Pastoral Theology, and director of the McDonald Centre for Theology, Ethics, and Public Life at the University of Oxford, UK. Sponsored by the Davidson College Religion Department, Samuel D. Maloney Lecture Series on the Study of Religion and Society, Office of the Pre...

  • Robert Caro: 2013 Conarroe Lecture

    A sold-out Duke Family Performance Hall audience sat raptly as Robert Caro spoke about the first 47 days of Lyndon Johnson’s presidency, as told in his book, "The Passage of Power." Caro has written four books on Lyndon Johnson and has often times been asked, “Why so many? Don’t you get tired?” to which c...

Chambers in Late Afternoon