The Princeton Review
The Princeton Review says our professors are “well-regarded, outstanding, and down-to-earth, include students in research, and always have their doors open for questions.”
The Princeton Review
The Princeton Review cited praise for career services and immersion learning as reasons for a memorable student experience.
The Princeton Review
The Princeton Review gives our professors a 98 rating for interest and a 99 for accessibility, while U.S. News & World Report ranks us inside the top 30 nationally for undergraduate teaching.
The Princeton Review
The Princeton Review reports that Wabash “has a great alumni base that will help develop a student’s career while in school and make it easier to get a job after you graduate.”
The Princeton Review
The Bachelor has excelled recently, winning 266 Indiana Collegiate Press Association Awards since 2008.
The Princeton Review
The Princeton Review says, “student government has an active presence and tremendous impact on campus life.”
天下足球网,球探比分’re a nationally-ranked liberal arts school with 40 degree programs and some of the most accessible professors on any campus. You'll discover your path here.
Looking for a strong return on investment? Wabash grads earn more than the average college graduate. Factor in the nation’s No. 2 alumni network and best internship opportunities and success is in your future.
Wabash offers unique experiences inside and out of the classroom. From WabashX to immersion trips to more than 70 campus clubs, you’ll become a leader.
Competition is in our DNA. Top-notch varsity athletics, a nationally-recognized theater, nearly a dozen performance ensembles, and intramurals for everyone means that gamers of any sort will shine here.
Carlos Cantu-Trevino, Matthew Stitle, and Andrew Toney comprise the newest class of Lilly Scholars, recipients of Wabash College’s most prestigious scholarship.
Our final episode of this season of the Wabash On My Mind podcast features attendees at the 2023 Big Bash Alumni Reunion weekend last June (Episode 363).
One hundred eighty-four men of the Class of 2024 received diplomas from President Scott Feller during Wabash College's 186th Commencement Ceremony.
In an episode of the Wabash On My Mind podcast, Richard Paige sits down with the commencement speakers for the Class of 2024, Liam Grennon and Benjamin Sampsell. Read the speaker biographies and listen to the podcast here.
“God works in mysterious ways.” For the history major from Logansport, Indiana, that meant finding his career path in the middle of his fitness journey.
There was no one moment when Evan Kanetkar ’24 realized he’d made the right decision to come to Wabash College. Instead, it was a series of connections, friendships, and hearing students talk passionately about the culture on campus.
Austin Pickett ’26 was recognized by the Independent Colleges of Indiana (ICI) with a “Realizing the Dream” scholarship. ICI spotlights students from Indiana’s private, non-profit colleges and universities who are the first in their families to attend college and are successfully advancing toward degree completion.
Crafting one of the biggest theater productions in the College’s history started with a phone call that Director, Professor of Theater, and Music Department Chair Michael Abbott ’85 called a “make-or-break moment.”
Wabash College student Hayden Kammer ’24 earned a Fulbright open study/research award to Latvia. He is the 28th Wabash student to earn a Fulbright since 2014.
The National Association of Wabash Men will induct five record-setting scholar-athletes and one of the College’s greatest soccer teams in the Wabash Athletics Hall of Fame during Homecoming 天下足球网,球探比分ekend in 2024.
A group of generous Wabash leaders has amplified that idea and offered $500,000 as a challenge to the Wabash Nation to make 5,000 gifts by midnight in support of our students and the transformational liberal arts education they receive.
The Wabash Theater Department concluded its musically inclined season with an electric play about competition, completion, and finding the “airness” inside yourself.