The Chesapeake Bay is the heart of Maryland's seafood industry and it's just a few miles from NDMU's campus. For our students, the Bay has become a valuable hands-on learning experience, where you set sail, collect water samples, test pH levels and if you're lucky, you'll hold a famed Maryland Blue Crab.
Henrietta Lacks’ name is synonymous with medical research. Her DNA cells are credited with helping to create dozens of medical breakthroughs. Today, her great-granddaughter is a student at Notre Dame of Maryland University and she’s hoping to continue her family’s legacy.
Notre Dame of Maryland University’s (NDMU) accreditation was fully reaffirmed by the Middle States Commission on Higher Education (MSCHE) for another eight years.
Notre Dame of Maryland University’s business programs were awarded accreditation by the Accreditation Council for Business Schools and Programs (ACBSP) Baccalaureate/Graduate Degree Board of Commissioners.
The School of Nursing at Notre Dame of Maryland University (NDMU) has been awarded a Nurse Support Program II (NSP II) Competitive Institutional Grant of $493,593. The NSP II Program is funded by the Health Services Cost Review Commission (HSCRC) and administered by the Maryland Higher Education Commission (MHEC).
Notre Dame of Maryland University (NDMU) recently earned the distinction of being the first university in Maryland to join the Small World Initiative (SWI). SWI gathers some of the world’s top universities who support and source the discovery of new antibiotics.
Two Notre Dame of Maryland University students are among those that have been chosen to design and undertake Projects for Peace. Micah Castelo and Lorelie Elaine Soriano submitted one of the 120 winning projects that are being awarded $10,000 each for implementation this summer.
Nancy Birdsall, a senior fellow and president emeritus of the Center for Global Development is serving as Notre Dame of Maryland University’s commencement speaker on May 20.
In 1937, Notre Dame of Maryland University’s Honor System was established by students. This year, the system, now called the “Honor Code,” celebrates its 80th anniversary.
You have probably seen her walking around campus, in Doyle Dining or playing on the field, she is the NDMU Women’s College student who is bald, and she owns it!