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You are a big part of what makes Muhlenberg so special.
Discovering yourself and your community is an essential part of the college experience. At Muhlenberg, you can explore your passions, make lifelong connections and celebrate your identity with a wide array of student organizations, affinity groups and activities.
Your Muhlenberg experience extends beyond the classroom. We’re here to help you find community, engage and explore across differences and make an impact in the world around you.
Muhlenberg students’ interests are limitless and the clubs and organizations available to you reflect that. Not seeing something you’re passionate about? Take the lead and start a new community on campus.
Muhlenberg’s slate of fraternity and sorority organizations provides opportunities for students to engage in personal and professional development with experiences consistent with our College mission and values.
Muhlenberg is committed to creating space for students from diverse faith communities to gather for reflection, religious services and programs, interfaith dialogues and more.
The Campus Living Room project brings together community members across identities, experiences, areas of expertise, and ideologies to discuss critical societal and college issues through multiple lenses.
Muhlenberg is committed to providing an inclusive space to learn, grow and engage. Learn about our ongoing efforts to ensure students have a place to belong.
Learn more about Muhlenberg College’s dedication to diversity, equity, inclusion and belonging.
The Office of Multicultural Life serves as a hub for inclusive student gatherings, student affinity groups and diversity education workshops.
Staff at the OML can help bring workshops and sessions to your student organization that can address a range of diversity education needs.
Erica Borbi ’25, who’s also a student-athlete on the track team, will start a full-time role with the Big Four firm EY after graduation.
The group of computer science and mathematics students, who refer to themselves as “Nerd Club,” took first place in the Consortium for Computing Sciences in Colleges Northeast Region competition for the fourth time since 2019.
Each chapter of the national Alpha Epsilon Delta honors organization may nominate two students who are going to professional school annually. For the last three years, both of Muhlenberg’s nominees have received awards.
Maddie Davidson ’25 spoke about her tree science and stewardship project that won a Youth Climate Action Fund grant from the city and led to an opportunity to speak at last fall’s Bloomberg CityLab summit in Mexico City.