Learn to navigate Hoboken
Hoboken is very easy to navigate once you know how the streets work. In just a few weeks, you can know exactly where anything is located with just the address.
Hoboken is very easy to navigate once you know how the streets work. In just a few weeks, you can know exactly where anything is located with just the address.
Perhaps for the first time in your life, you don’t have to tell someone where you’re going or when you’re coming home.
Looking back at how naive I was my first semester at Stevens is almost laughable. I mean, I thought having known what I wanted to major in automatically made me secure, when in reality I was just as unsure and nervous as everybody else.
Two semesters. Five(ish) classes. Fifteen credits. Nine months. That’s all that stands between me and the real world — and I cannot wait.
Stevens only has one dining hall, Pierce. It’s on the second floor of the Howe Center, and features incredible views of the Manhattan skyline.

Early in September of every year, the Office of Residential Education hosts a dodgeball tournament, pitting each of the freshman dorms against each other in a color-coded, ball-dodging blast.
From Hoboken, there are three ways to travel to New York City using public transport: the PATH, the bus, and the ferry.
One word that is most commonly associated with college is money. College requires payment to cover the costs of almost every aspect of a student’s time on campus, from the room and board, textbooks, and meal plans to the miscellaneous expenses you find yourself having throughout the year.
Summer 2019 may have been the best yet as far as old trends coming back from the dead!
At Stevens, students are given multiple opportunities to further their professional development and help secure a job upon graduation. These paths include the Co-op program, internships, and externships.