Despite lacking a degree, Rihanna received Harvard's Humanitarian award. She urged students to help others, citing her grandma's advice: "If you got a dollar, there's plenty to share."
Rihanna, seen in February , said of her charity work, "My grandmother always used to say, 'If you got a dollar, there's plenty to share'"
Rihanna never went to college but the R&B superstar voiced delight as she was presented an award by Harvard University for her humanitarian work.
"So I made it to Harvard! Never thought I would be able to say that in my life, but it feels good," a beaming Rihanna said to students' cheers at the prestigious US university Tuesday evening.
Harvard named the 35-year-old singer its Humanitarian of the Year, pointing to her projects that include an advanced center to treat breast cancer in her native Barbados and support for girls' education around the developing world.
Rihanna said she had set up her first charity at age 18 and remarked: "People make it seem way too hard, man."
"You don't need to be rich to help someone, you don't need to be famous, you don't even need to be college-educated," she said, while joking that she wished she were.
"I want to challenge each of you to make a commitment to help one person, one organization, one situation that touches your heart," she said.
"My grandmother always used to say, 'If you got a dollar, there's plenty to share.'"
Rihanna, who was discovered by a music executive while still a teenager, has also set up a scholarship program named after her grandparents for Caribbean students in the United States.