MIT offers assistance to City of Cambridge during Covid-19 crisis
The Institute is supporting Cambridge’s nonprofits, small businesses, and residents.
The Institute is supporting Cambridge’s nonprofits, small businesses, and residents.
The press is rapidly expanding free access to content including articles, books, and live discussions as a way to maintain public access to knowledge and research.
Critical research continues, students and staff are receiving support, and contingency planning proceeds for eventual phased reopening.
Picower Institute researchers are advancing their work in many ways despite time away from the lab required to corral Covid-19.
Despite being far from campus because of the pandemic, some students are engineering a creative way to stay connected.
MIT’s AgeLab offers ways to maintain conversations between younger and older adults.
In response to the Covid-19 pandemic, MIT enters a new mode for teaching and learning.
Alumni and supporters look to MIT in time of crisis.
Clinical and design considerations will be published online; goal is to support rapid scale-up of device production to alleviate hospital shortages.
With thousands now working and learning off-campus, the Institute aims to consolidate its footprint and conserve resources.