Inside the new world of online dissertation defenses
Emojis, grandmas logging in, and kudos from strangers: How MIT students have finished their PhDs during the pandemic.
Emojis, grandmas logging in, and kudos from strangers: How MIT students have finished their PhDs during the pandemic.
Graduate student Erica Salazar tackles a magnetic engineering challenge.
The prize, which provides financial support to women working toward a PhD in international affairs, will be applied toward her research into proxy warfare.
After delivering novel computational methods for nuclear problems, nuclear science and engineering PhD candidate Pablo Ducru plunges into startup life.
Junli Hao's efforts aid procurement of face masks and respirators for first responders.
Professors Paola Cappellaro, Warren Seering, and Lily Tsai honored as “Committed to Caring.”
Decisions on when to return to campus await more information but may involve a phased process and continued precautions.
MIT graduate students launched the Future Strategy Forum to advance women in security studies.
Postdoc Izabella Pena uses social media to combat the infodemic about the Covid-19 pandemic.
Through the MIT Student Success Coaching program, volunteer faculty and staff check in with students to assist with whatever “bubbles up.”
Students around the country recognized for innovative solutions to better single-use plastic, spacecraft and aircraft fuel gauges, surgery techniques, and more.
“Operations in practice are very messy, but I think that’s what makes them exciting,” says graduate student Jean Pauphilet.
Neurologist and researcher Diane Chan pitches in to help New England get through tough times.
PhD candidate’s journey to the center of the plant cell wall relies on nuclear magnetic resonance technology.
Ezra Zuckerman Sivan, Jinhua Zhao, and Kamal Youcef-Toumi honored as “Committed to Caring.”