Remembering Kenneth Keniston, founder of the MIT Program in Science, Technology, and Society
Longtime professor played a major role in encouraging MIT to ask new questions that significantly broadened the Institute’s educational mission.
Longtime professor played a major role in encouraging MIT to ask new questions that significantly broadened the Institute’s educational mission.
Longtime MIT physicist and mentor created instruments that advanced high-energy physics, including the Nobel Prize-winning discovery of the J particle.
Impactful program for first-year students helps to ensure a successful transition to MIT.
Cornell University professor and physicist uses nanoscale parts to create smart, active microbots.
Film looks at how Kendall Square became a beacon for industries working on treatments for diseases like cancer, Alzheimer’s, and diabetes.
Cornell University’s Paul McEuen will inaugurate series to honor beloved MIT professor.
Fifty years after the first moon landing with Apollo 11, the Department of Aeronautics and Astronautics looks to the future of space exploration at MIT.
From making the lunar landings possible to interpreting the meaning of the moon rocks, the Institute was a vital part of history.
Program creates a new hub for pedagogy and research in time-based media.
A look at the unique process by which MIT's class ring is dreamed up, created, and distributed every year.
From digital circuits to ingestible robots, the Institute has helped spearhead key innovations in the technology revolution.
Longtime executive editor for art and architecture at the MIT Press discusses his experiences in the publishing world.
A revolutionary educational project in the 1980s put the tools of computation in students’ hands — and foreshadowed even greater changes.
National Academies report cites need for strong leadership and cultural change; will be focus of upcoming MIT panel discussion.