Masks for safety, money for food
MIT senior Will Archer puts his entrepreneurial skills to work while raising funds for a local food bank.
MIT senior Will Archer puts his entrepreneurial skills to work while raising funds for a local food bank.
Despite the disruption caused by the pandemic, MIT students have carved out meaningful hands-on experiences.
“There’s no greater feeling than when you’re with all your classmates and they’re having a great time,” says MIT’s senior class president.
Far from MIT, nuclear science and engineering students take ownership of projects and explore new terrain.
In researching and writing a new play, undergraduates delved into the rise of several of MIT’s history-making students.
Remarkably large cohort of graduating seniors honored for excellence in the liberal arts.
MIT senior Darya Guettler advocates for climate action and broader deployment of zero-carbon energy sources.
When Covid-19 forced Edgerton Center student teams off campus, the engineers found their problem-solving skills put to the test.
Working remotely this summer, students worked to better understand human intelligence and to advance machine learning applications.
Undergraduate engineering and computer science programs are No. 1; undergraduate business program is No. 2.
Undergraduate research opportunities in the Plasma Science and Fusion Center’s High-Energy-Density Physics division support multiple fusion collaborations.
“We will find great meaning and satisfaction in having endured this historic test together,” President Reif told new and returning students.
With creativity and hard work, the Institute is striving to provide the best possible experience for the Class of 2024.
Undergraduates Aljazzy Alahmadi, Andrea Garcia, and Quynh Nguyen are sustaining the nuclear science and engineering research mission from around the world.
Student leaders, faculty, and staff contributed to process, values, and decisions.