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At a spirited Commencement ceremony, the Class of 2026 is urged to “run toward the hardest problems”

Lisa Su ’90, SM ’91, PhD ’94, Advanced Micro Devices CEO, tells graduates to apply “purpose, judgment, and courage” in their lives.
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Graduates in caps and gowns celebrate, throwing caps in the air
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Caption: Graduates celebrated on Killian Court at the OneMIT Commencement ceremony Thursday.
Credits: Credit: Gretchen Ertl
A female student in cap and gown takes a selfie in front of the Great Dome
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Caption: The OneMIT Ceremony honored graduates of all degree programs in MIT’s five schools and the Schwarzman College of Computing.
Credits: Credit: Gretchen Ertl
Rows of graduates sit on Killian Court; in the foreground a speaker stands at the podium under a large canopy.
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Caption: A total of 1,165 undergraduate and 2,817 graduate students received MIT diplomas this academic year.
Credits: Credit: Gretchen Ertl
Lisa Su speaks at a podium
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Caption: “The world does not just need people who know how to use powerful tools,” AMD CEO Lisa Su told the Class of 2026. “It needs people who know what to use them for. People with a sense of purpose. Judgment. Courage.”
Credits: Credit: Gretchen Ertl
Sally Kornbluth speaks at a podium
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Caption: Excellence and curiosity are two of MIT’s core values, MIT President Sally Kornbluth said, adding, “I hope we also hold, together, another core value — the commitment to always act ethically, with integrity, and with consideration for our fellow human beings.”
Credits: Credit: Gretchen Ertl
Five young men in caps and gowns stand side by side, facing away from the camera, with arms around each other.
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Caption: Graduates sported their “Brass Rat” rings, a distinctive symbol of the Institute.
Credits: Credit: Gretchen Ertl
Rows of seated graduates wear clear ponchos and smile despite rain
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Caption: A brief rain shower preceded the festivities, but the mood on Killian Court remained sunny. Happily, the sky cleared as the ceremony began.
Credits: Credit: Jake Belcher
Two graduates hug
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Caption: MIT’s Class of 2026 celebrated before starting the next chapter of their lives.
Credits: Credit: Jake Belcher

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Graduates in caps and gowns celebrate, throwing caps in the air
Caption:
Graduates celebrated on Killian Court at the OneMIT Commencement ceremony Thursday.
Credits:
Credit: Gretchen Ertl

After years of study and instruction, MIT’s Class of 2026 received one last piece of guidance this afternoon en route to picking up their diplomas and starting the next chapter of their lives.

“Run toward the hardest problems,” said Lisa Su ’90, SM ’91, PhD ’94, the chair and CEO of semiconductor powerhose Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) and the featured Commencement speaker at today’s OneMIT ceremony. “Hard problems really teach you what you’re capable of.”

Su’s career as one of the world’s leading technology executives has long been intertwined with MIT. She holds three degrees in electrical engineering from the Institute, along with another distinction: Building 12, home of the MIT.nano facility, was named after her in 2022. 

A central theme of Su’s address involved learning by taking on difficult challenges. At MIT, as she put it, she acquired “not the confidence that I would always know the answer, but the confidence that even when I didn’t know the answer, I could figure it out.”

Speaking before a large and appreciative audience in MIT’s Killian Court, Su also urged MIT’s new class of graduates to lead purposeful lives, with a sense of the greater good and an eye toward addressing societal challenges. 

“The world does not just need people who know how to use powerful tools,” Su said. “It needs people who know what to use them for. People with a sense of purpose. Judgment. Courage.”

Science: Curiosity on a Mission

The OneMIT ceremony is an Institute-wide Commencement event with a featured speaker and other traditional elements. MIT’s Commencement week also includes specific ceremonies in which undergraduates, and graduate students in the Institute’s five schools and the MIT Schwarzman College of Computing, walk across stage to receive their diplomas. 

After Su spoke, MIT President Sally A. Kornbluth delivered a charge to the graduates, discussing the Institute’s core values, especially the ideas of excellence and curiosity. She also emphasized MIT’s role in making advances that benefit the nation and society at large, from medicine to energy, agriculture, and other areas of need. 

“A few of those values that will serve you wherever you go,” Kornbluth observed, while noting MIT’s commitment to “the highest standards of intellectual and creative excellence” in its work. She observed that the Institute lives this ethos, by spurning legacy admissions and “back-door” admissions for donors’ families, among other merit-based practices.

“MIT is custom-made for people whose curiosity never sleeps,” Kornbluth said, offering that “curiosity is also our intellectual rocket fuel — and that fact is enormously important for our society as a whole.”

She added: “At MIT, we know that curiosity-driven science is the path to new knowledge,” Kornbluth said. “The kind that spawns world-changing innovations. Curiosity is the force that transforms deadly cancers into treatable conditions. That turns fusion energy from a dream to a reality. That uncovers new ways to grow more food using less of every resource.”

Indeed, Kornbluth emphasized, “We like to say that science is curiosity on a mission.”

“The responsibility to work with others”

MIT students earned a total of 1,165 undergraduate and 2,817 graduate degrees this academic year. 

A female student in cap and gown takes a selfie in front of the Great Dome
The OneMIT Ceremony honored graduates of all degree programs in MIT’s five schools and the Schwarzman College of Computing.
Credit: Gretchen Ertl
Rows of graduates sit on Killian Court; in the foreground a speaker stands at the podium under a large canopy.
A total of 1,165 undergraduate and 2,817 graduate students received MIT diplomas this academic year.
Credit: Gretchen Ertl
Lisa Su speaks at a podium
“The world does not just need people who know how to use powerful tools,” AMD CEO Lisa Su told the Class of 2026. “It needs people who know what to use them for. People with a sense of purpose. Judgment. Courage.”
Credit: Gretchen Ertl
Sally Kornbluth speaks at a podium
Excellence and curiosity are two of MIT’s core values, MIT President Sally Kornbluth said, adding, “I hope we also hold, together, another core value — the commitment to always act ethically, with integrity, and with consideration for our fellow human beings.”
Credit: Gretchen Ertl
Five young men in caps and gowns stand side by side, facing away from the camera, with arms around each other.
Graduates sported their “Brass Rat” rings, a distinctive symbol of the Institute.
Credit: Gretchen Ertl
Rows of seated graduates wear clear ponchos and smile despite rain
A brief rain shower preceded the festivities, but the mood on Killian Court remained sunny. Happily, the sky cleared as the ceremony began.
Credit: Jake Belcher
Two graduates hug
MIT’s Class of 2026 celebrated before starting the next chapter of their lives.
Credit: Jake Belcher

The OneMIT ceremony began with the annual alumni parade, which has come to feature graduates from the 50th anniversary class. In this case the undergraduate class of 1976 had the honors, entering with processional entry music from the Killian Court Brass Ensemble, conducted by Kenneth Amis. 

In another annual component of the OneMIT ceremony, Thea Keith-Lucas, the Chaplain to the Institute, delivered the invocation. The Chorallaries of MIT sang “The Star Spangled Banner” at the outset of the event. Near the conclusion, they sang the school song, “In praise of MIT,” and another Institute anthem, “Take Me Back to Tech.”

By tradition, speakers at the OneMIT event also included Teddy Warner, president of MIT’s Graduate Student Council, and Heba Hussein, president of the undergraduate class of 2026.

“As MIT graduates, we have the responsibility to work with others to generate, disseminate, and preserve knowledge to bear on the world’s greatest challenges,” Warner said. “We cannot solve global problems without global cooperation or with limited techniques. I implore everyone to apply the cooperative, interdisciplinary skills used every day at MIT to effect positive change in all areas of the global community.”

In her speech, Hussein reflected on the many ways her classmates supported each other during their time at MIT. “As we move forward, I urge you to continue to carry care,” Hussein said. “Care for our work, for each other, and for the people far beyond MIT whose lives are connected by what we choose to do.

Following the students’ remarks, Stephen DeFalco ’83, SM ’88, president of the MIT Alumni Association, issued a welcome to the new graduates. 

MIT: “Where I really learned to solve problems”

For her part, Su recounted that when she first came to campus, she was “pretty sure I was good at math.” Then, drawing laughs from the audience, she recalled stepping into two MIT first-year courses, 6.001 and 6.002. 

“Within about two weeks, I realized there were a lot of people at MIT who were very, very good at math,” Su said. 

She stuck with it, and, as she told the crowd today, “Along the way, I started believing in myself. … What I realize now is that MIT was teaching me something much bigger than semiconductor device physics.” Referring to MIT’s enduring motto of “mens et manus,” or “mind and hand,” Su underscored the importance of both thinking through problems and working to solve them in practical terms. 

“When I was a student, I thought it was just a motto,” Su said. “Now I think it captures exactly what makes MIT so special. MIT teaches you to think deeply. But it also teaches you to build. To test ideas. To keep going when the first experiment — or even the fifth experiment — doesn’t work. And over time, you start believing that you can solve problems that once felt impossible. I carried that feeling with me long after I left campus.”

Su’s remarks specifically credited the mentorship of MIT electrical engineer Dimitri Antoniadis, one of her PhD advisors, who today is the Ray and Maria Stata Professor Emeritus of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and in whose lab she worked as a doctoral candidate. 

“That was where I really learned how to solve problems,” Su said. 

After receiving her PhD from MIT, Su worked at Texas Instruments; IBM; and Freescale Semiconductor. In 2012, she joined AMD, which she has helped revitalize as a global leader in the semiconductor space. In 2014, she was named president and CEO of the company. Under her guidance, AMD has both grown and diversified its products, with expanding reach in high-performance computing, among other areas. 

Su has received many awards and honors in her career, including the IEEE’s Robert Noyce Medal in 2021; she was the first woman to be awarded the honor. 

In her remarks, Su referenced the many technology advances of recent decades, and noted the potential for new changes due to artificial intelligence. Su outlined her hope that AI can “accelerate discovery in every field,” including medicine and health care, suggesting it could help assemble more information than ever in valuable ways.

“This I think is the promise of AI at its best,” Su said. “It makes each of us more capable. Medicine. Science. Energy. Climate.”

At the same time, Su observed, “Technology itself does not decide what the future looks like.” Rather, she noted, people do: “For everything AI can do, AI cannot decide which problems are worth solving. It can’t make the hard judgments when the data is not there. It can’t take responsibility for the outcome. These are actually our responsibilities. And they matter more now than ever.”

“The commitment to act ethically”

In her charge to the graduates, Kornbluth also encouraged the MIT class of 2026 to  apply their knowledge and skills in socially beneficial, responsible ways.

“I mentioned excellence and curiosity, two of MIT’s core values,” Kornbluth said. “But I hope we also hold, together, another core value: the commitment to always act ethically, with integrity, and with consideration for our fellow human beings.”

She added: “I have no doubt that … with your uncommon talent, you can do it! And if you keep that goal in sight, I know you will do great things for the world. Congratulations — and warmest best wishes to all of you for a happy life and a fulfilling career.”

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