On the joys of being head of house at McCormick Hall
Raul Radovitzky and Flavia Cardarelli reflect on a decade of telling bad dad jokes, learning Taylor Swift songs, and sharing a home with hundreds of students.
Raul Radovitzky and Flavia Cardarelli reflect on a decade of telling bad dad jokes, learning Taylor Swift songs, and sharing a home with hundreds of students.
Film produced by MIT Open Learning’s video team shows the art and science of hand-forged knives with master bladesmith Bob Kramer.
As assistant director for academics and events, Ylana Lopez leads an array of programming at the Martin Trust Center for MIT Entrepreneurship.
Ananda Santos Figueiredo, a senior in climate system science and engineering, is charting her own course of impact.
In a new class, students design, build, and test an electric turbopump for a rocket engine, facing challenges they will experience as practicing engineers.
MIT students travel to the Amazon, working with locals to address the plastics sustainability crisis.
Students in a unique MIT course taught by research scientist, DJ, and game designer Philip Tan explore DJ’ing and tech culture with a hands-on approach.
MIT Department of Mechanical Engineering grad students are undertaking a broad range of innovative research projects.
The Institute’s “mind and hand” ethos has found a home in the United Arab Emirates.
The junior, who is majoring in computer science and molecular biology, wants to “make it a norm to lift others as I continue to climb.”
In an MIT visit, the endlessly curious Kramer explained how he sampled careers from cook to circus clown before beginning the pursuit of mastery within his craft.
The event featured updates from faculty and staff from across MIT, as well as a panel on communicating climate in the media.
Mini-UROP program connects first-years with graduate students and postdocs for enriched learning.
MIT students studied the Indigenous language during a new Independent Activities Period course to gain exposure and understand the language’s cultural and practical value.
Hiroko Matsuyama teaches her last course on the ancient art of Japanese flower arrangement.