“Timber Wars” from Oregon Public Broadcasting wins McElheny Award for local science reporting
Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT also recognizes reporting from The Boston Globe, Detroit Free Press, The Arizona Republic, and Boston’s WBUR.
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Knight Science Journalism Program at MIT also recognizes reporting from The Boston Globe, Detroit Free Press, The Arizona Republic, and Boston’s WBUR.
Celebrating 20 remarkable years, MIT OCW looks to the future, informed by learning needs underscored by the Covid-19 pandemic.
Seven MIT researchers see lessons and opportunities for US health care.
MIT historian, and scholar of assimilation and exclusion, surveys the deeper history behind the current crisis.
Hundreds worldwide join MIT students in experiencing 21H.000 (History of Now: Plagues and Pandemics) as a public series of webinars.
Graduate engineering and economics programs are No. 1 in the nation; MIT Sloan is No. 5.
Regina Barzilay, Fotini Christia, and Collin Stultz describe how artificial intelligence and machine learning can support fairness, personalization, and inclusiveness in health care.
A unique workshop lets students examine their personal histories as a way to even the playing field between mentors and mentees.
After studying and working on three continents, senior Andrea Orji now seeks to become a physician, eventually working in Nigeria.
While a national soccer win can stoke anti-refugee sentiment, messaging promoting diversity can reverse this effect.
At MIT Forefront, panelists explore ways to prepare workers and improve jobs.
Within minutes, the earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear meltdown on March 11, 2011, brought an unprecedented wave of death, displacement, and destruction to Japan.
Oral history project allows MIT students to dig deep into the longstanding connection between the Institute and South Asia.
CIS research affiliate describes his goals in creating a webinar series exploring sustainable development in Africa.