Weekly calls keep students connected to the Institute during a pandemic
Through the MIT Student Success Coaching program, volunteer faculty and staff check in with students to assist with whatever “bubbles up.”
Through the MIT Student Success Coaching program, volunteer faculty and staff check in with students to assist with whatever “bubbles up.”
“We volunteered because we thought it would be a great opportunity to give back to the MIT community in a time of necessity,” says Nathan Han.
MIT senior helps his immigrant family address medical matters while balancing his school work.
Despite being far from campus because of the pandemic, some students are engineering a creative way to stay connected.
MIT students train teams in Ghana and Uganda for the International Mathematical Olympiad through MISTI-Africa.
The survey, deployed every four years, is a unique, confidential forum for community input.
Chalk of the Day, an MIT student group, draws beautiful daily works of art on the chalk wall in Building 32.
Its former location, Building 44 on Vassar Street, will soon become the new MIT Schwarzman College of Computing.
After surgery to correct childhood hearing loss, Swarna Jeewajee discovered a desire to be a physician-scientist, and a love of a cappella music.
MindHandHeart is finding new ways to encourage healthy, positive social media use.
Managing her own synthetic biology project helped graduate student Jesse Tordoff overcome imposter syndrome and hit her stride.
A campaign to spread notes of kindness is coming to MIT, inspired by alumni Nick Demas and Jerry Wang.
The 10th round of MindHandHeart Innovation Fund projects is bringing diversity, equity, and inclusion, wellness, and community-building programming to campus.
Mangoes, coconuts, and imaginary lizards make using electricity to rearrange chemical bonds fun and exciting.
West Campus location identified for new residence.