Campus & Community

All Campus & Community

  • ‘Stunning progress’

    The public arena has made great strides toward diversity — as Harvard’s evolution has shown — but neighborhoods and schools need to catch up, according to sociologist Orlando Patterson, who said he arrived on an overwhelmingly white campus in 1970.

    Orlando Patterson
  • ‘The work of culture alters our perceptions’

    The two-day “Vision & Justice” conference at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study brought together a wide range of scholars and artists for performances and discussions considering the role of the arts in understanding the nexus of art, race, and justice.

  • Walton named dean of Wake Forest School of Divinity

    The Rev. Jonathan Walton will step down from his role as Plummer Professor of Christian Morals and Pusey Minister of the Memorial Church in order to become dean of Wake Forest University School of Divinity. Walton, who assumed leadership of the church in 2012, will leave this summer.

  • Service time, and the living is easy

    Harvard College’s incoming class will have a chance to participate in the inaugural Service Starts with Summer Program (3SP), an initiative meant to encourage students to engage in public service in their hometowns.

  • Diversity and dialogue in an age of division

    Harvard faculty and administrators discussed racism, sexism, LGBTQ rights, politics, and poverty at the FAS Diversity Conference “A Decade of Dialogue.”

    Keynote speaker Tim Wise at the symposium on diversity.
  • The flourishing of Genesis

    Genesis De Los Santos grew up in Dorchester and credits her community’s support for her unlikely journey from a neighborhood school to a private middle school academy to an elite high school and then to Harvard.

    Genesis standing at a table
  • They’re alive!

    The living walls at the Richard A. and Susan F. Smith Campus Center — eight organic interior designs made of climbing, creeping arms of trees and blocks of ferns and other tropical plants —are a welcome addition to Harvard’s newly configured social hub year-round.

    Tiago Pereira tending to the green wall
  • Running out of time

    Harvard seniors share their bucket lists of things to do during their final semester.

    Victor Agbafe at the Harvard Museum of Natural History.
  • The green escape

    A sustainability-themed escape room served as a test of puzzle-solving skills and a lesson on sustainable lifestyle shifts during Harvard Heat Week.

    Jena Lorman (left), Michael Cheng, and Tyler Morris solve puzzles in a sustainability-themed "escape room."
  • On having — and being — a role model

    An interview with Bridget Terry Long, the new dean of the Harvard Graduate School of Education, on her first eight months on the job.

    Dean Bridget Terry Long portrait
  • Carnegie Corporation names fellowship winners

    Economist Raj Chetty and sociologist Michèle Lamont of Harvard are among the Andrew Carnegie Fellows named this year by the Carnegie Corporation of New York. Also known as the “Brainy Award,” the fellowship grants up to $200,000 to each of 32 researchers writing and publishing in the humanities and social sciences.

    Chetty and Lamont
  • Opening eyes on higher education

    Eight students from Highline High School in Burien, Wash., recently spent five days in Boston and Cambridge visiting Harvard and MIT as part of the Harvard Club of Seattle Crimson Achievement Program.

  • In recognition of extraordinary service

    The Harvard Alumni Association has announced that Teresita Alvarez-Bjelland ’76, M.B.A. ’79, Dan H. Fenn Jr. ’44, A.M. ’72, and Tamara Elliott Rogers ’74 will receive the 2019 Harvard Medal.

  • New student survey asks about sexual assault and misconduct

    Harvard launches its first new survey on sexual misconduct in four years and expects different answers in light of the “Me Too” movement.

  • At WHRB, Harvard student turns on radio and tunes in listeners

    Henna Hundal ’19 works as interviewer on her own radio show on Harvard’s WHRB, bringing the larger world to her listening audience.

    Henna Hundal in the studio.
  • Bridge to a new life

    Success stories from Harvard’s Bridge Program, which pairs student tutors with immigrant employees to ease the transition to a new culture, are celebrated.

    Luz Orozco receives a standing ovation after speaking at the Bridge Program annual dinner.
  • New faculty: Jesse McCarthy

    New English and African and African American Studies Professor Jesse McCarthy took a roundabout path to academia. Now he’s teaching James Baldwin and Henry James and showing students there are many ways to be successful.

    Jesse McCarthy.
  • ‘Everyone is a teacher’

    Students present 30 projects at inaugural Education Innovation Showcase at Harvard.

    Yasmene Mumby (from left), Bonnie Lo, and Charisse Taylor give a flash talk
  • New dean for Graduate School of Design

    Sarah Whiting, former dean of architecture at Rice University, returns to Harvard, where she taught early in her career, as dean of the Graduate School of Design.

    Sarah Whiting
  • Rising to the Challenge

    Twenty would-be companies in four categories have been named finalists in the President’s Innovation Challenge, an annual “call to action, innovation, and entrepreneurship” at Harvard.

    finalists celebrate
  • 12 faculty honored for ‘compelling achievements’

    Twelve Harvard faculty are among the more than 200 individuals elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

    Academy of arts and sciences induction 2018
  • Two from Harvard win prestigious fellowship

    Harvard students Noah Golowich and Alex Atanasov have been selected to receive the prestigious Hertz Fellowship, joining 199 previous Harvard students who have received the honor since 1964.

  • Rising to the challenge

    MacLean Sarbah, M.A. ’19, hopes to return home to help take on one of Ghana’s biggest social problems: youth unemployment.

    GSD student Maclean Sarbah He is seen at Adolphus Busch Hall
  • A healthy twofer

    Harvard’s new Sustainable Healthful Food Standards, announced today, will challenge University food service to increase healthy options while also considering how the food is produced, taking into account sustainability, pesticide and fertilizer use, food-workers’ conditions, and animal welfare.

    Illustration of two plates, one filled with components of a healthy diet and one filled with planet.
  • A leg up

    The 13th annual Celebration of Scholarship dinner brought together brought together students who have benefited from financial aid and some of the many donors who support the program.

    Three people sitting at a dinner table
  • Running for a purpose

    Harvard runners run the Boston Marathon to overcome challenges, be part of a community, and give back

    Jenn Greiner (from left), Alison Steinbach, Bjarni Atlason, and Bob Surette are part of the Harvard College Marathon Challenge.
  • Donoff to step down as dean of School of Dental Medicine

    Bruce Donoff, dean of Harvard School of Dental Medicine for 28 years, announced today that he will step down from the position effective Jan. 1, 2020.

    Dean Bruce Donoff
  • Putting compassion into action

    At an event marking the 40th anniversary of the WilmerHale Legal Services Center, faculty, students, and clients recall what it has meant to them.

  • Faculty diversity continues to grow

    Harvard continues to make progress in its goal to diversify its faculty, with numbers of women and minorities reaching record highs.

    Cover of the annual report of the Office of Faculty Development and Diversity.
  • Striking lessons from the 1960s

    The occupation of University Hall in April 1969 and the strike that followed it left its mark on Harvard’s psyche. A daylong event Friday commemorates the 50th anniversary and brings today’s student activists into the conversation.

    Closeup of a fist raised during 1969 strike.