Campus & Community

All Campus & Community

  • A course that keeps teaching

    Educators gathered at the Harvard Ed Portal for Data Wise, a new HarvardX course that will transform classroom dynamics and build “collaborative inquiry” among teachers. The Data Wise Leadership Institute will begin in June.

  • Unlocking doors

    Dominique Donette, who is graduating from Harvard’s Graduate School of Education, beat long odds in her quest to help empower the powerless.

  • Yield remains high for Class of 2020

    Nearly 80 percent of applicants admitted to the Class of 2020 have chosen to enroll at Harvard College.

  • ‘If you’re not failing, you’re probably not trying as hard as you could be’

    Interview with geneticist George Church as part of the Experience series.

  • Five named Harvard College Professors

    Five faculty members have been selected as Harvard College Professors, five-year appointments that provide them with extra support for research or scholarly activities, a semester of paid leave, or summer salary.

  • Funding the future

    The Star Family Challenge makes grants every year to high-risk, high-reward research efforts that might not receive funding through other programs. This year’s recipients are Edo Berger, Katia Bertoldi, Edward Glaeser, Talia Konkle, and Bence Ölveczky.

  • Float like a butterfly, work like a bee

    To give back, extracurricular whirlwind Jesus Moran ’16 will teach in an urban school next fall.

  • New faculty deans appointed

    Danoff Dean of Harvard College Rakesh Khurana announced the appointment of the new faculty deans of Currier House. Professor Latanya Sweeney and Sylvia Barrett will take their posts this fall.

  • Changing a community, from the ground up

    Seven area residents were honored at the annual Allston-Brighton Legislators’ Breakfast by local elected officials and the Allston-Brighton Adult Education Coalition for their ongoing work in the community.

  • Boyd Irven DeVore dies at 79

    At a Meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on May 3, 2016, the Minute honoring the life and service of the late Boyd Irven DeVore, Ruth Moore Professor of Biological Anthropology, Emeritus, was placed upon the records. Professor DeVore played a major role in bringing evolutionary theory to the understanding of human behavior.

  • Doubling up at Harvard

    Harvard staff photographers interviewed four sets of twins currently enrolled as undergraduates at Harvard College, to gain a glimpse into these unusual relationships.

  • ‘Making Harvard a campus for all’

    Citing the harmful impact created by gender discrimination affecting students at Harvard College, administrators announced that beginning in the fall of 2017, new students who join unrecognized single-gender social organizations will not be permitted to hold leadership positions in recognized student organizations and athletic teams.

  • Ellen Langer joins group of geniuses

    Ellen Langer, professor of psychology, is among the 2016 recipients of the Liberty Science Center Genius Awards.

  • A place where startups begin

    Harvard Business School, the Ed Portal, and the Harvard i-lab gave 30 local high school students front-row seats to how entrepreneurship works.

  • Daniel Aaron, pioneer in American studies, dead at 103

    Daniel Aaron, Victor S. Thomas Professor of English and American Literature Emeritus, dies at 103.

  • Winthrop House renewal to begin

    Renewal work will begin on Winthrop House soon, as plans are detailed.

  • Faculty elected to National Academy of Sciences

    Five Harvard faculty members were elected to the National Academy of Arts and Sciences.

  • HBS Club of NY honors five

    The Harvard Business School Club of New York will honor five alumni leaders at its 49th Annual Leadership Dinner on May 18 at the American Museum of Natural History.

  • A focus on veterans

    Harvard Kennedy School’s Center for Public Leadership hosted a day of service for students to give back to veterans in the community.

  • Painting unveiled of College’s first African-American graduate

    Officials unveiled a painting of Richard Theodore Greener, Harvard College’s first African-American graduate, in Annenberg Hall.

  • My dinner with Dr. Hawking

    A day after attending Stephen Hawking’s talk at Harvard, reporter Peter Reuell received an invitation from Cumrun Vafa — would he be interested in attending a dinner party in Hawking’s honor?

  • Style by degrees: Harvard Business School

    Harvard Business School students, staff, and faculty are known for their sleek, polished style – sometimes with a hint of the unexpected.

  • She followed her star

    Moiya McTier ’16 blends her loves of space science and writing in a double concentration in astronomy and folklore and mythology, leading to a science fiction senior thesis.

  • A monk with one foot in the world

    Buddhist monk Tajay Bongsa wants to unite social and economic progress with dual master’s degrees in theology and business.

  • Faculty Council meeting held April 27

    On April 27, the members of the Faculty Council approved preliminary versions of the University Extension School courses for 2016–2017 and Courses of Instruction for 2016–2017.

  • Humanizing the humanities

    Leaving a legacy of curriculum innovation and diplomacy, Dean of Arts and Humanities Diana Sorensen steps down after 10 years of elevating the division.

  • SurgiBox wins $70,000 President’s Challenge

    SurgiBox, a collapsible, safe, and aseptic surgery device, won this year’s $70,000 grand prize in the President’s Challenge.

  • On-the-job learning

    The Summer Youth Employment Program (SYEP) offers local teenagers the chance to work at Harvard, and offers Harvard departments a way to fill temporary staffing needs while strengthening its connection to the community.

  • Nicco Mele named director of Shorenstein Center

    Nicco Mele, the Wallis Annenberg Chair in Journalism at the University of Southern California, is the new director of the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard’s John F. Kennedy School of Government.

  • Sharing his creative gifts

    South Carolina native Joshuah Campbell, who is graduating with joint degrees in music and French, has discovered the serious side of performing.