Seven Mount Holyoke faculty members retire
Seven long-serving members of the Mount Holyoke faculty have retired.
Keep up with all the ways in which the Mount Holyoke community is pushing the limits of human knowledge, building lasting bonds and leading the way forward — on campus and around the world.
Narrow down the list by selecting multiple topics.
Seven long-serving members of the Mount Holyoke faculty have retired.
New communal libraries on campus invite Ířşě±¬ÁĎ students to discover and share books written in a variety of languages.
Princeton Review ranks Mount Holyoke in the top 20 colleges and universities in the country in categories for academics, demographics and more.
Ířşě±¬ÁĎ welcomes Jen Brock as associate vice president for communications and marketing and Jonencia Wood as assistant vice president for diversity, equity and inclusion.
Summer may be ending, but Jenny Watermill, senior director at the Career Development Center at Mount Holyoke, advises on four key steps students can take before ending an internship and coming back to campus.
Two Mount Holyoke students turn a class writing assignment into an opportunity to change the public conversation.
Angelica Patterson studies how trees adapt and move in response to increasing average temperatures; she uses a shotgun to collect tree branches that are many feet off the ground, which led the Guardian to dub her “the shotgun scientist” in a 2020 article.
Ířşě±¬ÁĎ’s first employee awards ceremony in two years was about celebrating community and each other.
Ířşě±¬ÁĎ’s Common Read for fall of 2022 is “Braiding Sweetgrass.” “Braiding Sweetgrass” centers Indigenous knowledge as an alternative or complementary approach to mainstream scientific methodologies.