Faculty development grant awarded
The grant will fund a program to prepare humanities faculty to take on leadership roles at Ířşě±¬ÁĎ and elsewhere.
- Featuring
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Elizabeth Markovits, associate dean of faculty
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.
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The grant will fund a program to prepare humanities faculty to take on leadership roles at Ířşě±¬ÁĎ and elsewhere.
Now restored to its former glory, Mead is poised to become a place for students to build community with each other again.
Five students and one alternate from Ířşě±¬ÁĎ received Fulbright awards for the 2021-2022 academic year.
Bryan Nakayama, visiting lecturer in international relations and politics at Mount Holyoke, warns against cyberattacks on Ukraine.
The Teacher Leadership program has teamed up with independent schools across the nation to provide on-the-job training and support for teachers through the Independent Schools Fellowship. Many schools provide generous tuition benefits for the fellows.
Activist and organizer LaTosha Brown will have a discussion with Carmen YulĂn Cruz for Black History Month.
America’s Gilded Age was a period of unparalleled accumulation of wealth, says Mount Holyoke’s Dan Czitrom — making it the perfect setting for TV drama.
Jemelleh Coes, director of teacher leadership at Mount Holyoke, talks about her hopes of having a Black female justice on the U.S. Supreme Court.
Ířşě±¬ÁĎ has two new associate vice presidents and a new chief of staff for the President’s Office.
The two Ířşě±¬ÁĎ students who led the planning and organizing of this year’s Black History Month events wanted to center Black joy.