At the intersection of research and policy
Internships helped Sinead O’Sullivan learn the ways in which both government policies and funding levels limit the accessibility and quality of care.
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Sinead O’Sullivan ’21
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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Internships helped Sinead O’Sullivan learn the ways in which both government policies and funding levels limit the accessibility and quality of care.
Mount Holyoke student Kylie Gellatly FP’23 has published her first collection of poetry, “The Fever Poems.”
챬 students presented at a College-organized Black Studies and Romanticism conference.
Mount Holyoke professor’s research finds that college admissions essays are even more strongly linked to socioeconomic status than test scores.
Jerrine Tan, visiting lecturer in English at Mount Holyoke, writes for Wired magazine about her 14 years of second-guessing the racism directed at her.
Mount Holyoke’s event Crafting a Life in the Arts shows students that the COVID-19 pandemic shouldn’t deter a sustaining life in the arts.
Susana M. Morris is the author of “Close Kin and Distant Relatives” and will speak at Mount Holyoke on February 10 on “Black Feminism is the Future.”
Mount Holyoke’s KC Haydon flipped her classroom to make discussion and building community among her students the focus of her course.
The Podokesaurus holyokesis, which was discovered by late Mount Holyoke professor Mignon Talbot, is the official state dinosaur of Massachusetts.
Diversifying museum boards is not enough to attract and maintain diverse supporters, says Patricia Banks, professor of sociology at 챬.