Hank Green urges the Class of 2025 to work on “everyday solvable problems of normal people”
Lively Commencement ceremony gives students, family, and friends a chance to celebrate years of hard work by the Institute’s newest graduates.
Lively Commencement ceremony gives students, family, and friends a chance to celebrate years of hard work by the Institute’s newest graduates.
“There’s no better use of a day than learning something new,” Green reflected before delivering MIT’s 2025 Commencement address.
McFarling, Pulitzer-prize winning journalist and national science correspondent for STAT, was a 1992-93 Knight Science Journalism Fellow.
The collaboration will begin in 2026, greatly expanding the reach of quality open-access scholarship through D2O.
Senior Madison Wang blends science, history, and art to probe how the world works and the tools we use to explore and understand it.
Conference at MIT brings together scientific experts and communicators to discuss the path toward a more informed, science-supportive public.
Felice Frankel discusses the implications of generative AI when communicating science visually.
Support for D2O in 2025 includes two new three-year, all-consortium commitments from the Florida Virtual Campus and the Big Ten Academic Alliance.
The founding director of the Writing and Communication Center worked with thousands of students, faculty, and staff over four decades at MIT.
Professor Evan Lieberman describes new research in which he and colleagues find a sharp partisan divide over providing aid to poor nations.
The engineer and aspiring astronaut developed an outreach program at Lincoln Laboratory to help bring hands-on STEM activities to all.
Ten objects on display in the Koch Institute Public Galleries offer uncommon insights into the people and progress of MIT's cancer research community.
The science communicator, video producer, and entrepreneur has built online communities of people who love diving into complex issues.
Report aims to “ensure that open science practices are sustainable and that they contribute to the highest quality research.”
The method could help communities visualize and prepare for approaching storms.