MoHome from Home By the Numbers
From mid-March through the fall, in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, Mount Holyoke prevailed in its exceptional academic and community offerings.
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.
From mid-March through the fall, in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic, Mount Holyoke prevailed in its exceptional academic and community offerings.
Mount Holyoke College’s Common Read for 2020 will be prose essays from The New York Times Magazine’s ongoing initiative The 1619 Project.
“M&Cs binds us together as a community as we discuss matters related to media, pop culture, economics, politics, current affairs and global issues on the rise. Or even just the weather in Massachusetts!”
Skylar Hou ’22 missed her friends on campus so much she drew them into her photographs.
Members of the class of 2020, who are finishing their last semester at Mount Holyoke, share their four years of experience with incoming first-year students.
First-year students, still in the thick of their college transitions, reflect on what advice they’d give incoming firsties.
In January, Mount Holyoke welcomed spring admits, congratulated professors and student-athletes, and celebrated the community.
November at Mount Holyoke began with Founders Day and ended with snow. In between: field hockey, Gracious Dinner, HackHolyoke, Rachel Maddow and lots more.
Transfer student Anna Braman ’21 remembers her first visit to Mount Holyoke and how a run in with a granite curb led her to discover the warmth and sense of community she was looking for.