Third cohort of MHC Beckman Scholars named
Mount Holyoke College students Kelly Aja ’27 and Kimberly Dominguez ’27 have been selected for the Beckman Scholars Program through a competitive application process.
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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Mount Holyoke College students Kelly Aja ’27 and Kimberly Dominguez ’27 have been selected for the Beckman Scholars Program through a competitive application process.
The Phoenix, once a neglected outbuilding on the Mount Holyoke College campus, has been transformed into an environmentally conscious studio space thanks to a team of faculty and student research assistants.
Mount Holyoke College has selected “Parable of the Sower” for its Common Read for the 2025–2026 academic year. The New York Times named the novel a Notable Book of the Year for its prescient treatment of racial justice, climate collapse and fascism.
Mount Holyoke College Andrew W. Mellon Professor of Philosophy James Harold spoke to Yahoo News about the age-old question of the possibility of separating the art from the artist.
Mount Holyoke College faculty and administrators spoke to Bloomberg about how the federal government’s recent actions might affect international students and campus life.
Mount Holyoke College’s Ruth Lawson Professor of Politics and Carol Hoffmann Collins Director of the McCulloch Center for Global Initiatives Kavita Khory spoke to CNN and The Boston Globe about the threatened revocation of Chinese students’ visas.
Mount Holyoke College student Nima Maxamuud ’27 talks about her journey toward a greater understanding of intergroup dialogue as a discipline and a tool for change.
MassLive reported on Mount Holyoke College students’ work in tracing climate change through the campus’s beloved copper beech tree.
Senior Jen Butler ’25 looks back at their time at Mount Holyoke College in the laboratory of Associate Professor of Biological Sciences Amy Hitchcock Camp.
Arie Shaus, visiting assistant professor in data science at Mount Holyoke College, is a coauthor of a new study that examines the genetic diversity of the ancient Punic people.