Spotlight on popular majors: Neuroscience
Want to change your life and better the lives of your children’s children? Neuroscience and behavior might be the major for you.
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.
Want to change your life and better the lives of your children’s children? Neuroscience and behavior might be the major for you.
Politics is more than just elections. It’s versatile because it intersects with every aspect of society — health, arts, education, food, energy and more.
Sociology majors are interested in core questions about individuals, institutions and global processes — and how they impact the world.
Mount Holyoke senior Sara Sarmiento channeled her service experience and love of politics in a virtual internship with Sen. Elizabeth Warren.
Craig is a superb mentor, welcoming students at all levels, accommodating their schedules, goals and wide range of experience.
Kate is the founding director of Mount Holyoke’s Restoration Ecology Program.
The most famous example of Leah’s transformative pedagogy is Pulitzer and MacArthur-Prize winning playwright, Suzan-Lori Parks ’85, who has repeatedly credited Leah’s teaching with shifting her path from the sciences to literature.
Praust, who won a Fulbright Study grant during her senior year, discusses the conversations being had in academic circles about a researcher’s ethical responsibility.
Mount Holyoke College alum Sadaffe Abid ’95, co-founder of the women’s leadership organization CIRCLE, had her trailblazing instincts nurtured on campus.
Emma Taylor ’20 was awarded for significant contributions as a community assistant for the French Language Floor and as French mentor and the International Student Organizing Committee for outstanding efforts to promote understanding of the great diversity of international cultures, perspectives, and identities, and for supporting students in a moment of crisis.