The Department of Biological Sciences treats the life sciences in all their breadth and diversity, including the study of molecules, cells, whole organisms, ecosystems, plants, animals and ...
When Professor of Government Howard Gold taught his Elections in the Political Order class first thing on Wednesday morning ...
A quarterly collection of stuff we love from students, staff, faculty, and alums In Stephanie Dray ’93’s historical fiction novel Becoming Madam Secretary (2024), readers are introduced to heroine ...
Hélène Visentin, associate dean of the faculty and dean for academic development and professor of French studies, is the ...
The presidential portrait of Kathleen McCartney, Smith’s ninth president, was recently unveiled ...
That realization inspired her to start the National Voter Corps.
Celebrate the opening of Kirk Maynard's latest exhibition, Profiles, at our opening reception. This event is free and open to the public. Kirk Maynard is an artist and educator who is originally from ...
How do we reimagine what it will take, personally and collectively, to call a more just world into being? How can we nurture the conditions for joyful belonging and beloved community? How do we adapt ...
This talk highlights new research into deeply-rooted Indigenous histories in Vermont and New Hampshire, a region collectively known to Abenaki people as Ndakinna (“our homeland”). The seasonal and ...
When the U.S. Supreme Court ruled last year that colleges could no longer consider racial classification as a factor in student admission decisions, leaders of Smith’s Office of Admission were ...
Please join us for a robust conversation around election data and voter engagement with alum Victoria Tse '20. Victoria is the Outreach and Data Analysis Specialist for the National Study of Learning, ...
Tuesday, January 14 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Embedded in the question-title of this project—the slow—is a reminder about what is hidden in the critical term “fast fashion.” What is slow are the complex ...