Studying culture, disease and health in Canada
Paust will use her Fulbright fellowship to study how the novel coronavirus has impacted Indigenous populations in Canada.
- Featuring
-
Sarah Paust ’20
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.
Paust will use her Fulbright fellowship to study how the novel coronavirus has impacted Indigenous populations in Canada.
Donari Yahzid ’19 was awarded a Fulbright grant to study the effects of development on traditional culture in Samoa.
鶹ý helped prepare them to lead, say congresswoman Nita Lowey ’59 and Deborah Frank Feinen ’89, mayor of Champaign, Illinois.
At the University of Nebraska Medical Center, Mount Holyoke alumna Eleanor Rogan ‘63 chairs a department doing urgent COVID-19 research.
“Mount Holyoke has pushed me to be comfortable with being uncomfortable. I’ve gained understanding and appreciation for people who see things differently.”
Mount Holyoke has named Ana Yankova ’97 its inaugural chief investment officer. She will report to President Sonya Stephens and work with the Trustees.
Emma Wolff ’21 shares the story of how she came to the decision to double major in international relations and computer science.
We celebrate Mount Holyoke women who have made their mark since the College’s founding — by a woman! — in 1837.
Mahua Moitra ’98 talked about her gratitude for Mount Holyoke and how students should be prepared to lead in a time of rising worldwide nationalism.
Lexi discusses how attendance at a psychology lecture as a first-year student prompted her to suggest an experiment to Mara Breen, associate professor of psychology and education and to become part of a research team.