
Four alumnae represent the College the 2024 Summer Olympics.
Barnard is one of the first among its peers to make technology education a requirement for all students.
We’re creating a model for colleges across the country by piloting innovative programs and setting the standard for campus sustainability.
I came to Barnard to be part of a community of passionate and intelligent women. I left with great friendships and a confidence that's uniquely Barnard.
Four alumnae represent the College the 2024 Summer Olympics.
Seattle Opera’s first-ever scholar-in-residence, Naomi André ’89, shares how being at Barnard primed her for a trailblazing career.
The Jewish Theological Seminary’s first female chancellor discusses the impact that Barnard had on her career and her vision for JTS’s future.
At Barnard, smart, accomplished women are your professors and deans, the College leadership, and your advisors — and they all want you to succeed. A Barnard education instills a deep sense of confidence that you’ll take into the world, just like our many noteworthy alumnae.
As Spelman College’s 11th president, Dr. Helene Gayle ’76 builds on her success as a leader in global health to nurture the next generation of Black women.
For 32 years, Sharon Kleinbaum ’81 oversaw the world’s largest LGBTQ+ synagogue and transformed the Congregation Beit Simchat Torah (CBST).
Ann Barker ’50, novelist turned activist, teaches at-risk children in her community in a dangerous region in Chiapas, Mexico.