Learn about alumnae and students — from the Class of 2014 to the Class of 2024 — who are working across disciplines to improve society with creativity and innovation.
Barnard College News
A new festival from Barnard’s Movement Lab invited an exploration of what it means to live and make art at a time of rapidly evolving technology.
Sofia Rojas ’27 and Victoria Wilson ’26 will participate in an eight-week program, combining academic study and real-world work experience in Dublin, Ireland — making Barnard the only college to have two students awarded.
Read how the storyteller — whose film will screen at this year's Athena Film Festival — seeks to empower the disability community through authentic cinema inspired by personal experience.
Abby Sullivan ’25, an art history major, solved a mystery of the past with Louis Lang’s 1871 Art Students painting — helping to deepen the art world’s connection to the painter.
The épée fencer returns for a new semester ready to set the stage — or piste — for success.
Whether they’re from Kansas or Miami, these seven students have one thing in common — they know how to spend the holiday season in NYC, the most festive city in the world.
Barnard’s bees offer a bit o’ honey for the College’s students, faculty, and staff.
A curated list of some of the College’s most exciting moments from this year.
The Beckman Scholar is dedicated to studying the brain’s artful compositions, in between making music and rugby plays.
Avigail Greenberg ’25 — a political science major and environmental science minor — shines a light on renewable energy systems in Africa for a road map to a sustainable future.
In Introduction to Neuroscience, students wrap their heads around the “final frontier” — the human brain.
One of the College’s most unique traditions returned with a whopping 850-foot-long chain of sandwiches.
How Millie’s Thanksgiving Homestay Program fosters community among students who remain in NYC for the holiday and alumnae who are eager to host them.
In the run-up to the College’s celebration, students reflect on what it means to be the first in their families to attend college — with passion, pride, and music.
Eliana Steele ’26, a Laidlaw Scholar and linguistics major, researches language engineering — a method to restore Indigenous oral cultures, histories, and identity.
The College launches its theatre season with a Shakespeare comedy that challenges notions of love and gender.
Senior Nayla Delgado ’24 celebrates Hispanic identity with a collection that centers Hispanic, Latinx, and Spanish-speaking voices.
The educational studies and human rights double major will leverage the prize to pursue her mission to improve public education and uplift women in Central Asia.
For National Women’s Health and Fitness Day (September 27), discover how this student-athlete takes care of her mind and body when fencing.