Keynote speaker Christiane Amanpour honors Barnard's graduating seniors, alongside the College, family, and friends.
Barnard College News
The graduating athlete looks back on some of her favorite memories as a member of the Columbia Women’s Rowing Team.
For eight years, the Donald E. Axinn Foundation/Anna Quindlen prize has been awarded yearly to a graduating senior, who receives $25,000 to support her creative writing.
The two graduating seniors were each recognized with a $5,000 prize for their high standards of scholarship in Jewish studies.
Finally on campus after a remote fall semester, the Clifton, N.J., native shares one of her free days of fun exploring the City.
On National Student-Athlete Day (April 6), the Barnard athlete looks back on the connections and skills built during her time on Columbia’s women’s rowing team.
Three students have shared their Barnard journeys since they first arrived on campus four years ago. Here, the graduating seniors close out their college experience with one final look back.
In preparation of her campus-wide Accessibility Week workshop — “Ableism in the Classroom, Academia, and Society” — the urban studies major and Speaking Fellow explains why accessibility is everyone’s fight.
A year after COVID-19 became a national emergency, a campus-run project to monitor coronavirus in wastewater is part of a multi-pronged effort to keep the community safe during the pandemic.
Since last Women’s History Month (March) — over the course of a challenging year — alumnae, faculty, and students still stepped up as game-changers.
The sophomore joined an international body of fellows in designing community-oriented social campaigns for a sustainable future.
Asha Futterman ’21 reflects on her three-year journey with the Barnard Center for Research on Women, including her Reading the Black Library Youth Fellowship with the Rebuild Foundation.
The College welcomed students back to campus for the spring semester through a modified check-in process and new guidelines for residential living during the COVID-19 pandemic.
As the pandemic disrupted traditional internships and in-person work, Barnard students and alumnae discovered new professional opportunities.
The Barnard student shares her day of online courses, family time, and coffee runs.
Lena Harris ’22, Eve Kausch ’18, and Denise Mantey ’21 talk through their research on how to reenvision campus safety.
Logging in from Kennesaw, Georgia, McNeal offers a peek into her first day at Barnard as she moved through meetings and classes.
Professor of political science Michael G. Miller responds to students’ questions about all things voting in 2020.
New students in Beijing and Paris met with Barnard community members to celebrate NSOP week.
Award-winning author and keynote speaker Suki Kim ’92 returned to Barnard to welcome the community and officially open the College’s 131st academic year.