Skip date selector
Skip to beginning of date selector
October 2025
November 2025
December 2025
January 2026
Thursday, December 4, 2025
- All dayExhibit NOW in IMES E25-310, from May 23 onward! Stop by to visit and learn more!
- 1:00 AM1hWomen's Soccer vs. Clark UniversityTime: 7:00 PMLocation: Worcester, MA
- 1:00 AM1hWomen's Volleyball vs. Emerson CollegeTime: 6:00 PMLocation: Cambridge, MA
- 10:00 AM6hInk, Stone, and Silver Light: A Century of Cultural Heritage Preservation in AleppoOn view October 1 -- December 11, 2025This exhibition draws on archival materials from the Aga Khan Documentation Center at MIT (AKDC) to explore a century of cultural heritage preservation in Aleppo, Syria. It takes as its point of departure the work of Kamil al-Ghazzi (1853–1933), the pioneering Aleppine historian whose influential three-volume chronicle, Nahr al-Dhahab fī Tārīkh Ḥalab (The River of Gold in the History of Aleppo), was published between 1924 and 1926.Ink, Stone, and Silver Light presents three modes of documentation—manuscript, built form, and photography—through which Aleppo’s urban memory has been recorded and preserved. Featuring figures such as Michel Écochard and Yasser Tabbaa alongside al-Ghazzi, the exhibition traces overlapping efforts to capture the spirit of a city shaped by commerce, craft, and coexistence. At a time when Syria again confronts upheaval and displacement, these archival fragments offer models for preserving the past while envisioning futures rooted in dignity, knowledge, and place.
- 12:00 PM1h 30mFaculty Job Search Series (FJSS): Negotiating your job offerYou've got the offer! Learn what are common components of a faculty job offer and reflect on what elements you might consider negotiating. Determine how to quantify and explain your needs when you provide a counter-offer, and we will leave time for Q&A to answer your questions.This CAPD event is open to MIT PhD & postdoctoral scholars. Registration is required for this event. Please register here.
- 2:45 PM15mMIT@2:50 - Ten Minutes for Your MindTen minutes for your mind@2:50 every day at 2:50 pm in multiple time zones:Europa@2:50, EET, Athens, Helsinki (UTC+2) (7:50 am EST) https://us02web.zoom.us/j/88298032734Atlantica@2:50, EST, New York, Toronto (UTC-4) https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85349851047Pacifica@2:50, PST, Los Angeles, Vancouver (UTC=7) (5:50 pm EST) https://us02web.zoom.us/j/85743543699Almost everything works better again if you unplug it for a bit, including your mind. Stop by and unplug. Get the benefits of mindfulness without the fuss.@2:50 meets at the same time every single day for ten minutes of quiet together.No pre-requisite, no registration needed.Visit the website to view all @2:50 time zones each day.at250.org or at250.mit.edu
- 3:00 PM2hSuperUROP Poster ShowcasePrepare to be amazed. This fall, our undergraduate researchers have been hard at work: asking questions, designing research experiments, and gathering data. Join us at the SuperUROP Showcase to see what these imaginative students have accomplished so far. Hosted by MIT’s Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, this event will offer refreshments and the opportunity to tour the poster session and network with these emerging researchers. Mark your calendar to join us and please forward this invitation to any interested co-workers; we’re looking forward to seeing you.Register Here
- 4:00 PM1hColloquium on the Brain and Cognition with Surya GanguliTalk Title: TBDAbstract: TBDBio: TBDFollowed by a reception with food and drink in 3rd floor atrium
- 4:00 PM1h 30mTBAWeijie Zhong Stanford University
- 4:15 PM1hFall 2025 ORC Seminar SeriesA series of talks on OR-related topics. For more information see: https://orc.mit.edu/seminars-events/
- 4:15 PM1hHarvard-MIT Inorganic Seminar with Professor Amy Prieto (Colorado State University),
- 5:30 PM1h 30mQueer Career: Sexuality and Work in Modern AmericaWorkplaces have traditionally been viewed as “straight spaces” in which queer people passed. As a result, historians have directed limited attention to the experiences of queer people on the job. Queer Career rectifies this, offering an expansive historical look at sexual minorities in the modern American workforce. Arguing that queer workers were more visible than hidden and, against the backdrop of state aggression, vulnerable to employer exploitation, Prof. Margot Canaday positions employment and fear of job loss as central to gay life in postwar America.
- 6:00 PM2hMeditation at MIT ChapelSilent Meditation in the Chapel on Thursdays 6-8pm, open to everyone in the MIT Community. Some sessions include Guided Meditation at 6:30pm.