IWER Research Seminar Series
IWER hosts a weekly seminar on Tuesdays during the academic year. One of the longest-running seminar series at MIT, it features presentations by work and employment researchers from around the world.
IWER hosts a weekly seminar on Tuesdays during the academic year. One of the longest-running seminar series at MIT, it features presentations by work and employment researchers from around the world.
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A panel of practitioners explores how to solve worker shortages and offers three best practices for success.
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Machine learning is a powerful form of artificial intelligence that is affecting every industry. Here’s what you need to know about its potential and limitations and how it’s being used.
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‘Those ad-hoc interactions are what people miss in today’s work-from-home environment.’
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The initiative is open to individuals, businesses and groups with the goal of developing a diverse, global community of problem solvers.
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Generative artificial intelligence can help designers come up with new ideas, according to a new study.
We are a small but mighty team dedicated to helping MIT students develop as dynamic leaders equipped to collaborate with others to solve the world’s most pressing problems.
Leadership at MIT is not a title or a person. It’s a process. We begin with self-awareness and combine science-based frameworks, personalized coaching, and practical applications to develop leaders.
Here, leadership is not a title or a person. It’s a process. We begin with self-awareness, then combine science-based frameworks, personalized coaching, and practical applications to develop leaders.
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How to women in low-wage service-sector jobs respond to unemployment? That's a question Claire C. McKenna explored in her recent doctoral dissertation in the MIT Institute for Work and Employment Research (IWER) PhD program.