Highlights from the MIT Sloan Women's Conference
On the same day the MIT Corporation named Sally Kornbluth as the Institute’s 18th president, the long-awaited MIT Sloan Women’s Conference commenced in Cambridge.
On the same day the MIT Corporation named Sally Kornbluth as the Institute’s 18th president, the long-awaited MIT Sloan Women’s Conference commenced in Cambridge.
From designing and creating environmentally sound materials to fostering connections between organizations and inclusivity experts, ventures founded and managed by MIT and MIT Sloan alumnae are making positive impacts on the world.
Many of the MIT alumni who created the TravlerPack sleeping bag for Syrian refugees, including Sloanie Vick Liu, SB ’20, will return to campus for a special in-person ceremony celebrating the Classes of 2020 and 2021.
Although the chief mission of MIT Sloan is to develop principled, innovative leaders who improve the world, entrepreneurship and innovation play a significant part in this equation.
Thomas J. Allen, SM ’63, PhD ’66, a beloved member of the MIT Sloan community for more than half a century, died November 13 after a brief illness. He was 89.
Nearly 300 MIT alumnae gathered in Boston for the 2025 MIT Women’s Conference.
MIT Sloan alumni across programs and class years were recognized by the MIT Alumni Association for their service to the Institute.
Through the PKG Public Service Center’s social impact internships, MIT students like Salomé Otero, SB ’23, leverage their analytical, technical, and creative problem-solving skills for public good.
Analytics, production/operations management, and quantitative analysis/methods took the top spots.
Ayomikun “Ayo” Ayodeji, SB ’22, will begin postgraduate studies at Oxford University next fall.