Dear Colleagues, A resource available primarily for term faculty that you may want to consider for fall 2019 is a Presidential Leave. A special leave allows a faculty member to accept an exigent and extraordinary … Continue Reading Applications for Fall 2019 Presidential Leave Available
There are no physical, written or oral tests to be Griff, Emerson College’s mascot lion. You just need a desire to jump around, entertain and have fun with the crowd.
Dear Emerson community, I am writing to share with you that a Memorial Funeral Mass will be held for Lucas Flint ’20 on Friday, December 28 at 10:30 a.m. at Saint Francis of Assisi Church, … Continue Reading Memorial Funeral Mass for Lucas Flint ’20
Yes, we all know it’s sunny. And warm. There is a crazy amount of traffic. But what else do Emersonians wished they had known before they attended Emerson Los Angeles?
It is with great sadness that I write to let you know that Lucas Flint, ’20 from Braintree, MA, died yesterday, surrounded by his loving family. Lucas was fatally hit by an automobile as he was walking to his home in Braintree, MA.
The first full semester for Emerson College’s new dining services company, Bon Appetit, featured sweet successes with a focus on offering varied meals and locally grown produce.
Dear Faculty: Emerson College is now applications for the 2019 Presidential Fund for Curricular Innovation (PFCI) Internationalization and Inclusion Studio. The Studio will support projects devoted to internationalization of the curriculum, … Continue Reading Presidential Fund for Curricular Innovation: Internationalization and Inclusion — Now Accepting Applications
Writing, Literature and Publishing MFA student Porsha Olayiwola was named Boston’s newest Poet Laureate and will begin the post on January 1. Olayiwola is the artistic director at MassLEAP, a … Continue Reading MFA Student and Next Boston Poet Laureate Porsha Olayiwola Speaks to WBUR
Writing, Literature and Publishing MFA student Porsha Olayiwola has been named Boston’s next Poet Laureate, WBUR is reporting.
Despite increased media coverage of police brutality, there is a lack of empirical research on its mental health effects. Helping to change all that is Communication Studies faculty member Deion Hawkins.