Graduate students

  • Campus kicks off new school year with big, warm welcome

    Campus kicks off new school year with big, warm welcome

    University welcomes 590 first-year and 51 transfer students, 388 new graduate students, and nine new tenure-track faculty

  • Stefanie Covino battles climate change one town at a time

    Stefanie Covino battles climate change one town at a time

    Severe storms. Flooding. Drought. Erosion. Devastated communities struggling to rebuild. These doomsday headlines have become all too common, sweeping the news on a daily basis. In the face of climate change, communities are struggling with competing priorities and have difficulty focusing on climate resilience and conservation. The stakes are high. On the front lines of…

  • Students receive Fulbright fellowships, other awards for postgraduate work and study

    Students receive Fulbright fellowships, other awards for postgraduate work and study

    Three Clark University doctoral candidates and two recent graduates received prestigious fellowships from the Fulbright U.S. Student Program and other programs to fund their postgraduate research, teaching, and study abroad. “At Clark we have a long-standing success in receiving Fulbright fellowships and other competitive awards. It reflects our tremendous strengths in graduate and undergraduate education, and…

  • Clark’s business analytics program opens a world of opportunity for recent graduate

    Clark’s business analytics program opens a world of opportunity for recent graduate

    Thanks to the Clark University Graduate School of Management master’s in business analytics (MSBA) program, Shibbir Khan, M.S. ’18, has not only kept abreast of the latest information technologies, he’s also expanded his career contacts at multinational enterprises like The Walt Disney Company and Bank of America. Now those career contacts have paid off. Less than a month after graduation, Khan already had a job offer,…

  • Clark HERO Fellows work to green Massachusetts’ Gateway Cities

    Clark HERO Fellows work to green Massachusetts’ Gateway Cities

    Massachusetts’ Gateway Cities sport architectural reminders of their once-bustling industrial past: factories, warehouses, and ubiquitous triple-deckers, all built close to the street. What’s often missing from this picture? Trees. This summer, six Clark University undergraduate researchers have joined a multi-agency effort to increase the tree canopy to these 26 small- to mid-sized Gateway Cities, bringing cooling shade…

  • Biology doctoral student wins prestigious NSF fellowship

    Biology doctoral student wins prestigious NSF fellowship

    Emily Dart, a first-year doctoral student in biology at Clark University, has won a National Science Foundation (NSF) Graduate Research Fellowship, making her one of only 2,000 students, out of 12,000 who applied, to receive the prestigious award this year. The NSF Graduate Research Fellowship Program (GRFP) recognizes and supports outstanding graduate students in NSF-supported science, technology, engineering, and…

  • Study raises concerns about safety of drinking water drawn from aquifers

    Study raises concerns about safety of drinking water drawn from aquifers

    Findings in Holliston 'have national and global significance for aquifer protection and human health,' researchers say

  • Clark recognized as one of ‘Most Promising Places to Work in Student Affairs’

    Clark recognized as one of ‘Most Promising Places to Work in Student Affairs’

    Clark University has been recognized as one of the “Most Promising Places to Work in Student Affairs” (MPPWSA) by the ACPA-College Student Educators International and Diverse: Issues in Higher Education. This national award celebrates student affairs workplaces that are vibrant, diverse, supportive, and committed to staff work-life balance, professional development, and inclusive excellence. MPPWSA offers institutional leaders information that…

  • $450,000 NIH grant funds Clark protein research

    $450,000 NIH grant funds Clark protein research

    Professor Spratt and his research team of students aim to better understand biochemical roots of cancer, Ebola and other medical issues