How to tell the story of American racism? Alabama’s Legacy Sites offer ‘powerful’ approach
Students studying the intersections of art and racial justice traveled to Montgomery this semester.
Hoekstra provides update on Ph.D. fellowships at final convening of the academic year
Faculty discussed at length proposed changes to the undergraduate grading policy for a final time at Tuesday’s Meeting of the Faculty, a week before voting begins.
When the emailed ballot opens on May 12, faculty will have seven days to weigh in on three separate questions related to grading reform efforts: capping A grades to 20 percent plus four of students in a class; using an internal “average percentile rank” metric to determine honors and awards; and a satisfactory-plus option for instructors who opt out of letter grading. Any new policy adopted — voting results will be announced May 20 — will go into effect at the beginning of the 2027-28 academic year and will be reviewed after three years.
Said Alisha Holland, Gates Professor of Developing Societies in the Department of Government and a member of the Undergraduate Education Policy Committee’s Subcommittee on Grading: “We have a faculty proposal that has learned from other experiences and been debated, amended, and refined through months of genuine campus deliberation. The proposal needs to keep evolving — that’s what next year’s implementation work and the call for a review after only three years are for. But for once, the question isn’t whether Harvard is going to follow someone else’s lead. The question is whether we’re going to take our own.”
Edgerley Family Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences Hopi Hoekstra again moved the meeting from the Faculty Room in University Hall to the Science Center to accommodate the large number of faculty engaged in the discussion of the grading proposal. She opened with gratitude for her colleagues’ work across the FAS and the University in a challenging financial time.
“With the benefit of the expertise, experience, and commitment of many, many colleagues, we are making steady progress. And are beginning to see the early results of our efforts,” she noted.
Hoekstra also said Ph.D. admissions are “now on track to increase next year,” and a recent fundraising effort to expand graduate student fellowships is three-quarters of the way to meeting its $100 million goal before the end of June. She also cited new efforts to engage the Provost’s office for approval to launch select new faculty searches across the FAS academic divisions and in SEAS.
“This is hard work,” she said. “But the goal is clear: to put FAS on a stronger foundation – one that allows us to plan with confidence, to pursue knowledge with ambition, and to secure our academic mission for the long term.”
Faculty voted in favor of piloting the Shared Language Initiative (SCI), a collaboration with Columbia University that will provide access to instruction in Less Commonly Taught Languages that could include Uyghur, Chaghatay, Twi, Igbo, Amharic, Punjabi, Finnish or Dutch. The initiative, lauded by Dean of Arts and Humanities Sean Kelly and Mark C. Elliott, Mark Schwartz Professor of Chinese and Inner Asian History and Vice Provost for International Affairs, will launch July 1 and be reviewed in two years.
Harvard College professorships are awarded for excellence in undergraduate teaching and for helping students “develop their intellectual passions.”
Daniel Carpenter
Allie S. Freed Professor of Government
Jeff W. Lichtman
Jeremy R. Knowles Professor of Molecular and Cellular Biology
Santiago Ramón y Cajal Professor of Arts and Sciences
Hannah Marcus
Professor of the History of Science
Samantha Matherne
Professor of Philosophy
Ariel Procaccia
Alfred and Rebecca Lin Professor of Computer Science
Established by a gift from Edward Abramson ’57 and awarded for excellence in undergraduate teaching
Gage Hills
Associate Professor of Engineering
Julia Mundy
John L. Loeb Professor of the Natural Sciences and of Engineering and Applied Sciences
Annette Gordon-Reed, Carl M. Loeb University Professor, presented a Research Minute on her groundbreaking research on Thomas Jefferson. The 2008 Pulitzer Prize-winning author of “The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family,” who also serves on the Harvard Law School faculty, reflected on the decades-long fascination with the complicated character of the author of the Declaration of Independence who kept hundreds of slaves, whom she first learned about in third grade. Her latest book, “Jefferson on Race: A Reader,” published last month.
“Annette’s work brings history and law into conversation, offering new ways to understand familiar figures and events, and pressing us to look more closely at the principles and contradictions at our nation’s start,” said Hoekstra. “Her scholarship has reshaped how we understand early America, including the people and perspectives too often left out of the story.
“Her work reminds us that the past is not just something we inherit — it’s something we interpret,” she added.
Earlier in the meeting, Memorial Minutes were read for three faculty. The life of the late Akira Iriye, Charles Warren Professor of American History, Emeritus, was read by Erez Manela, Francis Lee Higginson Professor of History. The life of Martin Karplus, Theodore William Richards Professor of Chemistry, Emeritus, was presented by Xiaowei Zhuang, David B. Arnold, Jr., Professor of Science. And Dennis Frank Thompson, Alfred North Whitehead Professor of Political Philosophy, was read by Eric Beerbohm, Alfred and Rebecca Lin Professor of Government.
For excellence in undergraduate teaching, awarded by the Harvard Undergraduate Association
Jason Mitchell
Professor of Psychology
Andrew Murray
Harvard College Professor
Herchel Smith Professor of Molecular Genetics
Director of the Rowland Institute at Harvard
Established by the Harvard Griffin Graduate Student Council
Katrina Forrester
John L. Loeb Professor of the Social Sciences
Andrew Gordon
Lee and Juliet Folger Fund Professor of History
Patrick Slade
Assistant Professor of Bioengineering
Quinn White
Assistant Professor of Philosophy
Given to faculty in honor of their outstanding contributions to their fields
Sven Beckert
Laird Bell Professor of History
Stephanie Burt
Donald P. and Katherine B. Locker Professor of English
John Campbell
Morton L. and Carole S. Olshan Professor of Economics
Joyce Chaplin
James Duncan Phillips Professor of Early American History
Christina Cross
Associate Professor of Sociology
Luis Girón Negrón
William R. Kenan Jr. Professor of Comparative Literature and of Romance Languages and Literatures
Stephen Greenblatt
John Cogan University Professor of the Humanities
Daria Khitrova
Associate Professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures
Rebecca Lemov
Professor of the History of Science
Alejandro Madrid
Walter M. Naumberg Professor of Music
Orlando Patterson
John Cowles Professor of Sociology
Vidyan Ravinthiran
Gardner Cowles Associate Professor of the Humanities
Dan Smail
Frank B. Baird Jr. Professor of History
A number of faculty were recently awarded an extra term of paid sabbatical leave in recognition of their dedication to the FAS and the University.
Ann M. Blair
Carl H. Pforzheimer University Professor
Randy Buckner
Sosland Family Professor of Psychology and of Neuroscience
Glenda Carpio
Powell M. Cabot Professor of English and Professor of African and African American Studies
Suzannah Clark
Morton B. Knafel Professor of Music, Director of the Mahindra Humanities Center
Sean Eddy
Ellmore C. Patterson Professor of Molecular and Cellular Biology
Alisha Holland
Gates Professor of Developing Socieities
Philip Kim
Professor of Physics and Applied Physics
Paul Kosmin
Philip J. King Professor of Ancient History
Erez Manela
Francis Lee Higginson Professor of History
Amy Wagers
Forst Family Professor of Stem Cell and Regenerative Biology
John Wakeley
Professor of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology
Students studying the intersections of art and racial justice traveled to Montgomery this semester.
The annual award for teaching excellence, which includes a monetary prize, was established three decades ago with a gift from Edward Abramson ’57 in honor of his mother.
The four-day celebration, organized by the Office for the Arts at Harvard, features music, dance, theater performances, visual art exhibits, and hands-on art activities at venues across campus.