Events

Series of images from different ODIB events

 

UPCOMING EVENTS

Spring 2025

HUIT and SEAS Present: Embracing Neurodiversity - A Training by The MIND Project

HUIT and SEAS, in collaboration with The MIND Project, are proud to present a neurodiversity training session on Wednesday, January 22 from 11:00AM - 12:00PM EST!

Neurodiversity recognizes the wide range of ways people perceive, think about, and interact with the world around them. This concept encompasses all individuals whose cognitive processing diverges from what is considered typical. At Harvard, we strive for inclusive excellence. Given that we work alongside neurodivergent staff, students, and faculty, it is essential to cultivate an understanding of their unique perspectives and needs, reduce barriers, and build an environment that enables them to thrive. This training session will equip participants with the knowledge and skills necessary to better understand neurodivergent individuals and foster an inclusive, supportive environment for all. 

 

SIGNATURE EVENTS

BRIDGE Week

Building Relationships, Increasing Diversity, and Growing Engineers

BRIDGE Week is an annual event to recognize the importance of diversity in STEM, discuss current challenges, and learn how to foster a safe and welcoming STEM environment for all backgrounds and identities. This initiative started 2018 as a collaboration between the National Society of Black Engineers, Society of Women Engineers, and the Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers. The BRIDGE Banquet is the cornerstone event of the week. Student leaders select a SEAS alum that has made an impact on society and paved the way for future generations of engineers. To submit ideas for future BRIDGE Week events or honorees, contact diversity@seas.harvard.edu.

Check out previous iterations of the event here.

Ivy Collective for Inclusion in Engineering Doctoral Symposium

The Ivy Collective for Inclusion in Engineering Doctoral Symposium is a place for doctoral students in engineering to benefit from the rich exchange of personal experiences aimed at propelling the future of engineering towards greater inclusion.

The symposium features panels and presentations curated for Ph.D. students progressing towards degree completion as well as those seeking insights for careers in engineering.

This event is open to all Post-baccalaureate and PhD students in engineering, computer science, and applied sciences at event-affiliated institutions: Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Dartmouth, Harvard, MIT, UPenn, Princeton, and Yale. 

Check out previous iterations of the event here.

Beyond Western Approaches Symposium

Beyond Western Approaches: Recognizing Indigenous Traditions in Engineering

Harvard SEAS Office for Diversity Inclusion and Belonging invites you to join us for the symposium Beyond Western Approaches: Recognizing Indigenous Traditions in Engineering. The symposium invites us to expand the canon in STEM by exploring how Indigenous communities contribute to creating knowledge in engineering and applied sciences through new data, novel solutions, and culturally embedded frameworks for research design, interpretation, and application.

Check out previous iterations of the event here.

PAST EVENTS

AY 23-24

Fall 2023 Events

Inclusive Pedagogy Session for TFs and CAs

August 29 | 11 am - 12:30 pm | SEC

In this session, we will critically examine how your teaching engages a diversity of students, and apply strategies for cultivating equity and belonging in learning environments. This session is intended for CA's and TFs with appointments at SEAS in Applied Math, BioE, EE, ESE, MechE, ES.


Inclusive Pedagogy Session for TFs and CAs

September 18 | 4 - 5:30 pm | Zoom

In this session, we will critically examine how your teaching engages a diversity of students, and apply strategies for cultivating equity and belonging in learning environments. This session is intended for CA's and TFs with appointments at SEAS in Applied Math, BioE, EE, ESE, MechE, ES.


Virtual Area Networking Event: Computer Science, Applied Mathematics, Electrical Engineering

October 11 | 5:30 - 7 pm | Zoom


Accessibility by Design: A Teach-in on Disability for the SEAS Community

Luncheon Keynote with Dr. Rory Cooper

October 19 | 11:45 am – 1 pm | In-person and Zoom

Accessibility by Design: A Teach-in on Disability for the SEAS Community is a two-day event series designed to support our community learning goal of Exploring Universal Design for Accessibility and Inclusion. Through these opportunities, SEAS community members can share in experiences that support growth around Diversity, Inclusion, and Belonging. 


Crip Camp: A Disability Revolution Screening by UDR

October 19 | 5:30 – 8 pm | In-person and Zoom


Disability Inclusion Training by UDR

October 20 | 10 – 11 am | Zoom

According to the most recent census report, approximately 56 million (1 in 5) Americans has a disability. This session will provide a foundation of information for inclusion of individuals with disabilities at Harvard.  

University Disability Resources staff will discuss common barriers, such as environmental and unconscious bias, that individuals with disabilities often encounter.  We will cover basic etiquette as well as detailed information that apply to people with various visible and invisible disabilities.  An introduction to best practices for language usage, digital accessibility and hosting accessible events will be presented. 

Participants of this training will apply key concepts to their work with individuals with disabilities and will be taking an actionable step that indicates cultural awareness.


DIB Fellows’ Disability Access Tabling

October 20 | 12-2 pm | Maxwell Dworkin Lobby and SEC Lobby


Global Community Training for Returning Graduate and Post-baccalaureate Students

October 24 | 12:30 - 1:30 pm | In-person

This session is designed to provide an introduction to and vocabulary around topics related to race and gender for all SEAS graduate students, including those long established in the U.S., as well as our thriving international student community. Students are exposed to research and engage in discussions about the role race and gender play in America and within STEM fields.

[Open to returning SEAS graduate and Post-baccalaureate students]


Ivy Collective for Inclusivity: Launching and Pursuing Your Academic Job Search

November 2 | 5:00 - 6:30 pm | Zoom

The event explores navigating the academic search process through panel discussions with diverse early- and mid-career faculty focused on launching and pursuing successful search and breakout sessions with senior graduate students to support peer-to-peer dialog. Its goal is to uncover the hidden curriculum of searching for academic jobs. Attendees will engage with graduate students and faculty at other Ivy institutions.

[Open to current SEAS Ph.D. Students]

AY 22-23

Spring 2023 Events

Campus Climate Data Walk

February 6 | 5:30 pm | Boylston Hall, Ticknor Lounge (Cambridge)

Participants will engage in a Data Walk as we creatively engage key findings from 2022's DIB campus climate survey. Dinner will be provided.

Register


Lunch Break Seminar Series: Evelyn Hu

February 8 | 11:30 am - 12:30 pm | SEC 2.122

Speakers at this series will not only share their own exciting research, but also their story about how they grew interested in pursuing science. Evelyn Hu is the Torr-Coyne Professor of Applied Sciences and Electrical Engineering at SEAS and a co-director of the Harvard Quantum Initiative. Her research involves the study of nanoscale photonic devices demonstrating exceptional efficiencies, which hold promise for new quantum information technologies. Lunch from Dumpling House will be provided to the first 25 registrants.

Register


SEAS Affinity Group Luncheon

February 17 | 11:30 am - 12:30 pm | SEC 6.301 & 6.302

The purpose of this luncheon is to create a space for students leaders to meet the leaders of other student clubs on campus and to meet the team from the Office of Diversity, Inclusion and Belonging. This will be an opportunity to learn how the DIB Office can support each club's members and events, as well as a chance to form relationships with other student leaders for the purpose of cross-club collaboration on future events.

Register


Harvard and the Legacy of Slavery Facilitated Conversation

Postponed from Feb. 17 | New Date TBD 

Participants will explore ethical dilemmas raised by the legacy of slavery at Harvard and reflect on the University’s and on their own roles and responsibilities in teaching or learning about this legacy.


SEAS Graduate School Open House: Pre-Event Dinner

March 2 | 6 - 8 pm


SEAS Graduate School Open House: DIB Presentation

March 3 | 9 - 11 am


SEAS Graduate School Open House: DIB Office Hours

March 3 | 3:30 - 4:30 pm | Maxwell-Dworkin 133 | SEC 1.304

Want to know more about Diversity, Inclusion, and Belonging at SEAS? Stop by to meet the DIB Office in either Maxwell-Dworkin (Cambridge) or the SEC (Allston).


Lunch Break Seminar Series: Markita Landry

March 8 | 11 - 12:30 pm | SEC 4.307 & SEC 4.308

Speakers at this series will not only share their own exciting research, but also their story about how they grew interested in pursuing science. Markita Landry is an associate professor in the department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at UC Berkeley. She received her PhD in Chemical Physics and a certificate in Business Administration from the University of Illinois at Urbana - Champaign and completed a NSF postdoctoral fellowship in Chemical Engineering at MIT.


DIB Fellows Study Break

March 8 | 7:30 - 9:00 pm | Ticknor Lounge

Drop in and join our DIB Fellows for light refreshments and games before Spring Break!


Lunch Break Seminar Series: Latha Venkataraman

March 22 | 11:00 am - 12:15 pm | MD 119

The SEAS DIB Office is excited to announce this week's Lunch Break Seminar! Invited speakers will share their personal background in how they grew interested in pursuing science, followed by discussing exciting research being conducted in their labs. Following each seminar is a catered lunch with foods from the speaker's cuisine of choice. 

Dr. Latha Venkataraman from the department of Applied Physics at Columbia University. Her lab specializes in fabricating and studying single molecule circuits.


BRIDGE Week

April 3 - 7

BRIDGE Week Additional Details


BRIDGE Week: Alumni Panel

April 3 | 12:00 pm - 2:00 pm | Maxwell-Dworkin G125

Join SEAS alumni in this panel about their experiences at Harvard and beyond. Learn from our panelists about their champions and the communities that helped them thrive. Leave with take-aways for your academic and professional careers. 

RSVP


BRIDGE Week: Thesis Celebration

April 4 | 2:30 - 4:30 pm | Maxwell-Dworkin 119

SEAS Seniors will introduce their thesis research topics and the value of thesis writing. Topics include Resources for Research and Writing; a Thesis-Hack-a-Thon; and a Group-Share-Out. 

RSVP


Lunch Break Seminar Series: Bogdan Dragnea

April 5 | 11:00 am - 12:30 pm | SEC 2.122

The SEAS DIB Office is excited to announce this week's Lunch Break Seminar! Invited speakers will share their personal background in how they grew interested in pursuing science, followed by discussing exciting research being conducted in their labs. Following each seminar is a catered lunch with foods from the speaker's cuisine of choice. 

Bogdan Dragnea earned his Diploma in Physics from University of Bucharest in 1992. A Ph.D. scholarship from the French government allowed him to join the laser-matter interactions Physics graduate program at the University of Paris at Orsay. After a postdoc in near-field optics and spectroscopy with Steve Leone at JILA in Boulder, he joined the Chemistry Department at Indiana University Bloomington, in 2001.


BRIDGE Week: Banquet Dinner

April 5 | 6 - 8 pm | SEC 1.402

Please join us for the BRIDGE Week Banquet Dinner to celebrate the SEAS community's work in improving access and inclusion in engineering.

RSVP Required


BRIDGE Week: Student Affinity Group Mixer

April 6 | 6 - 8 pm | SEC LL2 Atrium

Celebrate the end of Bridge Week and your accomplishments this academic year with your peers. Music, food, and conversation. 

RSVP


BRIDGE Week: "Coded Bias" Screening & Discussion

April 7 | 12 - 3pm | SEC 1.321

Released in January, 2020, Coded Bias, explores the fallout of MIT Media Lab researcher Joy Buolamwini's discovery of racial bias in facial recognition algorithms. In this forum, Dr. Buolamwini interrogates biased algorithms, surveillance, and machine learning with DIB Fellow Chepchumba Choge and Edward Alexander.

RSVP 


Ph.D. Focus Group: Campus Climate Survey

April 21 | 3 - 4 pm | Zoom

ODIB is hosting a focus group for Ph.D. students to give honest and constructive feedback on the SEAS experience as a graduate student. The focus group will be moderated by two of the DIB Fellows who are also currently enrolled as Ph.D. students.

RSVP

Harvard University welcomes individuals with disabilities to participate in its programs and activities. If you would like to request accommodations or have questions about the physical access provided, please contact diversity@seas.harvard.edu in advance of your participation or visit. Requests for American Sign Language interpreters and/or CART providers should be made at least two weeks in advance, if possible. Please note that the University will make every effort to secure services, but these services are subject to availability.