Sira Nassoko ’24 has been awarded a Thomas J. Watson Fellowship for 2024–25 to explore music and soundscapes of the environment to reveal a lineage of hope and resilience across four countries.
Molly MacInnes, assistant professor of chemistry, is developing an innovative silicon purification process for a cleaner, healthier Earth.

Assistant Chief Diversity Officer for Intercultural Student Life Vrinda Varia shares her thoughts on her role at Grinnell and her life in Iowa.

As a professional musician, composer, farmer, and director of the Grinnell Symphony Orchestra, Eric McIntyre’s days are demanding and varied, and that’s exactly how he likes it.

Sanders brings a wealth of experience and expertise to the initiative. The initiative represents a pivotal milestone in our ongoing commitment to fostering collaboration and driving meaningful societal change.

Grinnell College Libraries has access to Adam Matthew's Gender: Identity and Social Change showcasing unique primary source material documenting the changing representations and lived experiences of gender roles and relations from the nineteenth century to the present.

A thriving environmental field station on land that both teaches and inspires.

A new seven-year plan sets a course that will strengthen collaboration and positive change.


Sharon Quinsaat’s book, “Insurgent Communities: How Protests Create a Filipino Diaspora,” looks at how protest allows migrants to form a community that extends across borders.
Dean of Academic Affairs Beronda Montgomery recently announced updates from the Office of the Dean.
The original play ‘Songs of the Scarlet and Wayback’ is a “throwback party turned time travel train ride,” inspired by Poweshiek County community interviews, student archival research, performances, pageants, and parties of Grinnell’s past. The production will officially premiere in the Flanagan Theatre on Friday, March 8, 2024.
The drivers of the Grinnell College Local Shuttle foster connections and enrich experiences for students through their conversations and shared journeys.
Peter-Michael Osera, assistant professor of computer science, gave the 2024 Grinnell Lecture, exploring program synthesis and what automation can reveal to us about the ways we teach and learn.