STS Undergraduate Fellowship: A University that Works for Us

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Date and Time

April 30, 2026
03:00PM - 04:30PM EDT

Location

Harvard Kennedy School, Darman Seminar Room (Taubman 135)

A University that Works for Us

Panelists

  • Bonnie Talbert, Director of the Harvard Foundation.
  • Simon Torracinta, Lecturer on the History of Science, Department of the History of Science, Harvard University.
  • Haley Griese, PhD Candidate, Harvard Divinity School.
  • William Mao, AB Candidate, Harvard College.
  • Yurui Zi, AB Candidate, Harvard College.

Contact

Henry Austin
henryaustin@hks.harvard.edu

Abstract

As Harvard undergraduates, we face novel challenges. Threats to federal funding for research and graduate training, a precarious and shrinking labor market for college-educated workers and for academic jobs, and new technologies that imitate and diminish human creativity have brought acute turmoil to the core of our intellectual life. There is a growing sense that Harvard, and universities more broadly, must “modernize” to keep pace with these changes. But how do we know what the right modern education would comprise?

Our workshop seeks to put diverse perspectives on the future of the university in conversation through exploring the “work” required to make a university “work”: specifically, academic labor and capital. Debates about the meaning and value of teaching and learning have increasingly been driven by campus labor movements, which are raising new concerns about pressures to incorporate AI into the classroom. At the same time, private capital is ever more deeply invested in the university, exerting influence not only through major donations but also through pre-professional student organizations, the promotion of startup culture on college campuses, and fellowships aimed at supplanting a college education altogether. Still other reactions to the changing university have sought to recover the humanistic dimensions of a liberal arts education. As the traditional structures and supports for academic life grow more precarious, and as alternative visions of intellectual formation proliferate, it is time to articulate an affirmative vision of what the university is for — and the forms of work required to realize it.

This will be the third discussion hosted by the Undergraduate Fellows of the Program on Science, Technology, and Society, following well-received panels on truth and reason in 2024 and AI and education in 2025. A key feature of our workshops has been to gather students, faculty, and staff in conversation, and this year will follow in that tradition. We hope the event will create a space for critical reflection on ongoing changes to the university, how they are experienced across our institution, and what it might mean to resist the framing of such transformations as inevitable. 

Valuing Accessibility

The Weatherhead Center for International Affairs welcomes individuals with disabilities to participate in its programs and activities. If you would like to request accommodations or have questions about the access provided, please get in touch with the person listed as the contact on the individual event listing in advance of your participation or visit. Requests for Sign Language interpreters and/or CART providers should be made at least two weeks in advance, if possible. Please note that the Weatherhead Center will make every effort to secure services, but that services are subject to availability.