Innovating at the speed of light
Symposium speakers describe how colleges must meet the challenges of a rapidly emerging environment in which "computing is for everyone."
Symposium speakers describe how colleges must meet the challenges of a rapidly emerging environment in which "computing is for everyone."
Institute ranks within the top 2 in 17 of 48 subject areas.
A J-PAL North America publication aims to help decision-makers understand how education technology can help — or hinder — student learning.
Nikhil Agarwal, Daniel Harlow, Andrew Lawrie, and Yufei Zhao receive early-career fellowships.
Professor David Autor’s latest research shows how economic polarization stems from urban job loss.
Firms learn from experience in the measurement, reporting, and verification of carbon emissions under China’s emissions trading systems.
MIT research center aims to support leaders in rigorously evaluating promising uses of education technology and innovative educational practices.
MIT’s J-PAL North America will provide funding and support to help selected partners test urgent and important policy questions.
Study explores the micromechanisms underlying regional economic diversification.
Less data-sharing among firms can actually lead to more collusion, economists find.
Two new MIT reports advance practical emissions-reduction strategies for Southeast Asia and Latin America at both the regional and country level.
Experts gather at MIT to share insights, techniques, and strategies for building resilient urban water systems.
Economist Alexander Wolitzky uses game theory to model institutions, networks, and social dynamics.
MIT School Access and Quality Summit brings policymakers, educators, and researchers together to examine strategies and ways to measure effectiveness.
Researchers uncover the factors that have caused photovoltaic module costs to drop by 99 percent.