Throughout the 2025-26 academic year, participate in accessibility workshops and help build community at Kenyon. When we design for extremes, everyone benefits.
Join the Writing Center for a weekly workshop to help you develop and build academic skills that touches on everything from avoiding procrastination to accessing campus services.
Recent graduates Eve Currens '25 and Wyatt Phillips '25 have returned to our labs to work as post-baccalaureate researchers. Hear what they have to say about their work this past semester.
Set aside some time to work on your resume. Join us in Chalmers 259 for this lab! Resume Labs are interactive, communal workshops where CDO staff work with you and your peers to create immediate and tangible improvements to your resume.
Join Associate Professor of History Patrick Bottiger for a free, hands-on workshop that will guide participants through the process of seed saving from the initial act of planting through cultivation, harvest, seed extraction, drying and storage.
From worms to geese to raccoons, the animals at the BFEC are quite different. But they all need to sleep! Join us for a reading of our new picture book that follows Rocky the raccoon as he meets different animals during his search for the perfect place to sleep.
The Ohio State University and The Five Colleges of Ohio are offering up to 30 paid summer research internships through the 2026 Summer Undergraduate Research Experience (SURE) program.
"Milton and Anne Rogovin: A Labor of Love" delves into the "Working People, Appalachia, and Family of Miners" series by Milton Rogovin (1909–2011), a photographer whose lens captured not only individuals but the bonds between them and their places.
This exhibition marks a milestone in the life of The Gund as we celebrate an extraordinary gift from collectors David Horvitz ’74 and Francie Bishop Good and works from other generous donors.
Lenore Tawney (1907–2007) was a pioneer in blurring the lines between textile art and sculpture. Her work abandoned the traditional grid structure of the loom, giving way to open, sculptural forms that carry both spiritual and conceptual weight.
Marie Watt’s installations are created — and lifted — by many hands. Suspended above us, her sculptures invite us not only to look, but to gather, breathe and take part.
Informed by deeply collective actions, each textile piece in this exhibition carries across more than material it carries memory, knowledge, resistance, and the layered meanings of place, time and relation.