• 2025.03.25 Wellesley is 14/20 for highest mid-career salary in Mass Boston Business Journal

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    A 2024 survey from PayScale ranks colleges according to a survey with more than 3 million respondents by "mid-career" salary (10+ years of experience). Wellesley is 14 out of the top 20 in Mass.

  • 2025.03.25 Phil Levine $1.6 billion annually in taxes by 14 NE Colleges The Boston Globe

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    Economist Phil Levine estimates that in a year with average endowment returns, 14 New England colleges would collectively pay around $1.6 billion annually in taxes if a 14% rate is implemented.

  • A student passes off a paper baton to another student, who expresses great excitement with her face.
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    Students relay the good news across campus

  • 2025.03.24 Wendy Robeson "childcare workers are severely underpaid" The Guardian

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    Despite high costs for parents, childcare workers are severely underpaid. “Providers themselves are not getting rich working a daycare job,” said Wendy Robeson, Wellesley Centers for Women researcher.

  • 2025.03.23 Jay Turner faster deployment of renewable energy The Seattle Times

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    “If we’re going to make a clean energy transition,” says professor Jay Turner, “it will require deploying electric vehicles, batteries, wind turbines and solar panels at unprecedented scales”

  • 2025.03.23 Tracy Gleason studies of imaginary friends Vox

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    Psychology professor Tracy Gleason studies imaginary friends, and says they take the form of an object the child “animates and personifies”––a stuffed animal, a doll, or even a can of tomato paste.

  • 2025.03.23 Phil Levine no replacement for loss of federal support The Boston Globe

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    There is no replacement for the loss of tens or hundreds of millions in federal support. As professor Phil Levine said, “If the asteroid is approaching the earth, putting up your umbrella won’t help.”

  • 2025.03.21 Michael Jeffries meteoric rise and fall WGBH

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    “We’re talking about someone who was on a meteoric rise and then was accused and found guilty of assault, and his career basically ground to a halt,” said dean of academic affairs Michael Jeffries.