H&S is strength at Stanford’s core
In establishing Stanford University in 1891, Jane and Leland Stanford declared that this institution should educate “cultured and useful citizens.” In the years since its creation, the university has grown into one of the world’s premier centers of teaching and research.
Delivering a transformative education is the core mission of the School of Humanities & Sciences.
The School of Humanities and Sciences is the soul—the core—of a Stanford University education. It’s one of the primary reasons students come to Stanford.
The goal of educating cultured and useful citizens remains as relevant today as it was 120 years ago. But the definition of such an education has dramatically changed. The world has changed; Stanford students have changed; and the education provided by the School of Humanities and Sciences has risen to meet the challenge.
In the Spotlight:
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Stanford marine biologists search for the world’s strongest coral
- Researchers are blogging about their expedition to the South Pacific, where they are studying why some corals survive the effects of climate change while others die. Read More »
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Artist takes performance to new heights at Jasper Ridge
- Stanford visiting artist Ann Carlson brings her background in dance, choreography, theater, visual art and performance art to an unlikely stage – Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve in the eastern foothills of the Santa Cruz Mountains. Read More »
Latest NewsView all »
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- Stanford course explores art and the shifting ideas of ‘occupation’
- Apr 26 - Students and members of the community explore how artists have occupied spaces in order to transform them, and consider the role of the arts in economic, immigrant, political and social justice struggles. Read more »
Upcoming EventsView all »
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- School of Fontainebleau: Prints from the Kirk Edward Long Collection
- Ongoing every day from April 17, 2013 through July 21, 2013. 11:00 AM. When the French king Francis I began in 1527 to transform a country chateau, Fontainebleau, into a truly royal residence, he hired Rosso Fiorentino, Francesco Primaticcio, and other esteemed Italian… Read more »