66.4 F
Cambridge
Monday, March 9, 2026
66.4 F
Cambridge
Monday, March 9, 2026

Harvard Political Review 2026 Journalism Fellowship

Are you a middle or high school student interested in journalism? Do you want to work one-on-one with experienced Harvard Journalists? Do you want to get published on the Harvard Political Review? If so, join the HPR's one-week bootcamp this summer!

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HPR Coronavirus Coverage: Student Life Across College Campuses

Students everywhere have been affected by the coronavirus pandemic. Many have moved out of their colleges, switched to online learning, and been left questioning what the future holds. This piece is a collection of stories from across student experiences.

Grading Policies: C is for Coronavirus

Harvard did not consult students before or after rolling out its first change to grading: extending the pass-fail deadline. For our grading policy to prioritize student well-being and educational equity, Harvard needs to initiate communication with students, not work around them until complaints are received. 

Finding the Future in the Past

Do not believe that staying up-to-date on the newest trends in academia will better prepare you for the future than reading old ideas.

In the Time of Coronavirus, We Can’t Forget About Mental Health

The university’s horrific incompetence and lack of consideration for its rapid eviction of students is symptomatic of an institutional problem: Harvard is not treating its students with the full humanity each one of us deserves.

Make Harvard Grade Again

Grade inflation may placate students and faculty, but it is not an honest reflection of student performance, and the secrecy surrounding Harvard’s grading process only perpetuates the issue.

The University as a Battleground

When thousands show up to demand justice for all, Harvard has no choice but to listen.

While Students Panic, the Gazette Praises

Like most Harvard students, I receive an email blast every morning from the Harvard Gazette, the university’s official news source and mouthpiece. I don’t...

“Broke Kids Don’t Go to Harvard”

Persistence and grit define first-generation, low-income students, even as we hide behind a facade of easy success. Harvard is incredibly diverse, both in privilege and lived experience, and we deserve an institution that is more responsive to our concerns and the unique challenges we face.

Which Shows Must Go On?

Harvard must uniformly apply public health guidelines while working to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

When Campaign Politics Meet Campus Politics

Though they are in competition with each other for student and public support, Harvard student campaign subgroups are united in their collective goal of encouraging and deepening youth civic engagement.