More from Tufts Events
- Oct 2912:00 PMTGE Open Advising HoursBuilding: Dowling Hall City: Medford, MA 02155 Campus: Medford/Somerville campus Location Details: Dowling Hall 710 Open to Public: No Primary Audience: Students (Undergraduate) Students interested in planning a semester or year abroad for Academic Year 2026-2027 are welcome to walk-in without an appointment for guidance and assistance from Tufts Global Education.
- Oct 292:00 PMDrop-in Research ConsultationsBuilding: Tisch Library City: Medford, MA 02155 Campus: Medford/Somerville campus Location Details: We will be located at tables in front of the leisure reading area just beyond the lobby on the main floor (second floor) of Tisch Library. Wheelchair Accessible: Yes Open to Public: No Primary Audience: Students (Graduate),Students (Postdoctoral),Students (Undergraduate) Event Type: Training/Workshop Event Subject: Research Event Contact Name: User Experience and Student Success Department Event Contact Email: tischuess@elist.tufts.edu Link: https://tischlibrary.tufts.edu/node/3565 Starting on October 1 and continuing every Wednesday through December 10, librarians at Tisch Library will be hosting weekly drop-in research consultations. You can stop by for research help, including but not limited to: Developing keywords and search strategies Identifying and searching for sources Evaluating information types Planning and organizing your research On the following dates, StAAR writing consultants will also be joining us to offer drop-in writing support: October 22 November 12 December 3 No appointment necessary! Stop by whenever you can.
- Oct 294:00 PMCenter for the Humanities at Tufts (CHAT) Open HouseBuilding: Fung House 48 Professors Row City: Somerville, MA 02144 Campus: Medford/Somerville campus Wheelchair Accessible: Yes Open to Public: Yes Primary Audience: Faculty,Postdoctoral Fellows,Staff,Students (Graduate),Students (Postdoctoral) Event Type: Community Engagement Event Subject: Arts,Humanities,Music,Working at Tufts Event Sponsor: School of Arts and Sciences Event Sponsor Department / Area: Center for the Humanities At Tufts (CHAT) RSVP Information: No RSVP required Admission/Cost: Free Event Contact Name: Amanda Gary Pepper Event Contact Email: amanda.pepper@tufts.edu Event Contact Phone: 203-763-9353 Link: https://humanities.tufts.edu/events/chat-mid-semester-open-house-1029 Join the Center for the Humanities at Tufts (CHAT) on October 29 for our mid-semester open house. All Tufts faculty, staff, grad students, post doctoral fellows, administrators, and members of our community are welcome. No agenda—feel free to stop by and enjoy some snacks and mingle with faculty in the humanities. Please contact humanities@tufts.edu with questions.
- Oct 295:30 PMTisch College Solomont Speaker Series: Alexis Nikole NelsonBuilding: Cabot Intercultural Center City: Medford, MA 02155 Campus: Medford/Somerville campus Location Details: ASEAN Auditorium, Cabot Center Open to Public: Yes Event Type: Lecture/Presentation/Seminar Event Subject: Health/Wellness,Sustainability/Climate Event Sponsor: Tisch College of Civic Life RSVP Information: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/solomont-speaker-series-alexis-nikole-nelson-tickets-1708507374549?utm-campaign=social&utm-content=attendeeshare&utm-medium=discovery&utm-term=listing&utm-source=cp&aff=ebdsshcopyurl Admission/Cost: Free Register (In-Person Only) Meet chef, foraging TikTok star and outdoor educator Alexis Nikole Nelson, better known as the "Black Forager" on social media! With over 5 million followers joining her viral adventures of foraging and cooking, Nelson reframes the worlds of food, botany and nature, helping people make environmentally sustainable food choices while also celebrating the outdoors and changing fraught relationships with food. Nelson's videos shine a light on the historical and cultural roots of foraging in African American and Indigenous food traditions that have traditionally been repressed. Nelson's work has been featured in places like the New York Times, Bon Appetit, NPR, the Kelly Clarkson Show, and Jimmy Kimmel Live!, and she hosted a 15-episode series on botany for YouTube's educational channel, Crash Course. Nelson received the James Beard Award for “Best Social Media” in 2022, and she was selected for Forbes 30 Under 30, 2025 TIME100 Creators and as a TikTok Tastemaker. Registration required. All are welcome. This event is cosponsored by the Tufts Pollinator Initiative.
- Oct 3012:00 PMAnimal Matters Seminar: "Trap, Neuter, Return at a Dairy Farm in Vermont"Building: Agnes Varis Campus Center City: North Grafton, MA 01536 Room: Agnes Varis CC - Agnes Varis Auditorium (AVA) - Room 107L Campus: Grafton campus Wheelchair Accessible: Yes Open to Public: Yes Primary Audience: Alumni and Friends,Faculty,Interns and Residents,Postdoctoral Fellows,Staff,Students (Graduate),Students (Postdoctoral),Students (Undergraduate) Event Type: Lecture/Presentation/Seminar Event Sponsor Details: Tufts Center for Animals and Public Policy, Office of Continuing Education, Tufts Elephant Conservation Alliance, and Office of Continuing Education Programs at Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine Speaker Name: Stacy LeBaron, founder and host of the "Community Cats" podcast RSVP Information: For joining remotely or in person: https://forms.gle/6wcTuNecoHX6gzro9 Admission/Cost: Free Event Contact Name: Center for Animals and Public Policy Event Contact Email: capp@tufts.edu Link: https://forms.gle/6wcTuNecoHX6gzro9 This seminar is part of the Animal Matters Seminar Series presented by Tufts Center for Animals and Public Policy and Office of Continuing Education Programs. Joining in person? After registering, you will receive a confirmation email with parking pass and location details. Joining remotely? After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar. Register here to join remotely or in person. In this casual session, Stacy LeBaron will walk the audience through the journey of a Trap-Neuter-Return (TNR) project conducted in July of 2024 at a dairy farm in Waitsfield, VT. Learn how to turn your passion for cats into action with mass trapping. LeBaron has been involved in animal welfare for over 30 years and considers herself a feline entrepreneur. She currently hosts a weekly podcast called the Community Cats podcast where she interviews nationally and internationally renowned experts helping with the problem of cat overpopulation and cat welfare. She has recorded over 600 episodes. In addition to the podcast, Stacy is committed to the model of virtual education by holding over 30 educational online events a year. She is currently a co-owner of the Community Cat Clinic in Duluth, GA and Woodstock, GA. She also serves on the board of the United Spay Alliance, Merrimack River Feline Rescue Society, PAWSitive Pantry, and the Vermont Humane Federation. Members of the public are invited to attend this seminar at no charge. The event is made possible by the generous support of the Elizabeth A. Lawrence Endowed Fund. The event is good for one non-medical interactive CEU in all states that recognize AVMA-approved continuing education providers. A registration QR code will be posted for in-person attendance.
- Oct 3012:00 PM[ENVS] Losing Control of Campus LandscapesBuilding: Curtis Hall City: Medford, MA 02155 Room: Curtis Hall - Multipurpose Room Campus: Medford/Somerville campus Wheelchair Accessible: Yes Open to Public: Yes Event Type: Lecture/Presentation/Seminar Event Sponsor: School of Arts and Sciences Event Sponsor Department / Area: Environmental Studies program RSVP Information: https://tufts.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_EDXfAMyATsOvhnBhYKP6tw Link: https://as.tufts.edu/environmentalstudies/news-events/hoch-cunningham-lecture-series#oct30 This lecture examines the paradoxes of care and control in campus landscapes. Mark Bomford traces the tension between the ordered care of campus master planning and the improvisational care of grassroots agroecological experiment, showing how each constrained the futures that could be imagined. Using metaphors from Anna Karenina to Claude Shannon’s concept of informational entropy, he argues that sustainability emerges not from perfection but from surprise, multiplicity, and relational responsiveness. Case studies from the University of British Columbia and Yale demonstrate that when shared labor, student-centered pedagogy, and ecological complexity are foregrounded over metrics-driven control and efficiency, campuses can serve as laboratories for more just and adaptive futures. To “lose control” is not to embrace chaos but to resist foreclosure—to vivify the ecological and social futures of the university as open, relational, and delightfully, surprisingly weird.


