Small enough to offer students individual attention, this major is also worldly enough to endow them with a breadth of knowledge essential to a career in art and architectural history and their related fields.
What we encounter in biology are the continuing consequences of events that began billions of years ago, yielding simple living forms. From this genesis evolved the many forms of life we recognize today.
In the English Department at Trinity College, faculty and students collaborate closely together as they explore a wide range of literary forms, genres, and media from an equally wide range of periods and cultures.
Neuroscience is a broad, multidisciplinary field concerned with the nervous system & its components & functional activities—including behavior & consciousness.
Having walked around the Frog Hollow neighborhood during his time at Trinity Michael wanted to see what kind of impact he could make in the community. Story and Soil is a celebration of Hartford, the community, good food and good coffee.
With her striking photography exhibit, “Hijabs & Hoodies,” MasterCard Foundation Scholar Tracy explores the stereotyping of African-Americans and Muslims by looking at how clothing can be perceived as a threat.
The Sea Semester takes 24 students on a five-week sailing voyage to the Phoenix Islands, aboard the SSV Robert C. Seamans, to conduct research on this largely under-studied region.
J-Start students spent #MLK Day volunteering at Martin Luther King, Jr. Community Day at the Wadsworth Museum. Trinity’s newest students are getting involved with their new home city of Hartford.
Exploring Experiences of Women in Caribbean, Europe, and North America
Janet L. Bauer has received a Fulbright Global Scholar grant—an award designed to support multicountry, transregional projects—for her research project on The Social Geographies of Islam in Diaspora: Race, Gender, Generation, and Place.
Led by Tim Landry, Associate Professor of Anthropology, 13 students are spending January break exploring Benin’s history, culture, and religious practices in the J-Term course “West Africa Abroad.”