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Spotlight: May 21, 2026

Since World War II, new, innovation-based work in the U.S. has often been done by young, college-educated workers. It has also been driven by demand: “Wherever we make new investments, we end up getting new specializations,” David Autor says.

May 21, 2026

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Research and Education that Matter

Connor Coley works at the interface of chemistry and machine learning, to discover and design new drug compounds. His lab develops models that are “grounded in an understanding of reaction mechanisms, the same way an expert chemist would be,” he says.

Engineers have developed a new way to amplify the T-cell response to mRNA vaccines. The advance could lead to much more powerful cancer vaccines and stronger protection against infectious diseases.

A new storytelling project titled Curiosity on a Mission champions the long-horizon science that powers American innovation. The MIT effort highlights how basic research sparks enormous advances in medicine, technology, national security, and economic growth.

Found Industries aims to strengthen U.S. industrial supply chains through its technology for extracting gallium and other critical metals. “We believe we can deploy this at scale to become one the first major Western suppliers of these metals,” Peter Godart ’15, SM ’19, PhD ’21 says. 

In a world without MIT, radar wouldn’t have been available to help win World War II. We might not have email, CT scans, time-release drugs, photolithography, or GPS. And we’d lose over 30,000 companies, employing millions of people. Can you imagine?

​Since its founding, MIT has been key to helping American science and innovation lead the world. Discoveries that begin here generate jobs and power the economy — and what we create today builds a better tomorrow for all of us.