Family and Friends Weekend
All Campus 26 E. Main St., Norton, MA, United StatesWe look forward to celebrating Wheaton family and friends on campus during the Family and Friends Weekend 2022!
We look forward to celebrating Wheaton family and friends on campus during the Family and Friends Weekend 2022!
Beard and Weil Galleries have partnered with the National Black Doll Museum of History and Culture to present What Only You Can Make: The Art of the African Wrap Doll.
Meet with Career Peer Advisors in the Career Design studio to work one-on-one with a CPAs on career-related materials (resume, cover letters, etc..), learn about funding opportunities and digital resources available to you for a successful internship or job search. The Design Studio is open daily, no appointment needed. Located in the left corner of […]
Interested in the idea of maybe majoring or minoring in Business and Management? Come to this information session to learn all the details, meet the faculty and get your questions answered.
Grab your lunch and join our weekly co-work space to explore internship and job opportunities, ask questions, and connect with other Wheaton job/internship seekers.
Author Kim Adrian reads from her memoir, The Twenty-Seventh Letter of the Alphabet, and discusses growing up with the confusion and chaos of mental illness and generational trauma. A brief Q&A will follow this lunchtime event.
Beard and Weil Galleries have partnered with the National Black Doll Museum of History and Culture to present What Only You Can Make: The Art of the African Wrap Doll.
The Tens, highlights selected work from students who received the Friends of Art Purchase Prize from 2011-2020. These pieces are part of the Wheaton College Permanent Collection and range from photography to film to illustration.
Beard and Weil Galleries have partnered with the National Black Doll Museum of History and Culture to present What Only You Can Make: The Art of the African Wrap Doll.
A live performance by artist Dominic Quagliozzi Dominic Quagliozzi merges his lived experience as a person with chronic illness and disability into art.