Academics

The tight-knit community and deliberate intellectual life widened my worldview and made me a more independent and responsible thinker.

Kevin Yang ’22 Political science major

A Williams Education

    50+ Different Areas of Study

    Extraordinary learning happens in every course of study, and any starting point can set you on a journey that goes both broad and deep. No matter what path you take, you’ll learn from an open exchange of ideas, beliefs and perspectives—readying you for a world that demands informed, reflective citizens.

    Tutorial Courses

    Two students, a professor and an unforgettable exploration. That’s the formula for Williams’ unique tutorials. Your professor sets the curriculum for a deep dive into a single topic, but you present your own ideas and inquiries to drive the discussion. As the months unfold, you’ll learn to form arguments, articulate opinions and persuade others.

    Winter Study

    Every January, Williams students spend a month nurturing their curiosities and interests in a single subject course. You can choose a topic you’ve long enjoyed or dip your toes into something completely new. There are 150+ Winter Study courses to choose from, as well as opportunities to venture far off campus for research, internships or fieldwork.

    Study Away

    At Williams, you can take what you learn and apply it in locations around the globe. You can conduct field research among the Mayan ruins, travel to Hungary to work with world-renowned mathematicians or study Italian culture and language through an art history program in Florence.

    Advising and Support

    Every first-year student is assigned an academic advisor who will guide you from your first days on campus through declaring your major. As a junior and senior, you’ll be advised by faculty in your department or program. You can also get help from the career center, the fellowships office and peer academic support.

    Meet Our Faculty

    Assistant Professor Victor Cesares

    Victor Cazares

    Assistant Professor of Psychology

    Faculty Spotlight

    Personal Connection

    In his research on the brain—and in mentoring transfer and Latinx students—psychology professor Victor Cazares draws from experience.

    The conversation began with a dog walk in the woods.

    On one of their regular strolls near campus, psychology professor Victor Cazares told computer science professor Katie Keith about his need for more computing power to support his research investigating how brains encode memories. 

    The two applied for—and received—nearly $745,000 in funding from the Massachusetts Life Sciences Center, plus $83,200 from Williams, to purchase powerful servers called a GPU cluster to analyze vast amounts of data for Cazares and other researchers across campus.

    The cluster, affectionately called GPMoo, “allows us to make predictions and develop models that are just at the limit of our human capacities,” Cazares says.

    His interest in brain behavior stems from a deeply personal connection—his father’s own battles with schizophrenia.

    Likewise, Cazares’ involvement in mentoring transfer and Latinx students comes from his own experience as a transfer student. Inspired by small classes and hands-on engagement at the community college he first attended in California, he aims to recreate that same close-knit learning environment at Williams.

    In addition to teaching courses such as “Feelings and Emotions: Shaping the Brain and Society,” “Experimentation and Statistics” and “From Order to Disorder(s): The Role of Genes and the Environment in Psychopathology,” Cazares is a faculty advisor for Williams’ newly formed Transfer Student Union. 

    He is also involved with SUBE, a newly formed student-run organization focused on empowering Latinx students to develop professional pursuits in STEM+ fields.

    Read about how Cazares and others are using the GPMoo, and learn more about his research and support for transfers and Latinx students.

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    A student reading in the library

    The Libraries

    Our libraries are more than just study centers. Inside, you’ll find space for communal learning where ideas are exchanged, new discoveries are formed and connections are made.

    Library Stats

    17,000+

    linear feet of archival and manuscript materials in the Chapin Library and College Archives

    100K+

    volumes in the Schow Science Library

    24-hr

    access to Sawyer Library’s historic reading room, multimedia-equipped classrooms, recording studio and exhibition spaces

    Learning by Doing