Public Event

Rise Up Boston: A Climate Event

Saturday, April 25 | 10:00am - 3:00pm

Together, we can make a difference! Join us for an action-packed day of activities, presentations, and the chance to meet people who are making a real difference.

Rise Up Boston

Join the Museum's Center for the Environment for a lively day full of hands-on activities, enlightening live presentations, climate conversations, and much more! Meet with some of the people who are making a difference addressing climate change at tables throughout the Museum, and talk with Museum educators. This all-day event is all about informing, empowering, and inspiring action. And it’s just the beginning, as we all work together to make a difference!

Get Tickets

Date and Time

Saturday, April 25 | 10:00am - 3:00pm

Audience

All Ages

Location

Entire Museum View Map

Price

Included with Exhibit Halls admission

Language

English
Get Tickets

Date and Time

Saturday, April 25 | 10:00am - 3:00pm

Audience

All Ages

Location

Entire Museum View Map

Price

Included with Exhibit Halls admission

Language

English

Join the Museum's Center for the Environment for a lively day full of hands-on activities, enlightening live presentations, climate conversations, and much more! Meet with some of the people who are making a difference addressing climate change at tables throughout the Museum, and talk with Museum educators. This all-day event is all about informing, empowering, and inspiring action. And it’s just the beginning, as we all work together to make a difference!

Our Inspiration

The Museum of Science is committed to offering experiences that highlight the impacts of climate change around the world and here at home. We encourage visitors (in-person and online) to learn about the impacts of a changing climate, consider the perspectives of others, become more confident in taking action, and discover ways to be part of the solution through individual and collective action.

View the Schedule
2024 Rise Up Boston Event

Featured Guests

Katharine Wilkinson

Author of Climate Wayfinding

Dr. Katharine Wilkinson is an author, strategist, teacher, and one of 15 “women who will save the world,” according to Time magazine. Her books on climate include the bestselling anthology All We Can Save, The Drawdown Review, the New York Times bestseller Drawdown, and Between God & Green. She is co-founder and executive director of The All We Can Save Project, cultivating climate leadership and engagement; co-host of the podcast A Matter of Degrees; and creator of All We Can Save Circles and Climate Wayfinding. Previously, she was the principal writer and editor-in-chief at the climate solutions nonprofit Project Drawdown. Dr. Wilkinson speaks widely, including a popular TED Talk on climate and gender equality that has more than 2 million views. Her writing and perspective have been featured by CNN, The New York Times, Time, the TODAY Show, The Washington Post, and many others. A former Rhodes Scholar, Dr. Wilkinson holds a doctorate in geography and environment from Oxford. 

Sara Beery

Assistant Professor at MIT EECS

Dr. Sara Beery is an assistant professor at MIT EECS' Faculty of AI and Decision Making and CSAIL, and was previously a visiting researcher at Google working on Auto Arborist. She’s always loved the natural world, and has seen a growing need for technology-based approaches to conservation and sustainability challenges. Her research focuses on building computer vision methods that enable global-scale environmental and biodiversity monitoring across data modalities, tackling real-world challenges including strong spatiotemporal correlations that lead to domain shift, imperfect data quality, fine-grained categories, and long-tailed distributions. She received her PhD in Computing and Mathematical Sciences (CMS) at Caltech, advised by Pietro Perona, where she received the Amori Doctoral Prize for my dissertation. She is honored to be awarded an AI2050 Early Career Fellowship, an NSF CAREER Grant, a PIMCO Data Science Fellowship an Amazon AI4Science Fellowship, and the NSF Graduate Research Fellowship. Her work has been supported by the NSF, NASA, Google, Microsoft, IBM, the USAF, MIT J-WAFS, and the Caltech Resnick Sustainability Institute. 

Melissa Hoffer

Climate Chief, Office of Governor Maura Healey Commonwealth of Massachusetts

Melissa Hoffer is Massachusetts’ first-ever climate chief. She joined the Biden Administration as a Day 1 political appointee, serving as the acting general counsel and principal deputy general counsel of the Environmental Protection Agency. She led the EPA’s Office of General Counsel through the transition until November 2021, and continued to serve as Principal Deputy General Counsel. Prior to that, she worked in the Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office as chief of the Environmental Protection Division beginning in 2012 and was named chief of AG Healey’s newly formed Energy and Environment Bureau in 2015. Prior to joining the Attorney General’s Office, Hoffer held senior roles at the Conservation Law Foundation and practiced for many years as a litigator and environmental lawyer at WilmerHale.

Alex Creely

Chief Engineer, ARC Conceptual Design at Commonwealth Fusion Systems 

Alex Creely is a scientist and engineer on a quest for clean energy. He is currently the Chief Engineer for ARC Conceptual Design at Commonwealth Fusion Systems, a Massachusetts-based company working toward clean fusion energy. Alex has been at CFS since 2019 after starting as lucky number 13 at the company. Alex has worked on fusion projects around the world and is optimistic about a future in which the world runs on clean energy.  

Alex Evans

Executive Director, Blue Hill Observatory

Dr. Evans joined the Blue Hill Observatory following more than a decade in academic and national science leadership roles. He is the Founder and Principal Investigator of LunaSCOPE, a NASA-funded research initiative focused on lunar science and exploration strategy. He has served in senior advisory capacities for the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, helping shape national priorities in space science and exploration. His work has emphasized interdisciplinary research, long-term data stewardship, and translating scientific insight into decision-making frameworks. 

Join us for an exclusive book event

When maps come up short and the path ahead is uncertain, how do we find our way? In her new book Climate Wayfinding, Dr. Katharine Wilkinson offers a compassionate and empowering guide for navigating through ache to action, doubt to possibility. Whether we’re steeped in climate or newly curious, we can look inward with care, outward with curiosity, and forward with courage to shape our unique contributions.

At 3pm in the d'Arbeloff Suite, join Dr. Wilkinson for a dynamic book experience, immersing in the wisdom of Climate Wayfinding and the beauty of poetry, art, and song. Amid kindred community, we remember that each of us is a node of possibility for healing the climate crisis—whoever we are and whatever we’ve got to give. 

Limited capacity - reserve your seat and signed book!
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The book cover of Climate Wayfinding by Katharine Wilkinson, surrounded by a nature collage

Generously supported by

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Takeda Pharmaceuticals

This event is brought to you in part through the generosity of the Lowell Institute.