DiOnetta Jones Crayton: Change-maker at MIT

Associate Dean and Office of Minority Education (OME) Director DiOnetta Jones Crayton has announced that she will step down from her role on Feb. 2. She has led the office for 14 years, advancing OME’s efforts to provide a robust portfolio of programs, services, and resources for undergraduate students of color.

“It has been my honor to serve as director of the OME for the past 14 years,” Crayton wrote in a letter to the staff of the Office of the Vice Chancellor announcing her departure. “As a team, we have accomplished great things together … It has been so rewarding and such a blessing to contribute to so many lives as well as different committees, programs, events, and services over the years.”

Founded in 1975, OME aims to foster academic excellence, build strong communities, and cultivate students’ professional mindsets to position them to become leaders in all career fields, as well as in civic life.

“DiOnetta has been a long-standing advisor, mentor, and change-maker at the Institute,” says Ian A. Waitz, vice chancellor for undergraduate and graduate education. “She has served on numerous Institute committees and been an essential thought partner in navigating some of the most challenging issues facing our students. I have personally valued her commitment to excellence, her strategic vision and leadership, and her ability to communicate her passion to others.”

Indeed, Crayton has been a change-maker since she arrived at MIT in August 2009, after holding leadership roles at Cornell University, the National Consortium for Graduate Degrees for Minorities in Engineering and Science, the University of California at Berkeley, and the University of the Pacific in Stockton, California. Within her first academic year alone, OME adopted a new mission statement; launched comprehensive, data-driven assessments of several existing programs; and devised a new staffing model to ensure the office would reach “optimal success,” as she said at the time.

She also piloted several new programs that year that have become mainstays in OME, including Master Your Future, a professional development workshop series. And she restructured OME’s industry partnership program, the Industrial Advisory Council for Minority Education (IACME), resulting in a threefold increase in member companies, as well as adding nonprofits, government labs, and alumni affinity groups to the mix.

Beyond making campus-based improvements, DiOnetta also “led outward,” co-chairing a major conference on underrepresented minority student success in higher education, held at MIT in April 2010. The conference brought together national experts, university diversity officers, and academic administrators from Ivy-Plus schools and other leading institutions to discuss the challenges at their institutions. The lessons gleaned from the gathering informed her strategic vision for her office, as well as her involvement in diversity, equity, and inclusion efforts more broadly at MIT.

Cordelia Price ’78, SM ’82, who has worked with Crayton since 2009, says, “I have seen DiOnetta’s excellent leadership, organizational, communication, initiative, effective meeting, and listening skills in action.” Price serves as the Black Alumni of MIT (BAMIT) representative to IACME and as chair of operations for the BAMIT Community Advancement Program, which funds student projects that benefit underserved communities of color.

Under Crayton’s leadership, Price adds, “[OME] programs have helped many students with their academic success, their opportunities for internships, their preparation for future employment or graduate school, and provided opportunities to serve the community. She also established or strengthened mentor programs, including mentors from IACME companies as well as MIT alumni.”

During Crayton’s tenure, OME has embraced a spirit of innovation — a quality well-suited for MIT’s ethos — to best meet students’ needs. For example, long before the pandemic forced the Institute to pivot to remote instruction and programs in 2020, she and her staff were already implementing a plan to adapt one of OME’s signature programs, Interphase EDGE (IP), into an online format. Applications for IP, a two-year scholar enrichment program that includes a seven-week summer session on campus, had been increasing dramatically. In an effort to serve more students, in 2018 Crayton’s team began working with MITx on an online platform to accommodate a new, remote cohort called IPx. By 2020, with that infrastructure in place, OME was able to offer the remote program to both cohorts, despite the closure of campus that summer.

So much of OME’s success comes down to Crayton’s emphasis on listening, says Myles Noel, a senior majoring in chemistry. He’s gotten to know her well as an IP participant and through interacting with her on various committees and student organizations. “Her leadership style is a lot of listening; she’s willing to listen to the issues that students are experiencing and from that, she is able to offer support and advice,” he says.

Listening to students has also informed the development of new programs. Two recent examples are The Standard, for men of color, and the CRWN (pronounced “crown”), for women of color. Both programs address a need that undergraduate students articulated — a desire to create a close-knit affinity group — while also supporting their academic and professional success.

“DiOnetta’s extraordinary leadership and unwavering emotional investment has helped countless students identify, open, and walk through doors of opportunity,” says Chancellor Melissa Nobles. “Her deep belief in our students has inspired them to believe in themselves and work towards their dreams — especially when they were unsure of themselves. She has made OME, MIT, and our world a better place over these past 14 years.”

Indeed, students speak fondly of Crayton’s ability to inspire them to believe in themselves. Noel says she has been an invaluable mentor and advisor. “She has been a pillar of support for me and a lot of other students in the community.” Kerrie Greene, an MD/PhD student who has known Crayton for almost 10 years, adds, “Dean Crayton is such a light, her warmth surrounds everything and everyone she supports. Under her guidance and leadership, I have seen countless numbers of my peers, including myself, blossom during their time at MIT and beyond.”

“Students will feel her loss, but the impact that she’s had is going to be lasting, and I think that’s something to be happy for,” says Noel.

WWE 2K24 Preview – A Good Hand – Game Informer

WWE 2K has steadily climbed the ladder of quality over the past two entries. A strong comeback in 2K22 saw initiative but meaningful improvements in 2K23, and the series is arguably the strongest it’s ever been. But a new year means another opportunity to retain the title for best wrestling sim or drop it to someone else. On the morning of the Royal Rumble last Saturday, I got to sample WWE 2K24’s notable new additions at a special preview event. That includes the new Showcase mode documenting 40 years of WrestleMania, the new Ambulance Match type, and additional features added to the moment-to-moment action. 

Showcase

The documentary-style Showcase mode has been christened “2K Showcase…of the Immortals.” With Wrestlemania 40 close at hand, Showcase serves as a celebration of this milestone by letting players relive some of the most memorable matches from the event’s decades-long history. 

The preview build offered three matches: Ultimate Warrior vs Rick Rude (Wrestlemania V), Rhea Ripley vs Charlotte Flair (Wrestlemania XXXIX), and Cody Rhodes vs Roman Reigns (Wrestlemania XXXIX). There are plenty more, of course, that I can’t speak about, but 2K promises to reveal the full list of Showcase matches “soon.”

I begin with the main event of last year’s ‘Mania, Cody v Roman. After watching the obligatory well-produced vignette welcoming players to Showcase (narrated by commentator Corey Graves), I take control of Reigns – backed by Paul Heyman and Solo Sikoa – and begin my task of reenacting the still-painful memory of spoiling Cody’s championship dreams. 

As with previous Showcase modes, you’re given a series of objectives to complete, which consists of executing moves used in the real match. However, one big and much-needed improvement is that objectives now display the necessary button inputs to execute the required move. That means no more constant pausing to visit the menu’s move list to remember how to perform a standing corner attack or trying to decipher what positioning hitting a teardrop suplex requires. Now that I always knew how to do what was asked of me, I could better focus on actually pulling it off – and the enemy AI doesn’t make it easy. 

At one point, I initiate the new Trading Blows mini-game. Wrestling fans probably know this better as the back-and-forth “boo/yay” punches. Striking involves holding down the attack button to fill a meter and releasing it within a highlighted area. Sometimes, a thinner gold area appears, and stopping the meter inside this trickier segment results in a more powerful strike. If you’ve played any wrestling mini-game, you know what to expect. Losing a Trading Blows battle leaves you in a stunned state, rendering you vulnerable to the opponent’s next move. It’s a fun way to game-ify one of wrestling’s biggest in-ring tropes. 

From what I played, Showcase is the experience you expect. The mid-match transitions to real footage are still cool, and the video packages offer a fun reflection or entertaining history lesson for wrestling diehards and newcomers, respectively. I’m excited to see what the rest of the match line-up looks like, and Showcase will hopefully be a great appetizer on the real-life road to Wrestlemania. 

Ambulance Match

Of the new match types available in 2K24, such as the Casket match, only the Ambulance match was available in my demo. Like the real version, the goal is to beat your opponent senseless enough to load them into the back of a real ambulance, shut the door, and watch them get driven away to a hospital local medical facility.

Before that, though, I chose to beat my opponent around and on top of the ambulance, which you can scale thanks to its ladder. While I was disappointed you aren’t able to physically hurl opponents off the top, you can execute moves on the roof or dive off of it. 

Opening and closing the ambulance doors is a necessary step, and the latter can be used to put a small roadblock in the way of your opponent when they have the upper hand. Once a superstar is tossed inside, a button-mashing minigame ensues as one player fights to close the door while the other battles to force their way out. This back-and-forth was fun and elicited a lot of shouting with my co-op partner.

Winning this battle as the player outside the vehicle triggers a final struggle as the victim attempts one last gasp to keep the door open moments before you shut it for good. I noticed the game seems to heavily favor the player inside the vehicle in this second attempt; mashing the button on the opposing end was noticeably harder. As such, it took several more tries and dishing out more abuse before I stunned my opponent, which wound up giving me enough of an edge to close the doors shut and send them packing. 

Ambulance Matches aren’t my favorite match type in real life; they’re rarely great or memorable. 2K24’s interpretation accurately replicates the thrill of the matches’ final moments, and it’s entertaining to an extent, but I don’t see myself playing the match very often in the face of more entertaining stipulations.

Overall Thoughts

The WWE 2K games are dense packages filled with modes and features, so it’s impossible to get a complete sense of their quality in small slices such as this. My key takeaway is that 2K24 doesn’t feel like a regression. If you’ve enjoyed the recent entries, odds are you’ll have a good time here, too. The presentation and superstar models (the ones I’ve seen, at least) look great, the gameplay retains the more pick-up-and-play-friendly controls of 2K23, and smaller additions, such as the ability to throw weapons, only add instead of subtract. It remains to be seen how much of an iteration this year’s game is compared to its predecessor, but I’m optimistic it will, at the very least, maintain the same level of quality. WWE is coming off of the best years it’s ever had in terms of its TV product, and I’m hopeful that momentum will rub off on 2K24.

The Roster So Far

2K will be rolling out roster reveals in the near future, but I can reveal the superstars playable in my demo.

  • Asuka
  • Bayley
  • Becky Lynch
  • Bianca Belair
  • Charlotte Flair
  • Cody Rhodes
  • Dakota Kai
  • Hulk Hogan ’02
  • Iyo Sky
  • Kevin Owens
  • Kofi Kingston
  • LA Knight
  • Randy Orton
  • Rhea Ripley
  • Rick Rude
  • Roman Reigns
  • Sami Zayn
  • Seth “Freakin” Rollins
  • Shayna Baszler
  • “Stone Cold” Steve Austin ’97
  • Trish Stratus
  • Ultimate Warrior
  • Undertaker
  • Xavier Woods
  • Zelina Vega

WWE 2K24 launches on March 8 for PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and PC. You can learn about everything it has to offer here

Noubar Afeyan PhD ’87 to deliver MIT’s 2024 Commencement address

Noubar Afeyan PhD ’87, an inventor and parallel entrepreneur with a penchant for bold ideas, will deliver the address at the OneMIT Commencement Ceremony on Thursday, May 30.

Afeyan is the founder and CEO of the venture creation company Flagship Pioneering, which founds companies that build biotechnology platforms to transform human health and sustainability. Since its founding in 2000, the company has built more than 100 science-based companies; Flagship-founded companies currently have more than 60 drugs in clinical development.

One of Afeyan’s most well-known successes is Moderna, which invented and produced an effective Covid-19 vaccine approved and deployed to billions of people in more than 70 countries. Currently the company’s chairman, he co-founded Moderna working with his team at Flagship and three academic co-founders in 2010, when the idea of using messenger RNA in therapies was virtually unheard of. But Afeyan has long been known for asking unconventional “What if?” questions and building companies with visionary goals. “Why wouldn’t you think you can actually change the world?” he said in a 2021 interview with Forbes.

“You might expect that after Moderna’s success in bringing lifesaving Covid-19 vaccines to the world, Noubar would rest on his laurels. But he isn’t that kind of entrepreneur,” says MIT President Sally Kornbluth. “In fact, he cautions that anyone seeking to benefit humanity on a large scale should avoid getting comfortable. He’s not afraid to make long-shot, long-term bets, investing in the most innovative science for the biggest impact. We are delighted to welcome Noubar to share his bold, dynamic outlook with the Class of 2024.”

“MIT is a place where audacious ideas abound, thanks in large part to its remarkable students. I’m thrilled to address the Class of 2024 as they prepare to make an impact in the world. We need their curiosity, imagination, inventiveness, courage, and determination — now more than ever,” Afeyan says.

A member of the MIT Corporation, Afeyan has a long relationship with the Institute. He earned his PhD in biochemical engineering at MIT in 1987 and was a senior lecturer at the MIT Sloan School of Management for 16 years, starting in 2000. Among other activities, he serves on the advisory board of the MIT Abdul Latif Jameel Clinic for Machine Learning, and has spoken at numerous Institute events, including MIT Solve.

“Afeyan has shown repeatedly that outstanding scientific talent, when relentlessly focused on audacious goals, can yield breakthroughs that many thought were impossible. His prolific record of invention, along with his coaching, funding, and mentoring of scores of science-driven startup businesses, provides a user’s guide on how to channel advances in science and technology to promote the public good,” says James Poterba, the Mitsui Professor of Economics and the chair of the Commencement Committee.

Born in Beirut to Armenian parents, Afeyan is a staunch advocate for the contributions of immigrants to economic and scientific progress. He is the co-founder of the Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity and a number of other philanthropic projects.

“I’m excited to learn from Dr. Afeyan as our commencement speaker. His work in biotechnology and entrepreneurship is truly inspiring, and I can’t wait to hear the insights and experiences that he will share with us,” senior class president Penny Brant says.

“I hold great admiration for the groundbreaking work of Moderna and its revolutionary vaccine development. Dr. Afeyan’s contributions to the field of biotechnology are truly commendable. As the UA president and a representative of my constituents, I am interested to hear what insights he will share with our graduating class,” Andre Hamelberg, president of the Undergraduate Association, says.

“I think it’s great that our speaker will have shared so many of our experiences. I’m excited for what advice he will offer us all,” Mikala Molina, president of the Graduate Student Council, says.

Afeyan joins notable recent MIT Commencement speakers including YouTuber and inventor Mark Rober (2023); Director-General of the World Trade Organization Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala (2022); lawyer and social justice activist Bryan Stevenson (2021); retired U.S. Navy four-star admiral William McRaven (2020); three-term New York City mayor and philanthropist Michael Bloomberg (2019); and Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg (2018).