Students, loved ones reunite for Family Weekend at Brown
From student performances and athletic events to research forums and WaterFire, Family Weekend offered parents and families a taste of Brown University’s distinct academic and extracurricular life.
https://www.youtube.com/embed/5oyD-T5XT-U
Family Weekend 2024
Brown welcomed alumni and thousands of parents and family members of current students to Providence. Video by Oliver Scampoli/Brown University
PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — More than 2,200 parents and family members from as far away as Singapore and Switzerland, and as close as Providence, joined their students on campus from Friday, Oct. 25, to Sunday, Oct. 27, for Brown University’s Family Weekend.
The longstanding annual tradition offers families the opportunity to see the world through a Brunonian’s eyes for a few days. This year, families who returned after having said goodbye to students just seven weeks earlier saw a campus transformed: The crisp air and blazing yellow and orange foliage was a sharp contrast to early September’s high temperatures and greenery.
It was an ideally autumnal setting for a weekend packed full of performances, lectures, wellness activities and more. Even though it boasted a feast of colors and full plate of programs, the stars of Family Weekend were the students, said Brown President Christina H. Paxson in a welcome address Friday evening.
1of4
Brown President Christina H. Paxson, left, led a conversation with IBES Director Kim Cobb, who delivered a keynote lecture during Family Weekend. Photo by Rythum Vinoben/Brown University
2of4
The College Green transformed into a dancefloor Friday night for a silent disco. Photo by Rythum Vinoben/Brown University
3of4
Visitors pet a therapy dog during Brown's Family Weekend. Photo by Nick Dentamaro/Brown University.
4of4
Student clubs and organizations hosted an array of events throughout the weekend, like this sidewalk sale put on by Fashion@Brown. Photo by Nick Dentamaro/Brown University
Paxson said she had three hopes for what parents and other relatives would observe in their students over the three days: that they feel grounded and comfortable on campus; that they’re enrolled in courses that are interesting, challenging and intellectually engaging; and that they’ve found a healthy cadence in balancing time for academics, extracurriculars, socialization and relaxation.
“The most important part [of Family Weekend] is not the events that you’ll go to or the things you’re going to see — it’s finding out firsthand what life is like for your child here at Brown,” Paxson said.
According to Kim Cobb, a professor of earth, environmental and planetary sciences who directs the Institute at Brown for Environment and Society, the Brown student experience is marked by optimism and hope.
Cobb delivered the Family Weekend keynote lecture, titled “Our Climate Future: Students as Changemakers.” She spoke about the inflection point at which the world finds itself — and the numerous ways that the current generation of students is rising to face critical climate challenges through research and action.
“I am extremely optimistic, mostly because the work that we’re doing here at Brown is illustrative of the engagement of this institution, and our entire community in making solutions that are durable and equitable,” Cobb said.
The weekend was a testament to students’ dedication to engagement and changemaking across a broad swath of disciplines.
The Asian American and Pacific Islander (AAPI) Mobile History Museum displayed exhibits researched, curated and designed by Brown students, faculty and alumni. The Health and Wellness Center hosted drop-in learning sessions for applying CPR, and students led walking tours in collaboration with the Simmons Center for the Study of Slavery and Justice, examining the history of Brown and Rhode Island and their ties to the transatlantic slave trade.
Just down College Hill at the Warren Alpert Medical School, families and relatives of medical students got the chance to tour the facilities and join in conversation with medical school leadership.
A Saturday faculty research forum tackled the roles that climate change and increased global temperatures play in the rise of emerging infectious diseases. Later in the day, attendees followed in the footsteps of a typical first-year medical student as part of the “Mini Med School” experience, in which visitors toured the anatomy lab and participated in an interactive clinical skills session.
Brown senior Gavin Schilling, center, said that having his parents visit from Chicago offered perspective and comfort during a busy school year. “This is a great reminder of home — that there’s life after Brown,” he said. “It’s just so nice. I’ve missed them a lot.” Photo by Nick Dentamaro/Brown University
But for many families, the most meaningful Family Weekend experiences were often small and personal.
“My parents hadn’t seen me practice since I was, like, 16,” said first-year student Porter Culp, a member of Brown’s figure skating club. “That was pretty special.”
Culp’s parents traveled from La Crosse, Wisconsin, first traveling to visit his twin sister at her college’s family weekend celebration in San Diego, California, before arriving in Providence. His mom, Kym, said the weekend was a lovely reminder of when she and Porter first visited campus while he was still in high school.
“I loved it as a parent,” Kym said. “We’re from a really small town, so I think of Providence as a nice springboard city — you can go to Boston, you can go to New York, but you’re still in this walkable city that has such a sense of community.”
In his first seven weeks, Porter said he hasn’t lost the feeling that drew him to Brown in the first place.
“It’s just a great campus,” he said. “I feel like everyone seems really happy to be here.”
1of3
The Bears celebrated in the locker room after a thrilling 23-21 victory against Cornell on Saturday afternoon. Photo by Jimmy Picerelli/Brown University
2of3
Bruno was a regular fixture of the weekend, stopping to take photos with students and their famiy members. Photo by Nick Dentamaro/Brown University
3of3
Families cozied up under blankets for a movie night on the College Green. Visitors may have recognized familiar locations in the film, "Hocus Pocus 2," which was filmed throughout Providence and Rhode Island. Photo by Rythum Vinoben/Brown University
Vast, varied and vibrant
There’s no one way to be a Brunonian, and there’s no one way to spend a weekend at Brown.
“Honestly, it’s such a great community event,” said David Silvey, who traveled from Fort Liberty, North Carolina, to visit his nephew, Brown sophomore Eric Ericson. “You get to see the campus, meet the students, go to all these different things… it kind of brings me back to when I was in school.”
David Silvey, left, was in Providence for the first time to visit his nephew, Brown sophomore Eric Ericson. Photo by Nick Dentamaro/Brown University
Silvey said he and the rest of Ericson’s family — his mom, dad and aunt — were keeping an open mind and schedule throughout the weekend, with no set agenda — except one of the three a cappella performances held Friday night.
“This kid came up to us and said, ‘We do a cappella really well here at Brown,’” Silvey said. “So, I said, ‘Heck yeah, we’re going.’”
Students also performed at the Lindemann Performing Arts Center, where multiple comedy groups took the stage with original skits, stand-up routines and improvisational sketches inspired by audience suggestions. Brown music faculty debuted their new works in an orchestra concert, and later in the night, the College Green transformed into a dancefloor, with guests donning headphones to jam out to a silent disco.
A spate of Saturday morning wellness offerings like yoga, guided meditation and stretching, and acupuncture helped attendees recharge ahead of a thrilling Saturday football victory for the Bears against Cornell, with Brown topping its competitor 23-21 at Richard Gouse Field at Brown Stadium.
All of that was followed by the sights and sounds of the city’s renowned WaterFire on Saturday evening. Launched in the mid-1990s by Brown Class of 1975 graduate Barnaby Evans, WaterFire is award-winning cultural experience that has been acclaimed by Rhode Island residents and international visitors alike as a powerful work of art and a moving symbol of Providence’s renaissance — and Saturday was no exception.
Along the Providence River, the city thrummed to the beat of Brown and RISD’s Gendo Taiko drummers and several performances from student music and dance groups, and visitors peered into the night sky through LunaSCOPE’s many telescopes. When it came time for WaterFire’s full lighting, nearly 20 Brown staff members carried torches, illuminating the river from both land and water.
1of4
Senior Associate Dean of Biology Education Kate Smith co-presented a faculty research forum on tackling emerging infectious diseases in a warming world. Photos by Brynne Connolly/Brown University
2of4
The Legorreta Cancer Center sold luminarias in honor of loved ones affected by cancer, to be lit during Saturday's WaterFire.
3of4
Dean of Medicine and Biological Sciences Mukesh Jain, right, met with students during the Warren Alpert Medical School’s Family Weekend activities.
4of4
Assistant Professor of Orthopaedics (Research) Dioscaris Garcia, left, and Program Manager of Community Mentoring and Service-Learning Jesse Kerstetter led an "Outside the Classroom" panel before families were split into groups for a tour of the anatomy lab and an interactive clinical skills session to experience a day in the life of a first-year medical student.
Across from the bonfires, a different kind of light was on display. Luminarias lined Steeple Street, each candle lit in honor of a loved one affected by cancer. The display was in support of the work of the Legorreta Cancer Center at Brown to improve cancer care in Rhode Island and across the world through research and treatment.
The luminaria display, much like other events held throughout Family Weekend, lent students, parents and family members an opportunity to reflect on the past while looking toward the future.
Gavin Schilling, a member of the Class of 2025.5, said that having his parents visit Providence from Chicago for the first time since his first year at Brown helped “put everything into perspective.”
“You can get so in your head about classes and clubs and activities and just the whole hustle and bustle of school,” Schilling said. “But this is a great reminder of home — that there’s life after Brown. It’s just so nice. I’ve missed them a lot.”
For the fifth time, Brown has earned the distinction of being the country’s top producer of Fulbright winners, with 40 grants offered to students and recent alumni for the 2024-25 academic year.
A public theologian and co-chair of the Poor People’s Campaign, Barber delivered the University’s 2025 Martin Luther King Jr. Lecture with wide-ranging reflections on U.S. history, poverty and policy.
At the 2025 College Squash Association Club Team Championships, the men claimed their third straight win, while the women’s team celebrated its second victory in three years.