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The School of Engineering at Rutgers University was founded in 1914 as the College of Engineering. It was originally a part of the Rutgers Scientific School, which was founded in 1864. [ 1 ] The school has seven academic departments, with a combined undergraduate student enrollment of over 2,400 students. [ 2 ]
The Voorhees Chapel is a notable landmark on the Douglass campus at Rutgers; Douglass was founded as an all-women's college in 1918, but now houses co-ed dormitories. 330 Cooper student housing on the Camden campus Demarest Hall dormitory on the New Brunswick campus. Rutgers University offers a variety of housing options.
Rutgers students can enroll in an undergraduate major program of study (with separate regional and comparative options), [5] an undergraduate minor, [6] and a post-baccalaureate Translation Certificate program, which is also open to non-matriculated students.
Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School is a medical school of Rutgers University. It is one of the two graduate medical schools of Rutgers Biomedical and Health Sciences , together with New Jersey Medical School , and is closely aligned with Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital , the medical school's principal affiliate.
University College in Rutgers–New Brunswick was eliminated in 2007, along with the other undergraduate liberal arts colleges (Rutgers, Douglass, Livingston Colleges, and the liberal arts aspect of Cook College) which were combined into a School of Arts and Sciences in an effort to consolidate undergraduate education, and have one common ...
New Jersey Medical School (NJMS), also known as Rutgers New Jersey Medical School, is a medical school of Rutgers University, a public research university in Newark, New Jersey. It has been part of the Rutgers Division of Biomedical and Health Sciences since the 2013 dissolution of the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey .
The Rutgers School of Public Health (SPH) is part of Rutgers Biomedical and Health Sciences. Prior to July 1, 2013, it was affiliated with the now-defunct University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey. The School of Public Health educates students to become leaders in public health, researchers, and promoters of population and individual ...
Sign at the side entrance of the Waksman Institute. The Waksman Institute of Microbiology is a research facility on the Busch Campus of Rutgers University.It is named after Selman Waksman, a student and then faculty member at Rutgers who won the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1952 for research which led to the discovery of streptomycin.