News Stories

  • April 26, 2020

    sidewalk chalk art that says Be kind to each other.

    RIT Archives launches ‘Pandemic Journals’

    RIT Archives is documenting the COVID-19 moment and its impact on the RIT community by collecting personal reflections of the pandemic. The “RIT Pandemic Journals” is meant to be a repository for RIT students, faculty, staff and alumni who are processing their response to the crisis in creative ways.

  • April 26, 2020

    Jeff Benck.

    RIT Rallies: Making the products for frontline workers

    Jeff Benck ’88 (mechanical engineering) is the president and CEO of Benchmark, a global provider of engineering, design and manufacturing services. Benchmark is working with about 10 clients who are making products that will help treat patients infected with COVID-19.

  • April 24, 2020

    patient listening to doctor from a tablet.

    RIT Student Affairs Division provides wellness support during pandemic

    During this time of COVID-19, the Wellness division of RIT Student Affairs remains a resource for undergraduate and graduate students seeking health care, mental health counseling, nutrition advice or guidance for navigating personal matters. While the delivery process looks different than before the pandemic, the level of care is the same.

  • April 23, 2020

    researcher pointing at equations on dry-erase board.

    Fixing the forgetting problem in artificial neural networks

    An RIT scientist has been tapped by the National Science Foundation to solve a fundamental problem that plagues artificial neural networks. Christopher Kanan, an assistant professor in the Chester F. Carlson Center for Imaging Science, received $500,000 in funding to create multi-modal brain-inspired algorithms capable of learning immediately without excess forgetting.

  • April 22, 2020

    tiger statue wearing graduation cap.

    Celebrating the Class of 2020

    RIT will celebrate the Class of 2020 with a virtual conferral of degrees on May 8, with plans for an in-person, traditional event at a future date when it’s considered safe, said President Munson and Provost Granberg in a letter to the graduates and the community.

  • April 22, 2020

    person writing in spiral-bound notebook.

    College of Liberal Arts honors students for writing excellence

    RIT’s College of Liberal Arts honored student achievement in writing with more than a dozen writing awards for essays varying from wasteful energy, maternal mortality, eyewitness testimony policies and seeking worth in a liberal arts degree. Each department within the college selected student awardees whose work embodies the ideals and standards of excellence, creative endeavor and scholarship.