News Stories

  • March 31, 2017

    Portrait of person

    Benjamin Lawrance named ACLS Fellow

    Benjamin Lawrance, the Hon. Barber B. Conable Jr. Endowed Professor of International Studies, has been named a 2017 American Council of Learned Societies Fellow and is the first RIT faculty member to receive an ACLS Fellowship.
  • March 31, 2017

    Poster displaying "National Endowment for the humanities announces New Grant Recipients"

    RIT to get Humanities Connections grant

    The National Endowment for the Humanities has announced a $91,000 grant to RIT to help students focus on the historical, economic and cultural meanings of community in and beyond Rochester.
  • March 31, 2017

    Van with GE #BalanceTheEquation poster on the side

    GE #BalanceTheEquation tour stops by RIT Monday

    Women scientists and engineers from GE will stop at RIT on Monday to talk to female RIT students as part of the GE #BalanceTheEquation tour. The event will provide students an opportunity to network with GE leaders and RIT alumnae working at GE to learn what it means to join the technical workforce.
  • March 31, 2017

    People watching presentation in large classroom

    IdeaLab teams proposed healthcare solutions

    Twenty-one RIT students from multiple disciplines participated in the spring IdeaLab@RIT, held March 25-26, and developed possible solutions to challenges provided to them by Rochester Regional Health patients and healthcare personnel.
  • March 31, 2017

    Person posing at table for "Make a Wish"

    Women in Business hosts etiquette dinner

    Meet Harianne Hewitt, a second-year double major in business management and international hospitality and service management and president of the Women in Business club.
  • March 30, 2017

    Portrait of person in park

    Business alumna named to ‘Forbes’ list

    Merrill Lynch financial advisor Fern (Grossman) Schwartz ’77 (business administration) has been named to the Forbes list of “America’s Top Women Wealth Advisors” for 2017.
  • March 29, 2017

    Two carbon chain diagrams under water

    Researchers study carbon nanotubes as water filters

    Enhanced single-walled carbon nanotubes offer a more effective and sustainable approach to water treatment and remediation than the standard industry materials—silicon gels and activated carbon—according to a paper by RIT researchers John-David Rocha and Reginald Rogers.
  • March 29, 2017

    Two people balancing props on hand

    A bright new day for NTID's Sunshine 2.0

    RIT/NTID alumnus Fred Michael Beam finds connections where others may not. As the coordinator of RIT/NTID’s traveling performance troupe Sunshine 2.0, Beam connects performing arts and science, technology, engineering and math—or STEM—themes, for deaf, hard-of-hearing and hearing children and adults around the country.

  • March 29, 2017

    student and staff member talking at a table.

    Preparing students on autism spectrum for success

    RIT is one of the leading universities in the nation in preparing students on the autism spectrum for professional success. Its strength stems from a combination of the Spectrum Support Program and the cooperative education program.

  • March 29, 2017

    People working on experiment in classroom

    Women in Computing helping to close gender gap

    For all the progress women have made in STEM careers, the gender gap in computing is only growing larger. RIT’s Women in Computing (WiC) group was created in 2008 to help empower women in computer fields to succeed and thrive at RIT and beyond.