Rutgers has transformed undergraduate education at its largest campus with a dramatic reshaping of academics and student life.
New and returning students to Rutgers–New Brunswick are benefiting from a multitude of changes:
- A single liberal arts school, the School of Arts and Sciences, now serves new arts and sciences undergraduates at Rutgers–New Brunswick.
- Students wishing to live on campus can choose among residence halls on the Busch, College Avenue, Cook, Douglass, or Livingston campuses—and even switch campuses from year to year.
- First-year seminars on topics such as the African immigrant experience and alternative energy are forging strong bonds between students and professors, engaging undergraduates in the intellectual life of a great public research university.
- Arts and sciences students are now served by Academic Advising Centers on each of the campuses at Rutgers–New Brunswick.
- The Douglass Residential College provides women at Rutgers with a small, close-knit community focusing on women’s leadership.
- Improved student services, a campuswide honors program, and “discovery houses” on the Livingston Campus are enriching the student experience for Rutgers undergraduates.
Here’s the spot to find answers and resources about the changes at Rutgers–New Brunswick.
Frequently Asked QuestionsDo you have questions? We have answers.
- Essential Offices and Resources
Information about key offices and resources relating to the transformation.
- Organizational Charts and Contact Information
Wondering who is responsible for what? We have org charts and contact information for the Office of Undergraduate Education, Office of the Vice President for Student Affairs, the School of Arts and Sciences, and the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences.
Rutgers Focus has covered the transformation of undergraduate education with in-depth articles:
- History of the Transformation
Find out about the steps leading to the transformation of undergraduate education at Rutgers–New Brunswick, including reports, recommendations, news releases, and more.
