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Need Help Choosing a Science Major? Turn to the Experts

No, we don’t mean the science experts – let Hollywood help you find the right program.

Engaged Learning in the Classroom and Community

My students explored applications of ethnobotany through engaged and experiential learning.

Looking For a Job in the Biotech Industry? ΢Ȧ is the Place to Earn Your Degree.

As a leading educator of Rhode Island’s workforce, ΢Ȧ has been tapped by the State of Rhode Island to assist in producing more technologically skilled graduates. Along with ΢Ȧ’s new Institute for Cybersecurity and Emerging Technologies, the college is launching a new B.S. degree in biotechnology.

You May Be Overlooking This Building on Campus. You Shouldn’t.

΢Ȧ’s greenhouse has life forms you wouldn’t believe. “Come in and explore,” says Greenhouse Manager Pam Hill.

Six Grants in Six Years for Biochemistry Professor Jamie Towle-Weicksel

“RI-INBRE has been very good to me in supporting my research,” says Jamie Towle-Weicksel. “I am very thankful.”

Geeking Out on Physical Sciences

You don't have to be a total science geek to appreciate what goes on in the Department of Physical Sciences at ΢Ȧ.

Keeping an Ion Physics

"There are few things more beautiful than the core of a nuclear reactor," says ΢Ȧ Associate Professor of Physical Sciences Benjamin Young.

From the Science Lab to Global Business: A ΢Ȧ Alum’s Story

΢Ȧ Impact

Since graduating from ΢Ȧ in ’05 with degrees in chemistry and computer science, Jide Okandeji earned a Ph.D. at Brown, became a lab chemist, filed four patents and is now managing products used in life-changing research and clinical diagnostics.

Alumna Teaches Physics and Self-Value to Highschoolers

Between her parents, who never limited what she could do based on gender, and her high school track coaches, who saw her innate leadership ability, Cante developed a strong sense of self. Today, she passes it on.

40 Days at Sea: ΢Ȧ Alum’s Field Study

There was no wind, only an eerie calm. Sea ice floated alongside the 274-foot vessel in 0 degree temperature. On deck, a cadre of research scientists from around the world huddled in parkas in a silent, collective state of awe.