Rutgers University–Camden
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Official Seal of Rutgers University
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Former names
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College of South Jersey, South Jersey Law School |
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Motto | Sol iustitiae et occidentem illustra |
Motto in English
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Sun of righteousness, shine upon the West also. |
Type | Public, Research university |
Established | November 10, 1766 |
Endowment | US $603 million (systemwide)[1] |
Chancellor | Phoebe A. Haddon |
President | Robert L. Barchi |
Academic staff
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254[2] |
Administrative staff
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430[2] |
Students | 6,158[2] |
Undergraduates | 4,497[2] |
Postgraduates | 1,661[2] |
Location |
,
,
U.S.
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Campus | Urban/Suburban |
Alma Mater | On the Banks of the Old Raritan |
Colors | Scarlet |
Mascot | Scarlet Raptors |
Website | camden.rutgers.edu |
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Rutgers University–Camden is one of three regional campuses of Rutgers University, New Jersey's public research university. It is located in Camden, New Jersey, United States. Founded in the 1920s, Rutgers–Camden began as an amalgam of the South Jersey Law School and the College of South Jersey. It is the southernmost of the three regional campuses of Rutgers—the others being located in New Brunswick and Newark.[3] The city of Camden is located on the Delaware River east of Philadelphia.
Contents
History
Rutgers–Camden began as the South Jersey Law School and the College of South Jersey. The schools were founded by a group of citizens led by Collingswood mayor and businessman Arthur E. Armitage.[4] In 1950, the two schools became the Camden campus when they merged with Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. After decades of providing students with a comprehensive liberal arts curriculum, in 1981 Rutgers–Camden began to offer its first master's degree programs, in biology, English, and business administration. In 1989, the growing demand for business offerings led to the founding of the School of Business–Camden, the first business school in southern New Jersey to earn prestigious accreditation from the AACSB International. Rutgers–Camden achieved another academic first in 2007: launching the first doctoral program on its campus—and the very first of its kind in the nation—with the PhD degree in childhood studies. Today, Rutgers–Camden boasts two additional PhD degrees in integrative biology and public affairs. The business school offers a four-year undergraduate business curriculum along with MBA, professional master’s, and executive programs. The law school, ranked highly and nationally, boasts a new and impressive facility complete with a state-of-the-art moot courtroom. In 2011, the School of Nursing became the newest academic unit at Rutgers–Camden, providing health care institutions throughout the region with high-caliber nursing professionals.
In July 2012, the New Jersey Legislature passed the "New Jersey Medical and Health Sciences Higher Education Restructuring Act," integrating Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, with units of the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey (UMDNJ). The Restructuring Act created a Rutgers–Camden Board of Directors that has the authority to determine policies for the organization, administration and development of the campus. It also links Rutgers–Camden with Rowan University for joint science collaborations. In July 2014, the legacy University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey School of Nursing at Stratford merged with the Rutgers School of Nursing–Camden.
Academics
Rutgers–Camden is accredited by the Middle States Commission on Higher Education.[5] It has nearly 40 majors and 50 minors plus special programs, an Honors College, hands-on research with faculty mentors, study abroad, internships, civic learning, and various graduate and advanced professional programs. The academic year follows a 4-4 schedule of two four-course semesters, fall and spring. During the winter study term, students study various courses outside of typical curriculum for 3 weeks in January. Rutgers students often take the winter study term to pursue internships or work on intensive research projects.
College of Arts and Sciences
The College of Arts and Sciences is the largest academic unit at Rutgers–Camden. Students enjoy the advantages of a personalized liberal arts education as well as the benefits of studying at a campus of a research university, particularly the opportunity to work closely with distinguished faculty. Students have a broad choice of majors and programs in the humanities, the arts, the social sciences, and the natural and physical sciences, including those in traditional liberal arts fields as well as more professionally oriented courses of study. The College of Arts and Sciences also has a highly selective Honors College, which offers a challenging academic program that includes seminars, junior and senior year projects, and extracurricular activities.
Graduate and Professional Programs
The Graduate School offers 14 programs granting master's degrees in several liberal arts disciplines including history, English literature, languages, and creative writing, as well as advanced degrees in the biological, chemical, computer, and mathematical sciences, nursing, psychology, social work, political science and public policy, and Doctoral programs in Childhood Studies, Computational Biology, and Public Affairs with emphasis on community development. An MBA program is offered through the Rutgers School of Business-Camden.
Visual and Performing Arts
The Rutgers–Camden Center for the Arts provides performances, exhibitions, education programs, and community projects that inspire a full appreciation and enjoyment of the arts, create meaningful opportunities to participate in the arts, advance the central role of the arts in education, and increase awareness of the arts as essential to cultural, economic, and community vitality. The Fine Arts Building on the Rutgers–Camden campus houses the Walter K. Gordon Theater, Black Box Theater, and the Stedman Gallery, each hosting a variety of campus and community programs and serving as focal points for the visual and performing arts in the region from international touring artists and companies to local theater and student-derived works.
The Rutgers School of Business–Camden
The Rutgers School of Business is accredited by The Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB). The School of Business offers undergraduate degree programs in Accounting, E-commerce, Entrepreneurship, Finance, International Business, Management, Marketing, and Operations Management. Graduate programs include MBA, PMBA, PMAc. Concentrations offered in MBA include: Accounting, E-Commerce, Entrepreneurship, Finance, International Business, Management, Marketing, and Operations Management.
The Rutgers Law School
The Rutgers Law School is a center of legal education. Its faculty is internationally recognized in a number of fields including constitutional, criminal, health, and corporate law. Its alumni are leading members of the bar in public and private practice settings throughout the nation. The school is well represented among the state and federal judiciary. The law school is a member of the Association of American Law Schools and is on the list of approved schools of the American Bar Association. It offers a three-year course of study for full-time students and a four-year, part-time program leading to the awarding of the Juris Doctor degree." [6]
The Rutgers School of Nursing–Camden
The Rutgers School of Nursing–Camden offers dynamic curricula that integrate nursing knowledge and clinical practice, including baccalaureate programs for traditional students, registered nurse students, and second-degree students; a doctor of nursing practice program; and certification in school nursing and wound ostomy continence nursing.
Libraries
Paul Robeson Library Located in the heart of the Rutgers–Camden Campus, the Paul Robeson Library develops and maintains access to materials that support undergraduate and graduate coursework and research. A designated Federal Depository for the First U.S. Congressional District, the library serves as a public resource for the citizens of New Jersey. Library faculty deliver comprehensive support for reference and research questions. Through the Paul Robeson Library, the Rutgers–Camden community may access the global resources of the Rutgers University Library System and a host of online services. Recent renovations to the library include an upgraded student computing center and a new lounge area for study.
Law Library One of New Jersey’s largest law libraries serves as a research facility for law students, legal practitioners, and the general public. The Law Library houses a collection of over 440,000 books and other materials, and the collection is comprehensive in its holdings of American, English, Canadian, and foreign legal periodicals. The Law Library is located on three floors of the Law School Building. A selective federal depository, the Rutgers–Camden Law Library hosts numerous online collections of public documents related to federal and New Jersey courts.[7]
Campus
Dorms and student housing
Undergraduate and graduate dorms are located at Third and Cooper Streets, and a graduate residence hall is located at 330 Cooper Street.[8] The twelve-story residence hall is the tallest building on campus. Many students live off campus in Camden's Cooper Grant neighborhood, in Philadelphia, or in surrounding suburbs such as Collingswood and Haddonfield, which are accessible through the PATCO Speedline.
Transportation services
Rail access to the university is provided by the PATCO's City Hall station, located two blocks from center campus, and the RiverLINE's Cooper Street - Rutgers University station. The Walter Rand Transportation Center is located a few blocks from campus, which provides access to several NJTransit bus lines. Additionally, the seasonally operated RiverLink Ferry running between Camden and Philadelphia has a stop at the nearby Adventure Aquarium.
As a service to students of the university, the Rutgers–Camden Police Department provides "a walking security escort for individuals to their vehicles; campus housing; the PATCO Hi-Speed Line station at Fifth and Market St.; and the Walter Rand Transportation Center on Broadway".[9]
Athletics
Known as the Scarlet Raptors, Rutgers–Camden's athletic teams are a member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) and compete in Division III in the following sports:
- Baseball
- Basketball
- Crew
- Cross Country
- Golf
- Indoor Track
- Outdoor Track
- Soccer
- Softball
- Tennis
- Volleyball
- Women's Lacrosse
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NCAA Division III Achievements
In 2006, Rutgers–Camden earned its very first NCAA Division III National Championship when the softball team defeated top-ranked and two-time defending champion St. Thomas (MN), 3-2. Rutgers–Camden set program marks with a 47-5 record and a 29-game winning streak.
In 2012 and 2013, Rutgers–Camden student-athlete Tim VanLiew won back-to-back NCAA Division III Outdoor Track and Field National Championships in the javelin. He won his first title on May 26, 2012, with a throw of 67.19 meters (220-05) at Claremont-Mudd-Scripps in Claremont, California. Nearly a year to the day of his first title, he not only defended his national javelin title, but he did so in record-breaking fashion. VanLiew’s throw of 75.55 meters (247-10) set the all-time NCAA Division III record for the new javelin, while shattering the NCAA Championship record, the University of Wisconsin-La Crosse stadium mark, and VanLiew’s old Rutgers–Camden program record in the process.
Rutgers–Camden's men's soccer team went a school-record 37 consecutive games without a loss, a record that spanned the 2012 and 2013 seasons. The team compiled a 32-0-5 record during that time, the eighth-longest streak in NCAA Division III men's soccer history. The team earned a trip to the NCAA Division III National Championship for the first time in program history by defeating Loras College, 3-2, in overtime on Dec. 6, 2013, in San Antonio, Texas. The unbeaten streak came to an end on Dec. 7, 2013, in a 2-1 double overtime loss to Messiah College in the NCAA Division III National Championship. The men's soccer team won three consecutive New Jersey Athletic Conference titles and in 2013 finished ranked No. 3 in the D3soccer.com Top 25 and No. 4 in the NSCAA national poll.
Student life
Student body
Approximately 6,600 undergraduate and graduate students attend Rutgers–Camden. Nearly 600 students live on campus. Renowned for its commitment for diversity, the student body is made up of students from 29 states and 33 countries. There are many clubs that represent various ethnic and racial groups, various religious denominations, political beliefs, and an LGBTQ club. There have been over 43,000 graduates as of 2016 [10]
Student media
- The Gleaner independent weekly newspaper; includes Features, Arts & Entertainment, Commentary, Weekly Word, Comics/Horoscope, Sports
- WCCR-Camden Internet-based radio station [11]
Scholarly journals and publications
- Cooper Street[12]
- Mickle Street Review [13]
- Rutgers Journal of Law and Public Policy (J.L.P.P.) [14]
- Rutgers Journal of Law and Religion [13]
- Rutgers Law Journal [15]
- StoryQuarterly [16]
- The Encyclopedia of Greater Philadelphia
Clubs and other organizations
There are over 40 clubs and organizations [17] on campus including:
- Black Student Union
- French Club
- Jewish Student Union
- Lambda Alliance
- Latin American Student Association
- Living Branch Ministries
- New Jersey PIRG and Water Watch
- Newman Club
- Muslim Student Organization
- Rotaract Club
- Rutgers Association of South Asia
- Spanish Club
- Math League
See also
- Henry Rutgers
- List of Rutgers University people
- Presidents of Rutgers University
- Rutgers University
- Post-secondary education in New Jersey
- List of American state universities
References
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- ↑ [1] Archived May 4, 2009 at the Wayback Machine
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External links
- Rutgers University
- Rutgers–Camden official website
- Official Home of the Scarlet Raptors
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- Pages with broken file links
- Articles using infobox university
- Pages using infobox university with the image name parameter
- Pages using infobox university with unknown parameters
- Rutgers University
- Universities and colleges in New Jersey
- Universities and colleges in Camden County, New Jersey
- Education in Camden, New Jersey
- Buildings and structures in Camden, New Jersey
- Educational institutions established in 1926
- Visitor attractions in Camden, New Jersey