News
MEET OUR GRADUATES: Faythann Fallon Redefines the Reach of People with Disabilities
“You don’t see a lot people in wheelchairs in film and television, and when you do, what is being represented isn’t the reality I know and experience,” says Fallon.
MEET OUR GRADUATES: Dayna Reilly Makes Tennis History at RIC
Rhode Island College ImpactDayna Reilly is one of the greatest women’s tennis student-athletes in Rhode Island College history.
2018 CRCA Spring Expo: Student Research Projects Probe Unmapped Territory
Rhode Island College ImpactA myriad of dynamic undergraduate research projects awaited visitors at the Murray Center on April 23. RIC’s annual Spring Expo of Research and Creative Activity Poster Session displayed more than 160 faculty-mentored student research projects, some of which shed light on data that had been overlooked for centuries.
New Division of Community, Equity and Diversity is Advancing Inclusive Excellence at RIC
Anna Cano-Morales has plans for a more inclusive campus.
Campus-Wide Safe Zone Trainings Promote Inclusive Excellence
Safe Zone is a campus-wide training program designed to create a nonjudgmental, safe, welcoming and inclusive environment for members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ+) community.
RIC Graduate Student Named 2018 Schwarzman Scholar and 2019 Gates Cambridge Scholar
The Schwarzman Scholarship and the Gates Cambridge Scholarship are two of the most prestigious, highly competitive international scholarships available. Seth is the first student in RIC history to receive these awards.
Director of Dance Explores Generation Gap in "That’s LIFE"
"I think it’s good for our students to see that we’re not only asking them to challenge themselves, we’re challenging ourselves as well," says Cardente-Vessella, director of dance.
Necessity Became the Mother of Invention for Math App Inventor Roberto Campusano
“Like most discoveries in life, I stumbled upon this as I was pursuing something else,” says Roberto Campusano ’95.
Active Learning in Action at RIC
The initial assumption by many psych majors is that if they enroll in a Research Methods course they’re signing up for a semester of boredom. Not in Marcotte's courses.