The New Brunswick Campus is the largest and most diversified
of the university's three campuses, with 13 academic units, over 2,000 faculty,
and more than 38,000 students enrolled in undergraduate and graduate programs.School of Arts and
Sciences
Richard S. Falk, Ph.D., Acting
Executive Dean
The School of Arts and Sciences, created in 2006, combines
the former Douglass, Livingston, Rutgers, and University Colleges. The school offers
students a wide choice of majors in the humanities, social sciences,
biological/life sciences, and physical and mathematical sciences, as well as
access to a limited number of majors offered by the School of Environmental and
Biological Sciences and the Mason Gross School of the Arts.
School of
Environmental and Biological Sciences
Robert M. Goodman, Ph.D., Executive Dean
The School of Environmental and Biological Sciences offers
undergraduate programs in various applied disciplines with an emphasis on
environmental, agricultural, food, and marine sciences. Formerly the College of
Agriculture, later the College of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences, and
most recently Cook College, the school adopted its present name in 2006.
Graduate programs are offered through the Graduate School-New
Brunswick.
Ernest Mario School
of Pharmacy
Joseph A. Barone, Pharm.D., Acting Dean
First organized in 1892 and incorporated into the state
university in 1927, the Ernest Mario School of Pharmacy offers a six-year
professional program leading to the doctor of pharmacy (Pharm.D.) degree and a
graduate program offering a post-bachelor of science (B.S.) Pharm.D. degree
(both traditional two-year and nontraditional). Other graduate programs leading
to advanced degrees through the Graduate School-New Brunswick are available. In
addition, the school sponsors a continuing education program for the benefit of
practicing pharmacists throughout the state.
Mason Gross School of
the Arts
George B. Stauffer, Ph.D., Dean
This branch of Rutgers opened in 1976. The school grants
both undergraduate and graduate degrees. Formed to provide an education in the
arts of the highest professional caliber, the school offers a master of fine
arts (M.F.A.) degree in visual arts and theater arts; doctor of musical arts
(D.M.A.), artist diploma (A.Dpl.) in music, master of music (M.M.), and
bachelor of music (B.Mus.); and bachelor of fine arts (B.F.A.) degrees in
visual arts, dance, and theater arts.
Rutgers Business
School-Newark and New Brunswick
Glenn Shafer, Ph.D., Dean
Rutgers Business School offers undergraduate and graduate
programs through the university's Newark and New Brunswick campuses. Rutgers
Business School: Undergraduate-Newark is a four-year undergraduate
school that offers the bachelor of science degree in accounting, finance,
management, management information systems, marketing, and supply chain and
marketing science. Rutgers Business School: Undergraduate-New
Brunswick is a four-year undergraduate school that offers the bachelor of
science degree in accounting, business analytics and information technology,
finance, management, marketing, and supply chain and marketing science. Rutgers
Business School: Graduate Programs-Newark and New Brunswick offers the
master of business administration (M.B.A.), an M.B.A. degree in professional
accounting, a master of accountancy in taxation, a master of accountancy with
options in governmental accounting or financial accounting, a master of
information technology, a master of quantitative finance, and a variety of dual
degrees. The Ph.D. degree in management is offered by the Graduate School-Newark
in cooperation with the New Jersey Institute of Technology.
School of
Communication and Information
Jorge R. Schement, Ph.D., Dean
The School of Communication and Information is a community
of scholars, students, alumni, and professionals seeking to make a difference
in an age of global information and communication. With roots in academic
programs offered at Rutgers beginning in the 1920s, the current name of the
school was adopted in 2009 to reflect its 21st-century outlook. The School of
Communication and Information offers undergraduate programs of study in
communication, information technology and informatics, and journalism and media
studies. Students are admitted to these majors through a competitive process
after they have been admitted to the university. At the graduate level, the
school offers programs leading to the degrees of master of communication and
information studies, master of library and information science, and doctor of
philosophy (with the Ph.D. awarded by the Graduate School-New
Brunswick). Professional development courses and certificate programs for
working professionals also are provided.
School of Engineering
Thomas N. Farris, Ph.D., Dean
Instruction in engineering began at Rutgers in 1864 when the
State of New Jersey designated the Rutgers Scientific School as the State
College for the Benefit of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts. The College of
Engineering became a separate unit in 1914 and was renamed the School of
Engineering in 1999. The school is dedicated to the sound technical and general
education of the student. It offers a bachelor of science degree in nine
disciplines, including bioenvironmental engineering with the School of
Environmental and Biological Sciences, and a curriculum in applied sciences.
Its graduate programs are conducted through the Graduate School-New
Brunswick.
Edward J. Bloustein
School of Planning and Public Policy
James W. Hughes, Ph.D., Dean
Founded in 1992, the Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning
and Public Policy provides focus for Rutgers' programs of instruction,
research, and service in planning and public policy. The school offers
undergraduate programs in planning and public policy and in public health. On
the graduate level, the school confers master of city and regional planning,
master of city and regional studies, master of public affairs and politics,
master of public policy, master of public health, and doctor of public health
degrees; the latter two degrees are offered jointly with the University of
Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey-School of Public Health. A dual-degree
program in public health and applied psychology leading to the master of public
health and doctor of psychology degrees is offered with the Graduate School of
Applied and Professional Psychology. A program also is offered that leads to
the doctor of philosophy degree in planning and public policy; this degree is
conferred by the Graduate School-New Brunswick. In addition, the school
offers dual-degree programs with Rutgers' two law schools, with the Rutgers
Business School: Graduate Programs-Newark and New Brunswick, and with the
Graduate School-New Brunswick.
School of Management
and Labor Relations
Susan J. Schurman, Ph.D., Dean
The School of Management and Labor Relations, formed in
1994, provides undergraduate instruction in labor studies and employment
relations leading to a bachelor of arts degree conferred jointly by the school
and the School of Arts and Sciences, as well as a bachelor of science degree
awarded by the School of Management and Labor Relations alone. At the graduate
level, programs are offered that lead to the degrees of master in human
resource management, master in labor and employment relations, and, through the
Graduate School-New Brunswick, a doctor of philosophy degree in industrial
relations and human resources.
Graduate School-New Brunswick
Jerry Kukor, Ph.D., Dean
Graduate programs in the arts and sciences have been offered
since 1876. The Graduate School-New Brunswick awards advanced degrees in
more than 60 disciplines and is responsible for all doctor of philosophy
degrees at Rutgers-New Brunswick. The faculty is drawn from virtually all
academic divisions of the university.
Graduate School of
Applied and Professional Psychology
Stanley B. Messer, Ph.D., Dean
The Graduate School of Applied and Professional Psychology
(GSAPP) was established in 1974 to train direct-service psychologists who have
a special commitment to community involvement. It offers the doctor of
psychology (Psy.D.) degree in professional psychology with specializations in
the areas of clinical psychology and school psychology. GSAPP also awards the
master of psychology (Psy.M.) degree en passant to the doctorate; the Psy.M. is
not offered as a terminal degree.
Graduate School of
Education
Richard De Lisi, Ph.D., Dean
Courses in education were first offered by the former
Rutgers College in the late 19th century. A separate school offering its own
curricula was organized in 1924. The Graduate School of Education offers
programs leading to the degrees of master of education and doctor of education.
School of Social Work
Kathleen J. Pottick, Ph.D., Acting Dean
Established in 1954 to prepare students for professional
social work practice, the School of Social Work offers a two-year graduate
curriculum leading to the master of social work degree. The school's faculty
also teaches an undergraduate social work program. The School of Social Work
offers a doctor of social work (D.S.W.) degree program, and through the
Graduate School-New Brunswick, it offers a program leading to the doctor of
philosophy degree.
Summer Session-New Brunswick
Elizabeth H. Hough, M.A., Director
The Summer Session, begun in 1913 and established as a
division of the university in 1960, offers a wide variety of graduate and
undergraduate courses during three sessions in the summer months. In addition,
select noncredit programs for targeted audiences are conducted.