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Frank Educational Gilmore, who graduated from SC&I in 2014 after serving a 10-year prison sentence, is the founder and CEO of the Educational Gilmore Community Learning Center, where children K-7 receive tutoring, nurturing, and inspiration. He is also a national motivational speaker in the area of youth development and youth programming.
Gilmore and the center were recently featured on The Ellen Show.
Holloway to begin presidency on July 1 after successful tenures at Northwestern, Yale
SC&I faculty member Joyce Valenza describes how a visit from an author to a single location became a state-wide event.
IT & Informatics students pitched over 40 projects at the fall IT & Informatics Showcase. Two projects were named Showcase winners after being chosen as ‘Best Project’ by both the judges and the students. Four additional teams won Best Project awards for their topic areas.
The new specialization, launching in spring 2020, will help prepare SC&I’s Master of Communication and Media students for careers in Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR), sustainability, organizational purpose, and more.
Students, faculty, and alumni arrived at the Zimmerli Art Museum to celebrate the academic achievements of SC&I students, the generosity of donors, and the many ways the students benefit by the donor’s scholarships.
SC&I's Dean for Research Mark Aakhus and Distinguished Professor of Communication Brent Ruben spoke about their international research initiatives at this event, which was hosted by Rutgers Global.
NJ Spark, a social justice journalism lab that enables students to report on local underserved communities, has received additional funding from the Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation.
Ruiz, an Information Technology and Informatics major at SC&I, is one of only 1,000 students in the country chosen for this honor. As an Under 30 Scholar, Ruiz will attend the Forbes Under 30 Summit where he plans to network and gain insight into what it takes to run a company.
Montague hopes to promote further collaboration between public librarians and social workers as she observes Rutgers’ first Masters of Social Work (MSW) intern, Sandra Burstyn, at the East Brunswick Public Library. Burstyn was placed there as a result of an existing collaboration between the School of Communication and Information, The School of Social Work, and the East Brunswick Public Library.