Jump to content

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute

Coordinates:42°43′48″N73°40′39″W/ 42.7300°N 73.6775°W/42.7300; -73.6775
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Coat of arms designed byRichard Clipston Sturgisin 1904[1]
Former names
Rensselaer School (1824–1834)
Rensselaer Institute (1834–1861)
Motto"Knowledge and Thoroughness"
TypePrivateresearch university
EstablishedNovember 5, 1824;199 years ago(November 5, 1824)
AccreditationMSCHE
Academic affiliations
Endowment$864 million (2022)[2]
PresidentMartin A. Schmidt
ProvostRebecca W. Doerge[3]
Academic staff
488 (2019)[4]
Administrative staff
1,291 (2019)[4]
Students8,142 (2019)[4]
Undergraduates6,203 (2019)[4]
Postgraduates1,366 (2019)[4]
Other students
573 (2019)[4]
Location,,
United States

42°43′48″N73°40′39″W/ 42.7300°N 73.6775°W/42.7300; -73.6775
CampusSmall city[5],265 acres (107 ha)
Other campuses
NewspaperThe Rensselaer Polytechnic
ColorsCherry and white[6]
NicknameEngineers
Sporting affiliations
Mascot
  • Red Hawks
  • Puckman[7]
Websitewww.rpi.edu
Location of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute inTroy,New York

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute(/rɛnsəˈlɪər/;RPI) is aprivateresearch universityinTroy, New York,with an additional campus inHartford, Connecticut.A third campus inGroton, Connecticutclosed in 2018.[8]RPI was established in 1824 byStephen Van RensselaerandAmos Eatonfor the "application of science to the common purposes of life" and is the oldesttechnological universityin theEnglish-speaking worldand the Western Hemisphere.[9]

Built on a hillside, RPI's 265-acre (107 ha) campus overlooks the city ofTroyand theHudson River.The institute operates an on‑campusbusiness incubatorand the 1,250-acre (510 ha)Rensselaer Technology Park.[10]

RPI is organized into six main schools which contain 37 departments, with emphasis on science and technology.[11]It isclassifiedamong "R1: Doctoral Universities: Very High Research Activity".[12]As of 2017, RPI's faculty and alumni included multiple engineers, includingIvar Giaever.

History

[edit]

1824–1900

[edit]
Stephen van Rensselaer,founder of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Engraving of the original Rensselaer School
Engraving of RPI in 1876

Stephen Van Rensselaerestablished the Rensselaer School on 5 November 1824 with a letter to the Reverend Dr.Samuel Blatchford,in which Van Rensselaer asked Blatchford to serve as the first president. Within the letter he set down several orders of business. He appointedAmos Eatonas the school's first senior professor and appointed the first board of trustees.[1]The school opened on Monday, 5 January 1825 at the Old Bank Place, a building at the north end of Troy.[13]Tuition was around $40 per semester (equivalent to $800 in 2012[14]).[1]The fact that the school attracted students from as far asOhioandPennsylvaniais attributed to the reputation of Eaton. Fourteen months of successful trial led to the incorporation of the school on 21 March 1826 by the state ofNew York.In its early years, the Rensselaer School strongly resembled a graduate school more than it did a college, drawing graduates from many older institutions.[15]

Under Eaton, the Rensselaer School, renamed the Rensselaer Institute in 1832, was a small but vibrant center for technological research. The first civil engineering degrees in theUnited Stateswere granted by the school in 1835, and many of the best remembered civil engineers of that time graduated from the school. Important visiting scholars includedJoseph Henry,who had previously studied under Amos Eaton, andThomas Davenport,who sold the world's first workingelectric motorto the institute.[16]

In 1847 alumnusBenjamin Franklin Greenebecame the new senior professor. Earlier he had done a thorough study of European technical schools to see how Rensselaer could be improved. In 1850 he reorganized the school into a three-year polytechnic institute with six technical schools.[17]In 1861 the name was changed to Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.[18]A severe conflagration of 10 May 1862, known as "The Great Fire",destroyed more than 507 buildings in Troy and gutted 75 acres (300,000 m2) in the heart of the city.[19][20]The "Infant School" building that housed the Institute at the time was destroyed in this fire.Columbia Universityproposed that Rensselaer leave Troy altogether and merge with its New York City campus. Ultimately, the proposal was rejected, and the campus left the crowded downtown for the hillside. Classes were temporarily held at the Vail House and in theTroy Universitybuilding until 1864,[21]when the Institute moved to a building on Broadway on 8th Street, now the site of the Approach.[20]

One of the first Latino student organizations in the United States was founded at RPI in 1890. TheClub Hispano Americanowas established by the international Latin American students that attended the institute at this time.

Since 1900

[edit]

In 1904 the institute was for the fourth time devastated by fire, when its main building was completely destroyed.[22]However, RPI underwent a period of academic and resource expansion under the leadership of PresidentPalmer Ricketts.[23]Named president in 1901, Ricketts liberalized the curriculum by adding the Department of Arts, Science, and Business Administration, in addition to the Graduate School. He also expanded the university's resources and developed RPI into a true polytechnic institute by increasing the number of degrees offered from two to twelve; these included electrical engineering, mechanical engineering, biology, chemistry, and physics. During Rickett's tenure, enrollment increased from approximately 200 in 1900 to a high of 1,700 in 1930.[24]

Another period of expansion occurred followingWorld War IIas returning veterans used their GI Bill education benefits to attend college. The "Freshman Hill" residence complex was opened in 1953 followed by the completion of the Commons Dining Hall in 1954, two more halls in 1958, and three more in 1968. In this same time frame (1966)Herta Regina Lengwas appointed as RPI's first female full professor. She is now honored there with an annual lecture series.[25]In 1961, there was major progress in academics at the institute with the construction of the GaerttnerLinear Accelerator,then the most powerful in the world,[26]and the Jonsson-Rowland Science Center. The current Student Union building was opened in 1967.

The next three decades brought continued growth with many new buildings (see 'Campus'below), and growing ties to industry. The "H-building", previously used for storage, became the home for the RPI incubator program, the first such program sponsored solely by a university.[27]Shortly after this, RPI decided to invest $3 million in pavement, water and power on around 1,200 acres (490 ha) of land it owned 5 miles (8.0 km) south of campus to create theRensselaer Technology Park.[28]In 1982 the New York State legislature granted RPI $30 million to build theGeorge M. Low Center for Industrial Innovation,a center for industry-sponsored research and development.

In 1999, RPI gained attention when it was one of the first universities to implement a mandatorylaptop computerprogram.[29]This was also the year of the arrival ofShirley Ann Jackson,a former chairperson of theNuclear Regulatory Commissionunder U.S.President Bill Clinton,as the eighteenth president of RPI. She instituted "The Rensselaer Plan"(discussed below), an ambitious plan to revitalize the institute. Many advances have been made under the plan, and Jackson has enjoyed the ongoing support of the RPI Board of Trustees. However, her leadership style did not sit well with many faculty;[30]on 26 April 2006, RPI faculty voted 149 to 155 in a failed vote of no-confidence in Jackson.[31]In September 2007, RPI's Faculty Senate was suspended for over four years over conflict with the administration.[32][33]On 3 October 2008, RPI celebrated the opening of the $220 millionExperimental Media and Performing Arts Center.That same year the national economic downturn resulted in the elimination of 98 staff positions across the institute, about five percent of the workforce.[34]Campus construction expansion continued, however, with the completion of the $92 million East Campus Athletic Village and opening of the new Blitman Commons residence hall in 2009. As of 2015, all staff positions had been reinstated at the institute, experiencing significant growth from pre-recession levels and contributing over $1 billion annually to the economy of theCapital District.[35]That same year, renovation of the North Hall, E-Complex, and Quadrangle dormitories began and was later completed in 2016 to house the largest incoming class in Rensselaer's history.[36][37]

In July 2022,Martin A. Schmidt,formerly provost ofMassachusetts Institute of Technology,became RPI's nineteenth president.[38]

Campus

[edit]

RPI's 275-acre (111 ha)[39]campus sits upon a hill overlookingTroyand theHudson River.The surrounding area is mostly residential neighborhoods, with the city of Troy lying at the base of the hill. The campus is bisected by 15th Street, with most of the athletic and housing facilities to the east, and the academic buildings to the west. A footbridge spans the street, linking the two halves. Much of the campus features a series ofColonial Revival stylestructures built in the first three decades of the 20th century. Overall, the campus has enjoyed four periods of expansion.[13]

1824–1905

[edit]

RPI was originally located in downtown Troy, but gradually moved to the hilltop that overlooks the city. Buildings that remain from this time includeWinslow Chemical Laboratory,a building on theNational Register of Historic Places.Located at the base of the hill on the western edge of campus, it currently houses the Social and Behavioral Research Laboratory.[13][40]

Ricketts Campus, 1906–1935

[edit]
Russell Sage Laboratory

President Palmer Ricketts supervised the construction of the school's "Green Rooftop" Colonial Revival buildings that give much of the campus a distinct architectural style. Buildings constructed during this period include theCarnegie Building(1906), Walker Laboratory (1907), Russell Sage Laboratory (1909),[41]Pittsburgh Building(1912),Quadrangle Dormitories(1916–1927), Troy Building (1925),Amos Eaton Hall(1928),Greene Building(1931) andRicketts Building(1935). Also built during this period was "The Approach" (1907), a massive ornate granite staircase found on the west end of campus. Originally linking RPI to the Troy Union Railroad station, it again serves as an important link between the city and the university.[42]In 1906 the '86 Field, home field of the football team until 2008, was completed with support of the Class of 1886.

Post-war expansion, 1946–1960

[edit]
West Hall
TheVoorheesComputing Center

AfterWorld War II,the campus again underwent major expansion. Nine dormitories were built at the east edge of campus bordering Burdett Avenue, a location that came to be called "Freshman Hill". TheHouston Field House(1949) was reassembled, after being moved in pieces from its originalRhode Islandlocation.West Hall,which was originally built in 1869 as a hospital, was acquired by the Institute in 1953. The ornate building is an example ofFrench Second Empirearchitecture.[43]It was listed on theNational Register of Historic Placesin 1973.

Another unique building is the Voorhees Computing Center (VCC). Originally the St. Joseph's Seminary chapel, it was built in 1933 and acquired by Rensselaer in 1958, and after renovation served as the institute's library from 1960 until the completion of the newFolsom Library,in 1976.[44]The Folsom Library, located adjacent to the computing center, has a concrete exterior that was designed to harmonize with the light gray brick of the chapel;[45]architecturally, it is an example of the modernbrutaliststyle.[46]Subsequently, the university was unsure of what to do with the chapel, or whether to keep it at all, but in 1979 decided to preserve it and renovate it to house computer labs and facilities to support the institute's computing initiatives. Today the VCC serves as the backbone for the institute's data andtelephonyinfrastructure.

Modern campus, since 1961

[edit]
Center for Biotechnology and Interdisciplinary Studies
EMPAC

The modern campus features theJonsson-Rowland Science Center(J-ROWL) (1961), Materials Research Center (MRC) (1965), Rensselaer Union (1967), Cogswell Laboratory (1971), Darrin Communications Center (DCC) (1973),Jonsson Engineering Center(JEC) (1977),Low Center for Industrial Innovation(CII) (1987), a public school building which was converted into Academy Hall (1990), and theCenter for Biotechnology and Interdisciplinary Studies(2004).[13]Tunnels connect the Low Center, DCC, JEC and Science Center. A tenth dormitory named Barton Hall was added to Freshman Hill in August 2000, featuring the largest rooms available for freshmen.[47]

On 3 October 2008, the university celebrated the grand opening of theExperimental Media and Performing Arts Center(EMPAC) situated on the west edge of campus.[48]The building was constructed on the precipice of the hill, with the main entrance on top. Upon entering, elevated walkways lead into a 1,200-seat concert hall. Most of the building is encased in a glass exoskeleton, with anatrium-like space between it and the "inner building". Adjacent to and underneath the main auditorium there is a 400-seat theater, offices, and two black-box studios with 35-foot (11 m) to 45-foot (14 m) ceilings.[49]Originally budgeted for $50 million, the EMPAC construction costs ballooned to over $200 million due to difficulty of anchoring the foundation in the soft clay of the hill.[50]

In 2008, RPI announced the purchase of the former RensselaerBest WesternInn, located at the base of the hill, along with plans to transform it into a new residence hall. After extensive renovations, the residence hall was dedicated on 15 May 2009, as the Howard N. Blitman, P.E. '50 Residence Commons.[51]It houses about 300 students in 148 rooms and includes a fitness center, dining hall, and conference area.[51]The new residence hall is part of a growing initiative to involve students in the Troy community and help revitalize the downtown. RPI owns and operates three office buildings in downtown Troy, the Rice and Heley buildings and the historicW. & L.E. Gurley Building.[52]RPI also owns theProctor's Theaterbuilding in Troy, which was purchased in 2004, with the intention of converting it into office space.[53]As of 2011, Rensselaer had signed an agreement with Columbia Development Companies to acquire both Proctor's Theatre and Chasan Building in Troy and launch a redevelopment.[54][55][56][57]

Other campuses

[edit]

The Institute runs a 15-acre (6.1 ha) campus inHartford, Connecticut,and a distance learning center inGroton, Connecticut,the latter of which was closed in 2018. These centers are used by graduates and working professionals and are managed by the Hartford branch of RPI,Rensselaer at Hartford.At Hartford, graduate degrees are offered inbusiness administration,management,computer science,computer and systems engineering,electrical engineering,engineering science,mechanical engineeringandinformation technology.There are also a number of certificate programs and skills training programs for working professionals.

Academics

[edit]
Academy Hall

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute has five schools: the School of Architecture, the School of Engineering, the School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences, theLally School of Management & Technology,and the School of Science. The School of Engineering is the largest by enrollment, followed by the School of Science, the School of Management, the School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences, and the School of Architecture. There also exists an interdisciplinary program inInformation Technologythat began in the late 1990s, programs in prehealth and prelaw,Reserve Officers' Training Corps(ROTC) for students desiring commissions as officers in the armed forces, a program incooperative education(Co-Op), and domestic and international exchange programs. Altogether, the university offers over 145 programs in nearly 60 fields that lead to bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees. In addition to traditional majors, RPI has around a dozen special interdisciplinary programs, such as Games and Simulation Arts and Sciences (GSAS), Design, Innovation, and Society (DIS), Minds & Machines, and Product Design and Innovation (PDI).[58]RPI is a technology-oriented university; all buildings and residence hall rooms have hard-wired and wireless high speed internet access, and all incoming freshmen have been required to have a laptop computer since 1999.[59] Nationally, RPI is a member of theNational Association of Independent Colleges and Universities(NAICU) and the NAICU'sUniversity and College Accountability Network(U-CAN).

Rensselaer Plan

[edit]

With the arrival of PresidentShirley Ann Jacksoncame the "Rensselaer Plan", announced in 1999. Its goal is to achieve greater prominence for Rensselaer as a technological research university.[60]Various aspects of the plan include bringing in a largergraduate studentpopulation and new research faculty, and increasing participation in undergraduate research, internationalexchange programs,and "living and learning communities". So far, there have been a number of changes under the plan: new infrastructure such as theCenter for Biotechnology and Interdisciplinary Studies,Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center,andComputational Center for Nanotechnology Innovations(CCNI) have been built to support new programs, and application numbers have increased.[61]In 2018, Rensselaer received a record number of applications: 20,337.[62]According toJared Cohonin 2006, then president ofCarnegie Mellon University,"Change at Rensselaer in the last five years has occurred with a scope and swiftness that may be without precedent in the recent history of American higher education."[63]

The ability to attract greater research funds is needed to meet the goals of the plan, and the university has set a goal of $100 million annually. Fourteen years later, in FY2013, research expenditures reached this goal. To help raise money the university mounted a $1 billion capital campaign, of which the public phase began in September 2004 and was expected to finish by 2008. In 2001, a major milestone of the campaign was the pledging of an unrestricted gift of $360 million by an anonymous donor, believed to be the largest such gift to a U.S. university at the time. The university had been a relative stranger to such generosity as the prior largest single gift was $15 million.[64]By September 2006, the $1 billion goal has been exceeded much in part to an in-kind contribution of software commercially valued at $513.95 million by the Partners for the Advancement of Collaborative Engineering Education (PACE).[65]In light of this, the board of trustees increased the goal of the $1 billion capital campaign to $1.4 billion by 30 June 2009. The new goal was met by 1 October 2008.[66]

In anticipation of RPI's 200th anniversary, an updated version called the "Rensselaer Plan 2024"[67]was announced in 2012.[68]

In 2016, Jackson announced during the Fall Town Hall Meeting that the institute was in the final stages of organizing a new capital campaign which it would launch in 2017 to meet the goals of the Rensselaer Plan 2024.[69]The goal of the campaign was cited as being primarily for the support of financial aid for undergraduate students and the expansion of on-campus research facilities to accommodate planned increases in doctoral and graduate enrollment. The fundraising goal of the capital campaign was $1 billion, with over $400 million raised prior to the campaign going public.[70]

Ambitious spending on the Rensselaer Plan has led the university into financial difficulties, with its credit rating lowered by several agencies.[50][71]

Faculty

[edit]

Rankings

[edit]
Academic rankings
National
ARWU[72]107–127
Forbes[73]177
U.S. News & World Report[74]51
Washington Monthly[75]93
WSJ/College Pulse[76]101
Global
ARWU[72]501–600
QS[77]601-610
THE[78]601–800
U.S. News & World Report[79]822

For 2021,U.S. News & World Reportranked Rensselaer tied for 53rd among national universities in the U.S., 40th out of 180 for "Best Value" in undergraduate education, and tied for 68th out of the top 83 in "Most Innovative Schools".[80]The same rankings placed Rensselaer's undergraduate engineering program tied at 32nd among schools whose highest degree is a doctorate,[80]and its graduate program is ranked tied for 43rd out of 218 engineering schools.[81]

The Leiden Ranking (2016) placed RPI at 127 among the top 900 world universities and research institutions according to the proportion of the top 1% most frequently cited publications of a university.[82]In 2016,The Economistranked Rensselaer No. 18 among four-year non-vocational colleges and universities andTimes Higher Education–QS World University Rankingsplaced Rensselaer among the top 50 universities for technology in the world.[83][84]In 2016, Rensselaer was listed among the top ten universities for highest median earnings.[83]

Civil liberties organizationFIREgave RPI its 2020 "Lifetime Censorship Award" "For its unashamed, years-long record of censoring its critics and utter disinterest in protecting students’ rights".[85]

Electrical and Computer Systems Engineering at RPI

[edit]

One of the major departments at RPI is the ECSE department, or Electrical and Computer Systems Engineering department. The department offers students the ability to gain bachelors, masters, and doctoral degrees inElectrical Engineering,orComputer Systems Engineering.While the school itself was founded in 1824, Electrical Engineering was first introduced to Rensselaer Polytechnic in 1907[86]with the class of 1911, long before the invention of the first computers but twenty-eight years after the invention of the lightbulb. The department was listed as Physics and Electrical Engineering in 1924 while under PresidentPalmer Ricketts.Computer system engineering was added later. Today Computer Systems Engineering and Electrical Engineering are in many ways similar, with many of the core classes being shared between the two. Electrical Engineering, however tends to focus more on hardware, while computer systems engineering tends to focus on algorithms and systems. Many students take dual majors, the common ones being Electrical Engineering and Computer Systems Engineering, Electrical Engineering and Mechanic Engineering, Electrical Engineering and Applied Physics, and Computer Systems Engineering and Computer Science. Many students in the ECSE department often do minors in other fields such aseconomicsorpsychology.[87]The ECSE department currently does research in the areas of information science and systems, communication and network, control and autonomy, energy and power systems, electronics and photonics, and computer systems design.[88]Notable alumni from the ECSE department include James A. Parsons,B. Jayant Baliga,Alan Borck, founder of RLC Electronics, Bruce Carlson, Mukesh Chatter,Allen B. Du Mont,Nariman Farvardin,Peter Hart, inventor of the A* search algorithm,Herman A. Haus,Marcian E. Hoff,creator of the microprocessor, Doug Mercer, who was influential in the field of analog to digital converters,Sean O’Sullivan,Curtis P. Priem,founder ofNVIDIA,George Saridis,Steven J. Sassoon,inventor of digital camera,Chauncey Starr,Raymond S. Tomlinson,inventor ofe-mail,and Eitan Yudilevich.[89]

Research and development

[edit]
TheLow Center for Industrial Innovation,northeast hub of theSmart Manufacturing Innovation Institute

Rensselaer isclassifiedamong "R1: Doctoral Universities – Very High Research Activity ".[90]Rensselaer has established six areas of research as institute priorities:biotechnology,energy and the environment,nanotechnology,computation and information technology,andmedia and the arts.[91]Research is organized under the Office of the Vice President for Research,Jonathan Dordick.[92]In 2018, Rensselaer operated 34 research centers and maintained annual sponsored research expenditures of $100.8 million.[93]

Center for Biotechnology and Interdisciplinary Studies

One of the most recent of Rensselaer's research centers is theCenter for Biotechnology and Interdisciplinary Studies,a 218,000 square-foot research facility for fundamental and applied research inbiotechnology.The primary target of the research center is biologics, a research priority based on data-driven understanding ofproteomics,protein regulation, and gene regulation. It involves usingbiocatalysisandsynthetic biologytools to block or supplement the actions of specific cells or proteins in the immune system. Over the past decade, CBIS has produced over 2,000 peer-reviewed publications with over 30,000 citations and currently employs over 200 scientists and engineers. The center is used primarily to train undergraduate and graduate students, with over 1,000 undergraduates and 200 doctoral students trained.[94][95]The center has numerous academic and industry partners, including theIcahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai.These partnerships have resulted in numerous advances over the last decade through new commercial developments in diagnostics, therapeutics, medical devices, and regenerative medicine which are a direct result of research at the center. Examples of advancements include the creation of syntheticheparin,antimicrobial coatings, detoxificationchemotherapy,on-demandbiomedicine,implantable sensors, and 3D cellular array chips.[96]

A Blue Gene/Psupercomputersimilar to Rensselaer'sCenter for Computational Innovations

Rensselaer also hosts theTetherless World Constellation,a multidisciplinary research institution focused on theories, methods, and applications of theWorld Wide Web.Research is carried out in three inter-connected themes: Future Web, Semantic Foundations and Xinformatics. At Rensselaer, a constellation is a multidisciplinary team composed of senior and junior faculty members, research scientists, and postdoctoral, graduate, and undergraduate students. The faculty experts for the TWC constellation areJames Hendler,Deborah McGuinnessandPeter Fox.Faculty alumni of TWC includesHeng Ji(Natural Language Processing). In 2016, the Constellation received a one million dollar grant from theBill & Melinda Gates Foundationfor continuing work on a novel data visualization platform that will harness and accelerate the analysis of vast amounts of data for the foundation's Healthy Birth, Growth, and Development Knowledge Integration initiative.[97]

In conjunction with the constellation, Rensselaer operates theCenter for Computational Innovationswhich is the result of a $100 million collaboration between Rensselaer,IBM,andNew York Stateto further nanotechnology innovations. The center is currently home to the most powerful private-university basedsupercomputerin the world and its supercomputer is consistently ranked among the most powerful in the world, capable of performing over 1.1peta-FLOPS.The center's main focus is on reducing the cost associated with the development ofnanoscalematerials and devices, such as those used in thesemiconductorindustry. The university also utilizes the center forinterdisciplinaryresearch inbiotechnology,medicine,energy,and other fields.[98]Rensselaer operates anuclear reactorand testing facility–the only university-run reactor in New York State–as well as the GaerttnerLinear Accelerator,which is currently being upgraded under a $9.44 million grant from theUS Department of Energy.[99]

In 2024, Rensselaer, in partnership withIBM,unveiled a newquantum computeron campus, aiming to further quantum computer research for both the university and the New York State area.[100]

Students

[edit]
Rensselaer's Quadrangle dormitory on the central campus

In 2018, Rensselaer's enrollment was 7,442 total resident students, including 6,590 undergraduate and 1,329 graduate.[101]Over 71% of Rensselaer's students are from out of state. More than 20% of students are international. Rensselaer students represent all 50 U.S. states and over 60 countries. The undergraduate student to faculty ratio is 13:1. Among the class of 2020, 66% are in the top 5 percent of their high school class, 93% in the top quarter, and 99% in the top half. The average unweighted high school GPA for enrolled students was 3.88 on a 4.0 scale, with 65% having a 3.75 GPA or higher and 99% having at least a 3.0.[102]

Rensselaer's yield rate for the Class of 2021 surpassed 20 percent in the year 2018 with over 20,000 applications received by Rensselaer's Office of Admissions.[103]The average SAT score range was 1330–1500 for the mid-50% range with a median SAT score of 1420 on a scale of 1600. The average ACT score range was 29–33 for the mid-50% range with a median ACT score of 31.[104]In 2016, Rensselaer's freshman retention rate was 94% and admissions selectivity rating was 35th in the nation according toU.S. News & World Report.Since 2000, undergraduate enrollment grew by over 1,700 students, from 4,867 to 6,590 during calendar year 2018, and the full-time graduate enrollment declined from 1500 to 1,188.[71][105]

Roughly 12% of students received the Rensselaer medal, a merit scholarship with a cumulative value of $100,000 for exceptional high school students in science and mathematics.[104]95% of full-time domestic undergraduate students receive either need-based or merit-basedfinancial aid,averaging 85% of total financial need met per student.[106][107]In 2018, Rensselaer invested over $140 million in financial aid and scholarships for students.[107]

Gender ratio

[edit]

RPI became coeducational in 1942. In 1966, the male-to-female ratio was 19:1, in the 1980s it reached as low as 8:1, and in the early 1990s the ratio was around 5:1. In 2009, RPI had a ratio of 2.5:1 (72% male / 28% female),[108][109]In 2016, the ratio for the incoming freshman class had fallen to 2.1:1 (68% male / 32% female), the lowest in the history of the institute.[110]In the fall of 2016, more than 1,000 women enrolled in Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute's undergraduate engineering programs for the first time in its history. These women represented 30 percent of the student body in engineering at the university, and 32 percent of the university's total gender composition. Shekhar Garde, Rensselaer's dean of engineering, claims he wants to increase the female composition of the institute to 50 percent before 2030.[111]

Grand Marshal and President of the Union

[edit]

The positions ofGrand Marshaland President of the Union at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute are typically awarded (by student vote) to the students who are respected by the student body and are represented by a top hat and a derby hat respectively. While Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute has had the position of Grand Marshal (GM) since 1865, the position of President of the Union did not come about until 1890 when the union was developed. However, between 1890 and 1894, there was only a President of the Union, no Grand Marshal. Starting with the 1894–1895 school year, the President of the Union and Grand Marshal ran side by side. The week of voting for said positions is called GM Week, and typically has events on campus for students to do to promote the voting.

Grand Marshal (GM)

[edit]

The Grand Marshal position is elected by the student body (typically in the spring) and is the highest position a student can hold at RPI. The GM plays a big role in the student government by doing projects, appointing officers, and aiding the general campus community.[112]The first GM was Albert M. Harper, and the current GM as of 2024–2025 is Vivian Rost-Nasshan (158th).[113]

President of the Union (PU)

[edit]

The President of the Union is elected by the student body (typically in the spring). Their main responsibility is to appoint an executive board of 15–20 students (responsible for the Rensselaer Union's budget). The executive board is the chief financial body of the Rensselaer Union. They are responsible for preparing and approving the budget for the following fiscal year, keeping track of and distributing union funds, and managing the business affairs with other facilities. In addition to appointing the executive board, they also work closely with the union's staff, athletics staff, and student clubs.[114]The first PU was W.C.H. Slagle, and the current as of 2024-2025 is Catherine Philipps (135th).[113]

Greek life

[edit]
The Theta Chapter ofChi Phiat Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
TheRSEClubhouse from the South Side near the "Freshman Hill" dorms

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute has an extensive history of Greek community involvement on campus, including past presidents, honorary academic building dedications, andphilanthropicachievements. The overall Greek system at Rensselaer stresses Leadership, Fortitude, Innovation, and Evolution. RPI currently has 29 active fraternities as well as 6 sororities, with 32 percent involvement of all males and 18 percent involvement of all females, organized under theInterfraternal CouncilandPanhellenic Council.[115]Of those Greek organizations, three were founded at Rensselaer including theTheta Xinational engineering fraternity, theSigma DeltaHispanic-interest local sorority, and theRensselaer Society of Engineerslocal engineering fraternity. Theta Xi fraternity was established by RPI students on 29 April 1864, the only national fraternity founded during the Civil War. TheTheta Xi Fraternity Chapter Houseis listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Additionally, Rensselaer is home to theEpsilon Zetachapter of theAlpha Phi Omega,or "APO," national service fraternity, which operates a test-bank and office at the top floor of the Student Union. The organization also hosts a campus lost & found, universal can tab collection, and a public 3D printing service.

In 2017,Chi PhiandTheta Chiat Rensselaer co-hosted an event called "Brave A Shave For Kids With Cancer," along with several other Greek organizations - raising over $22,000 for pediatric cancer research with dozens of participants shaving their heads to spread awareness of pediatric cancers. Many fraternities and sororities also engage inAdopt-a-Highwayand host events in the local community.[116]Since its inception, all members of Greek Life have also participated in Navigating Rensselaer & Beyond - RPI's official continuation of student orientation through hosting annual events open to all students such as Beach Day/Hike with Greek Life, a day of hiking and team building activities for incoming freshmen, and Saratoga Therapeutic Equine Program, a day of service focused on horse rehabilitation programs.

Greek Life organizations also operate Greek-affiliated groups including the Alumni Inter-Greek Council, Greek Greeks - a student-run venture which aims to promote sustainability and safe environmental practices in Greek chapter houses, Greek Spectrum - anLGBTQIAsupport and advocacy group, and the undergraduate Greek leadership societyOrder of Omega.

Athletics

[edit]
Official athletics logo

TheRPI Engineersare the athletic teams for the university. RPI currently sponsors 23 sports, 21 of which compete at theNCAA Division IIIlevel in theLiberty League;men's and women'sice hockeycompete at theDivision Ilevel inECAC Hockey.The official nickname of some of the school's Division III teams was changed in 1995 from the Engineers to the Red Hawks. However, the hockey, football, cross-country, tennis and track and field teams all chose to retain the Engineers name. The Red Hawks name was, at the time, very unpopular among the student body; a Red Hawk mascot was frequently taunted with thrown concessions and chants of "kill the chicken!". In 2009 the nickname for all teams has since been changed back to Engineers. In contrast, the official ice hockey mascot, known asPuckman,has always been very popular. Puckman is ananthropomorphichockey puck with an engineer's helmet.

During the 1970s and 1980s, one RPI cheer was:

E to the x, dy/dx, E to the x, dx
Cosine, secant, tangent, sine
3.14159
Square root, cube root, log of pi
Disintegrate them, RPI![117][118]

Ice hockey (men's)

[edit]

RPI has a competitive Division Ihockey teamwho wonNCAAnational titles in 1954 and 1985. Depending on how the rules are interpreted, the RPI men's ice hockey team may have the longest winning streak on record for a Division I team; in the 1984–85 season it was undefeated for 30 games, but one game was against theUniversity of Toronto,a non-NCAA team. Continuing into the 1985–86 season, RPI continued undefeated over 38 games, including two wins over Toronto.[119]The streak ended atBoston Universityagainst theTerriers.Adam OatesandDaren Puppa,two players during that time, both went on to become stars in theNHL.Joé Juneau,who played from 1987 to 1991, andBrian Pothier,who played from 1996 to 2000, also spent many years in the NHL.Graeme Townshend,who also played in the late 1980s, had a brief NHL career. He is the first man ofJamaicanancestry to play in theNational Hockey League.

The ice hockey team plays a significant role in the campus's culture, drawing thousands of fans each week to theHouston Field Houseduring the season. The team's popularity even sparked the tradition of the hockey line, where students lined up for season tickets months in advance of the on-sale date. Today, the line generally begins a week or more before ticket sales.[120]Another tradition since 1978 has been the "Big Red Freakout!" game held close to the first weekend of February. Fans usually dress in the school's colors red (cherry) and white, and gifts such as T-shirts are distributed en masse. In ice hockey, the RPI's biggest rival has always been the upstate engineering schoolClarkson University.In recent years RPI has also developed a spirited rivalry with their conference travel partnerUnion College,with whom they annually play a nonconference game inAlbanyfor the Mayor's Cup.

Ice hockey (women's)

[edit]

The women's ice hockey team moved to the NCAA Division I level in 2005. During the 2008–09 season the team set the record for most wins in one season (19-14-4). On 28 February 2010, Rensselaer made NCAA history. The Engineers beatQuinnipiac,2–1, but it took five overtimes. It is now the longest game inNCAA Women's Ice Hockeyhistory. Senior defenseman Laura Gersten had the game-winning goal. She registered it at 4:32 of the fifth overtime session to not only clinch the win, but the series victory.[121]

RPI's lacrosse team in ademonstration gameat the1948 London Olympics

Lacrosse (men's)

[edit]

Thelacrosseteam represented the United States in the1948 Olympicsin London. It won theWingate Memorial Trophyas national collegiate champions in 1952.[122]FutureNHLhead coachNed Harknesscoached the lacrosse and ice hockey teams, winning national championships in both sports.

Baseball

[edit]

The Engineers baseball squad is perennially atop theLiberty Leaguestandings and has seen 8 players move on to the professional ranks, including 4 players selected in theMLBdraft. The team is coached by Jason Falcon. The Engineers play their home games at the historic Robison Field.

American football

[edit]

American rugbywas played on campus in the late 1870s.Intercollegiate footballbegin as late as 1886 when an RPI team first played aUnion Collegeteam on a leased field in West Troy (Watervliet). Since 1903, RPI and nearby Union have been rivals in football, making it the oldest such rivalry in the state. The teams have played for theDutchman's Shoessince 1950. RPI Football had their most successful season in 2003, when they finished 11–2 and lost toSt. Johns(Minn.) in the NCAA Division III semifinal game.[123]

Athletic facilities

[edit]
Houston Field House
East Campus Athletic Village, under construction

TheHouston Field Houseis a 4,780‑seat multi-purpose arena located on the RPI campus. It opened in 1949 and is home to the RPI Engineers men's and women's ice hockey teams. The Field House was renovated starting in 2007 as part of the major campus improvement project to build the East Campus Athletic Village. The renovations included locker rooms upgrades, addition of a new weight room, and a new special reception room dedicated toNed Harkness.[124]Additionally, as part of the renovations through a government grant,solar panelswere installed on the roof to supply power to the building.

As part of the Rensselaer Plan, the Institute recently completed a major project to improve its athletic facilities with the East Campus Athletic Village. The plan included construction of a new and much larger 4,842‑seat football stadium, a basketball arena with seating for 1,200, a new 50-meter pool, an indoor track and field complex, new tennis courts, new weight rooms and a new sports medicine center.[125]The Institute broke ground on 26 August 2007, and construction of the first phase is expected to last two years.[126]The estimated cost of the project is $78 million for phase one and $35–$45 million for phase two.[127]Since the completion of the new stadium, the bleachers on the Class of '86 football field on the central campus have been removed and the field has become an open space. In the future the new space could be used for expansions of the academic buildings, but for now members of the campus planning team foresee a "historic landscape with different paths and access ways for students and vehicles alike".[128]

Student life

[edit]
Student Union

The students of RPI have created and participate in a variety of clubs and organizations funded by the Student Union. About 170 of these organizations are funded by the Student Union, while another thirty, which consist mostly of political and religious organizations, are self-supporting.[129]In 2006 thePrinceton Reviewranked RPI second for "more to do on campus."[130]The Union was the last entirely student-run union at a private university in the United States until September 2017.[131]

Phalanxis RPI's Senior Honor Society.[132]It was founded in 1912, when Edward Dion and the Student Council organized a society to recognize those RPI students who had distinguished themselves among their peers in the areas of leadership, service and devotion to thealma mater.It is a fellowship of the most active in student activities and has inducted more than 1,500 members since its founding.[133]

RPI has around twentyintramuralsports organizations, many of which are broken down into different divisions based on level of play. Greek organizations compete in them as well as independent athletes. There are also thirty-nine club sports.

Given the university's proximity to theBerkshires,Green MountainsandAdirondacks,the Ski Club and the Outing Club are some of the largest groups on campus. The Ski Club offers weekly trips to local ski areas during the winter months,[134]while the Outing Club offers trips on a weekly basis for a variety of activities.[135]

The Rensselaer Polytechnicis the student-run weekly newspaper.[136]The Polyprinted about 7,000 copies each week and distributed them around campus until 2018 when the newspaper switched to online-only distribution due to budget concerns. Although it is the Union club with the largest budget,[citation needed]The Polyreceives no subsidy from the Union and obtains all funding through the sale of advertisements. There is also a popular student-run magazine calledStatler & Waldorfwhich prints on a semesterly basis.[137]

RPI has an improvisational comedy group, Sheer Idiocy, which performs several shows a semester.[138]There are also several music groups ranging froma cappellagroups such as the rusty pipes, Partial Credit, the Rensselyrics and Duly Noted,[139]to several instrumental groups such as the orchestra, the jazz band and a classical choral group, the Rensselaer Concert Choir.

Another notable organization on campus isWRPI,the campus radio station. WRPI differs from mostcollege radioin that it serves a 75-mile (121 km) radius[140]including the greaterAlbanyarea. With 10 kW of broadcasting power, WRPI maintains a stronger signal than nearly all college radio stations and some commercial stations. WRPI currently broadcasts on 91.5 FM in the Albany area.

The RPI Playhouse

The RPI Players is an on‑campus theater group that was formed in 1929. The Players resided in the Old Gym until 1965 when they moved to their present location at the 15th Street Lounge. This distinctive red shingled building had been a USO hall for theU.S. Armybefore being purchased by RPI. The Players have staged over 300 productions in its history.[141]

RPI songs

[edit]

There are a number of songs commonly played and sung at RPI events.[142][143]Notable among them are:

  • "The Alma Mater (Here's to Old RPI)" – sung at formal events such ascommencementandconvocation,also played and sung by thePep Bandat hockey and football games, and played daily at noon by the quadrangle bell tower. It was published in the first book ofSongs of Rensselaerprinted in 1913.
  • "Hail, Dear Old Rensselaer" – used to be thefight songduring the 1960s. It is still played today by the Pep Band at athletic events.
  • "All We've Learned at Rensselaer" – sung at the RPI commencement ceremonies by the Rensselyrics. Although the Rensselyrics are ana cappellagroup, this song is accompanied by piano. Each verse or section has a different musical style, several of which are closely based onBilly Joelsongs or other popular songs.

First Year Experience and CLASS programs

[edit]

Another notable aspect of student life at RPI is the "First-Year Experience"(FYE) program. Freshman begin their stay at RPI with a week called" Navigating Rensselaer and Beyond "or NRB week. The Office of the First-Year Experience provides several programs that extend to not only freshman, but to all students. These include family weekend, community service days, the Information and Personal Assistance Center (IPAC), and the Community Advocate Program.[144]The FYE program was awarded the 2006NASPAExcellence Gold Award, in the category of "Enrollment Management, Orientation, Parents, First-Year, Other-Year and related".[145]

Starting in 2008, the Division of Student Life updated the structure of its residential college model based upon the concept of "Clustered Learning Advocacy and Support for Students" (CLASS), which included a planned requirement for all sophomores tolive on campusand to live with special "residence cluster deans".[146] The transition to this program began in early 2010 among some resistance from some fraternities and students who had planned to live off campus.[147][148]

NROTC

[edit]

RPINROTCis an officer accession program hosted at RPI with the goal of developingMidshipmeninto commissioned officers into theUnited States NavyandMarine Corps.The unit consists of students from RPI as well asUnion College.The program was officially started at RPI in September 1941, just a few months before the US involvement inWWII.[149]RPI NROTC was part of theV-12 training programthat was aimed at increasing the number of total commissioned officers during WWII. It focused on developing officers for the military specializing in technical degrees such asengineering,medicine,andforeign languages.The RPI class of 1945 had a large majority of its student body in the NROTC program with around 70% of the 932 students.[150]

Since 1926, over 75 Naval Officers have attained flag officer rank with a degree from RPI. Besides theUS Naval Academy,this is the largest number of flag officers produced from one single institute. RPI NROTC is home to several notable alumni including NASA AstronautCDR Reid WisemanandRDML Lewis Combs.[149]RDML Combs is the founder of the Navy Construction Battalion, commonly referred to as the "Seabees,"which plays a crucial role in creating forward deployed bases as well ashumanitarianefforts to bring fresh water to underdeveloped communities.

Religious clubs

[edit]

One of the religious clubs that can be found at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute is RPI-Sage Hillel. This is aJewishclub that incorporates both Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute andRussell Sage College.[151][152]Hillel club is a club that is part of a much larger international organization calledHillel International.Hillel's purpose is "Enriching the lives of Jewish students so that they may enrich the Jewish people and the world," and their vision is for "a world where every student is inspired to make an enduring commitment to Jewish life, learning and Israel."[153]Hillel meets on Fridays at 6:30 for services and has several other activities throughout the week as decided on by the board of Hillel.

Another religious club at RPI is Cru, which is a non-denominationalChristianclub that holds worship on Fridays from 7pm. There are other events throughout the week, such as a men's small group, a women's small group, a Saturday morning small group, and a book club.[154][155]Cru club is part of an also much larger organization, and there are many such programs in schools across the country. Cru was originally founded in 1951 byBillandVonette BrightatFuller Theological Seminary.Its values are faith, growth, and fruitfulness.[156]Cru holds retreats several times a year and has many resources dedicated to helping people who are curious in the Christian faith.

History of women

[edit]

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute has historically been a male dominated institute. The first woman to apply to RPI applied in 1873, and her name was Elizabeth R. Bruswell. However, she did not attend as she was the only female to apply, and it was suggested that she would not be accepted as it would not be comfortable for her as the only woman on campus. For many years afterwards, the school continued to only allow admission to men. It wasn't until 1942 that women were welcome to enroll in classes at Rensselaer.

First women

[edit]

Students

[edit]

Camilla (Trent) Cluett (Architecture), Elizabeth English (Biology), Helen Ketchum (Architecture),Lois Graham(Mechanical Engineering), and Mary Ellen Rathbun (Metallurgical Engineering) were the first women to enroll in 1942. Lois Graham and Mary Ellen Rathbun became the first to graduate on April 22, 1945.[157]In addition, Antoinette A. Patti was the first woman to receive a master's degree from RPI in February 1947, in Chemistry. The first Doctoral Degree received by a woman at RPI was Reva R. G. Servoss in June 1954, in Chemistry as well.

Faculty

[edit]

Miss Hazel Brennan was the first woman assistant instructor in chemistry in 1918 and was officially the first woman instructor. The following year, 1919, Marie De Pierpont was hired as an instructor in French and was later named professor as well as being named head of the language department in 1928. She was the first woman to hold a full professorship at the institute and ended her position in 1932. It wasn't for another 11 years (1943) that another woman was hired as an instructor.Herta Leng,who worked in the Physics Department, was given the title of assistant professor in 1945, and became a full professor in 1966, the second woman to be a full professor at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.[157]

While the percentage of women enrolled at RPI remains comparatively low, it has improved significantly over time. The ratio as of 2020 was about 32% women and 68% men.[158]

Notable alumni

[edit]

According to the Rensselaer Alumni Association, there are nearly 100,000 RPI graduates living in the United States, and another 4,378 living abroad.[159]In 1995, the Alumni Association created the Rensselaer Alumni Hall of Fame.[160]

Several notable 19th-century civil engineers graduated from RPI. These include the visionary of the transcontinental railroad,Theodore Judah,Brooklyn BridgeengineerWashington Roebling,George Washington Gale Ferris Jr.(who designed and built the originalFerris Wheel) andLeffert L. Buck,the chief engineer of theWilliamsburg Bridgein New York City.[160]

Many RPI graduates have made important inventions, includingAllen B. DuMont('24),[161]creator of the first commercialtelevisionandradar;Keith D. Millis('38),[162]inventor ofductile iron;Ted Hoff('58),[163]father of themicroprocessor;Raymond Tomlinson('63),[164]often credited with the invention ofe-mail;inventor of thedigital cameraSteven Sasson[165]andCurtis Priem('82), designer of the firstgraphics processorfor the PC, and co-founder ofNVIDIA.RPI Prof.Matthew Hunterinvented a process to refinetitaniumin 1910.H. Joseph Gerberpioneered computer-automated manufacturing systems for industry.

In addition to NVIDIA, RPI graduates have also gone on to found or co-found major companies such asJohn Wiley and Sons,Texas Instruments,Fairchild Semiconductor,PSINet,MapInfo,Adelphia Communications,Level 3 Communications,Garmin,Bugle Boy,Vacasa,andRivian.Several RPI graduates have played a part in theU.S. space program:George Low(B.Eng. 1948, M.S. 1950) was manager of theApollo 11 projectand served as president of RPI, and astronautsJohn L. Swigert Jr.,Richard Mastracchio,Gregory R. Wiseman,and space touristDennis Titoare alumni. TheElectric Power Research Institute(EPRI) was founded by Dr.Chauncey Starrwho graduated from RPI with a PhD in physics in 1935.

Political figures who graduated from RPI includedfederal judgeArthur J. Gajarsa(B.S. 1962), and Major GeneralThomas Farrellof theManhattan Project.Edward Burton Hughes,the Acting Commissioner ofNew York State Department of Transportationin 1969, Executive Deputy Commissioner ofNew York State Department of Transportationfrom 1967 to 1970, and Deputy Superintendent ofNew York State Department of Public Worksfrom 1952 to 1967.Bertram Dalley Tallamy,seventh Federal Highway Administrator under the Federal Aid Highway Act of 1956, in office from February 5, 1957 – January 20, 1961.DARPAdirectorTony Tether,RepresentativeJohn OlverofMassachusetts's 1st congressional district,and SenatorsJohn BarrassoofWyoming,Mark ShepardofVermont,andGeorge R. DennisofMaryland,Prime MinisterHani Al-MulkiofJordan.

Notable ice hockey players includeNHLHockey Hall of Famerand five-time NHLAll StarAdam Oates(1985),Stanley Cupwinner and former NHL All StarMike McPhee(1982), two-timeCalder CupwinnerNeil Little(1994), former NHL All RookieJoé Juneau(1991), and former NHL All StarDaren Puppa(1985).

Other notable alumni include 1973Nobel Prize in PhysicswinnerIvar Giaever(Ph.D. 1964);[166]the first African American woman to become a thoracic surgeon,Rosalyn Scott(B.S. 1970); director of Linux InternationalJon Hall(M.S. 1977);NCAApresidentMyles Brand(B.S. 1964);[167]Lois Graham(B.S.ME 1946), who was the first woman to receive a degree in engineering from RPI, and went on to become the first woman in the US to receive a PhD in engineering; adult stem cell pioneerJames Fallon;Michael D. West,gerontologistandstem cellscientist, founder ofGeron,now CEO ofBioTime(1976); directorBobby Farrelly(1981),[168]David Ferrucci,lead researcher on IBM'sWatson/Jeopardy! project; 66th AIA Gold Medal-winning architect Peter Q Bohlin;Matt Patricia,former head coach for theDetroit Lions;Garrettina LTS Brown, founder of Garrett's List, King Breeders and inventor of FreeTV; Luis Acuña-Cedeño, Governor of the Venezuelan Sucre State and former Minister of Universities;Andrew Franks,former placekicker for theMiami Dolphinsof theNational Football League;Sean Conroy,the first openly gay professional baseball player;Prem Jain(Father of Green Buildings in India);Keith Raniere,anAmericanfelonand the founder ofNXIVM,a multi-level marketing company andcult.[169]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcRicketts, Palmer C.(1934).History of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 1824–1934(3rd ed.). New York:John Wiley & Sons, Inc.,London:Chapman & Hall.p. 34.
  2. ^As of June 30, 2022.U.S. and Canadian Institutions Listed by Fiscal Year (FY) 2022 Endowment Market Value and Change in Endowment Market Value from FY21 to FY22(Report). 30 January 2022.Retrieved14 September2023.
  3. ^"Professor Prabhat Hajela Appointed Provost".25 May 2012. Archived fromthe originalon 28 March 2013.Retrieved25 May2012.
  4. ^abcdefAs of June 30, 2019."Rensselaer 2019 Annual Report"(PDF).Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. 1 November 2019.
  5. ^"IPEDS - Rensselar Polytechnic Institute".
  6. ^"RPI Brand Guidelines"(PDF).12 June 2015. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 24 January 2016.Retrieved6 January2016.
  7. ^Symbols of the Institute.Lib.rpi.edu. Retrieved 21 November 2013.
  8. ^"U.S. Department of Education Closed School Unit School Closure Records Created During: February 2019..."World Documents.US Department of Education.Retrieved19 July2022.
  9. ^"RPI History".Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.Retrieved1 May2009.
  10. ^"Rensselaer in Brief".2008.Retrieved22 May2008.
  11. ^"RPI: Academics".RPI.edu.Retrieved15 February2014.
  12. ^"Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute".Indiana University.2022. Archived fromthe originalon 19 March 2020.Retrieved17 February2022.
  13. ^abcdInstitute Archives and Special Collections."RPI Building Histories".Retrieved21 January2007.
  14. ^"The Inflation Calculator".Westegg.com.Retrieved15 February2014.
  15. ^"CIRCULAR—To the County Clerks of the State of New-York".The Geneva Gazette, and General Advertiser(1829/01/21). James Bogert: 3. 21 January 1829.Retrieved17 March2014.
  16. ^Wicks, Frank (July 1999)."The blacksmith's motor".Mechanical Engineering Magazine.American Society of Mechanical Engineers. Archived fromthe originalon 5 February 2007.Retrieved28 February2009.
  17. ^"Timeline of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute History 1999".Retrieved21 January2007.
  18. ^Laws of the State of New York, Volume 1.Albany, NY: State of New York. 1 May 1861. p. 428.
  19. ^"THE GREAT FIRE IN TROY.; Between Five and Six Hundred Buildings Destroyed. A Number of Persons Killed and Missing".The New York Times.12 May 1862.Retrieved4 October2018.
  20. ^abNehrich, John (27 January 2010)."Classic buildings result of citywide fire".Retrieved2 March2010.
  21. ^"The Infant School Property".RPI Building Histories.Retrieved2 March2010.
  22. ^"FOURTH FIRE AT R.P.I.; Troy's History Technical School Destroyed in $50,000 Blaze"(PDF).The New York Times.Retrieved16 March2014.
  23. ^"RPI Biography of Palmer Ricketts".Retrieved21 January2007.
  24. ^"NEB&W Guide to the History of RPI".8 September 2004. Archived fromthe originalon 11 January 2009.Retrieved28 February2009.
  25. ^"RPI Physics, Applied Physics, & Astronomy: Herta Leng Lecture Series".10 September 2015. Archived fromthe originalon 10 September 2015.Retrieved29 February2020.
  26. ^"History of RPI's Gaerttner Linear Accelerator".Retrieved28 February2009.
  27. ^"RPI's Incubator Program History".Archived fromthe originalon 19 August 2010.Retrieved5 September2011.
  28. ^Le Maistre, C.W. (1989). "Academia linking with industry-the RPI model".Academia Linking With Industry: the RPI model.pp. 207–208.doi:10.1109/EMTS.1989.68976.S2CID195837916.
  29. ^Monahan, Torin (2003)."Hot Technologies on Every Pillow"(PDF).Radical Pedagogy.4(1).
  30. ^Stripling, Jack (7 December 2014)."Behind RPI's Highly Paid Chief, Tales of an Imperial Air and Cowed Staff".www.chronicle.com.Retrieved23 May2020.
  31. ^"No-Confidence Motion Fails at Rensselaer Polytechnic".The Chronicle of Higher Education.27 April 2006.
  32. ^"RPI faculty approves new constitution".Retrieved30 December2008.
  33. ^Nancy D. Campbell; Jane F. Koretz (2010).Nelson, Cary(ed.)."The Demise of Shared Governance at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute"(PDF).Journal of Academic Freedom.1.AAUP.Retrieved23 May2020.
  34. ^"For RPI, priorities an issue: Layoffs spark questions about school's spending on construction, salaries".Retrieved30 December2008.
  35. ^Mary L. Martialayvar."Rensselaer Regional Economic Impact More Than $1 Billion Annually".News.rpi.edu.Retrieved4 October2018.
  36. ^"North Hall and E-Complex Renovated To Accommodate Largest Incoming Class – Every Day Matters".Insiderensselaer.com.Retrieved4 October2018.
  37. ^"Quad undertakes summer renovations".The Polytechnic.Retrieved4 October2018.
  38. ^Silberstein, Rachel (23 November 2021)."RPI selects next president, will succeed Shirley Ann Jackson".Times Union.Retrieved2 July2022.
  39. ^"Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Virtual Campus Tour".Retrieved1 March2009.
  40. ^"Social and Behavioral Research Laboratory".Archived fromthe originalon 11 March 2009.Retrieved3 March2010.
  41. ^John F. Dojka (26 June 2019)."Continuing Up the Hill: Russell Sage Laboratory".RPI History Revealed: Uncovering History in the Archives.Retrieved16 July2019.
  42. ^Institute Archives and Special Collections (2003)."History of The Approach".Retrieved21 February2008.
  43. ^Institute Archives and Special Collections."RPI Building Histories: West Hall".Retrieved28 February2009.
  44. ^"Rensselaer Building Histories: Chapel/Voorhees Computing Center".Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Archives and Special Collections.Retrieved28 February2009.
  45. ^"Rensselaer Building Histories: Folsom Library".Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Archives and Special Collections.Retrieved7 October2017.
  46. ^"Mid-century Modern in TroyArchived26 February 2020 at theWayback Machine"[event announcement]. 7 October 2017. DOCOMOMO New York/Tri-State, a local chapter of DOCOMOMO US, national working group of the international organization DOCOMOMO (DOcumentation and COnservation of buildings, sites and neighborhoods of the MOdern MOvement)." The tour will end with the striking Brutalist Folsom Library. "Retrieved 7 October 2017.
  47. ^RPI (2006)."Barton Hall Profile".Retrieved28 February2009.
  48. ^The Polytechnic (2007)."EMPAC on schedule to open October 2008".Retrieved9 November2007.
  49. ^"EMPAC Mission".2007. Archived fromthe originalon 8 June 2008.Retrieved21 January2007.
  50. ^abBrunelle, Will."Report: R.P.I. facing $1 billion in debts, liabilities".Politico PRO.Retrieved5 March2019.
  51. ^ab"Rensselaer Unveils Newly Renovated Residence Commons in Downtown Troy".RPI Press Release. 15 May 2009.Retrieved24 May2009.
  52. ^"RPI Campus Map".Archived fromthe originalon 24 May 2019.Retrieved27 February2010.This interactive map can be used to see the locations of the Rice, Heley and Gurley buildings in Troy.
  53. ^"Rensselaer Announces Purchase of Proctor's Theatre Building in Downtown Troy"(Press release). Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. 6 April 2004. Archived fromthe originalon 14 August 2007.Retrieved28 October2008.The goal is to develop a high-end hotel that will provide economic and community benefits to the city of Troy and to the surrounding area
  54. ^"Columbia Development Companies To Acquire Proctor's Theater and Chasan Building in Troy and Launch Restoration - News & Events".News.rpi.edu.Retrieved4 October2018.
  55. ^Young, Elizabeth (8 April 2009)."The Drama Over Troy's Theatre".Albany Times-Union.Hearst Corporation.Retrieved10 June2009.
  56. ^"Save Proctor's Theatre advocacy group".Archived fromthe originalon 25 February 2020.Retrieved27 February2010.
  57. ^Caprood, Tom (23 April 2009)."A discussion about Proctor's".The Record.Journal Register Company.Retrieved11 June2009.
  58. ^"Interdisciplinary Programs".Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Archived fromthe originalon 18 June 2009.Retrieved9 June2009.
  59. ^"Mobile Computing Program Frequently Asked Questions".Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.Retrieved6 April2010.
  60. ^"The Rensselaer Plan".1999. Archived fromthe originalon 20 January 2007.Retrieved21 January2007.
  61. ^"Accomplishments of Rensselaer Plan".2006.Retrieved21 January2007.
  62. ^"Freshman Applications for Class of 2022 Surge Past 20,000 at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute".RPI News.Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. 28 March 2018.Retrieved6 May2018.
  63. ^"Board of Trustees Enthusiastically Endorses Leadership and Presidency of Dr. Shirley Ann Jackson".2006.
  64. ^Arenson, Karen W. (13 March 2001)."For Rensselaer Polytechnic, a Record-Setting Gift With No Strings Attached".The New York Times.Retrieved8 March2007.
  65. ^"Rensselaer Magazine: Fall 2006: Making A Difference"(PDF).www.rpi.edu.Rensselaer (ISSN 0898-1442). 2006. pp. 4, 8.Retrieved23 May2020.
  66. ^"Historic Rensselaer Capital Campaign Reaches Goal Nine Months Ahead of Schedule"(Press release). RPI. 1 October 2008.Retrieved3 March2010.
  67. ^"The Rensselaer Plan 2024"(PDF).Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 17 September 2013.Retrieved5 July2022.
  68. ^"2024 Plan: Looking back to look forward".The Polytechnic.3 December 2014.Retrieved5 July2022.
  69. ^"New capital campaign coming in 2017".Retrieved17 March2017.
  70. ^"Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Launches $1 Billion Capital Campaign".Rensselaer News.Retrieved5 July2022.
  71. ^ab"The Untold Story".Renew Rensselaer.Retrieved23 May2020.
  72. ^ab"2024 Academic Ranking of World Universities".ShanghaiRanking Consultancy. 15 August 2024.Retrieved21 August2024.
  73. ^"America's Top Colleges 2024".Forbes.6 September 2024.Retrieved10 September2024.
  74. ^"2023-2024 Best National Universities Rankings".U.S. News & World Report.18 September 2023.Retrieved9 August2024.
  75. ^"2024 National University Rankings".Washington Monthly.25 August 2024.Retrieved29 August2024.
  76. ^"2025 Best Colleges in the U.S."The Wall Street Journal/College Pulse.4 September 2024.Retrieved6 September2024.
  77. ^"QS World University Rankings 2025".Quacquarelli Symonds.4 June 2024.Retrieved9 August2024.
  78. ^"World University Rankings 2024".Times Higher Education.27 September 2023.Retrieved9 August2024.
  79. ^"2024-2025 Best Global Universities Rankings".U.S. News & World Report.24 June 2024.Retrieved9 August2024.
  80. ^ab"Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Rankings".U.S. News & World Report.2021.Retrieved15 October2020.
  81. ^"RPI's Graduate School Rankings".U.S. News & World Report.2021.Retrieved15 October2020.
  82. ^Studies (CWTS), Centre for Science and Technology."CWTS Leiden Ranking".CWTS Leiden Ranking.
  83. ^ab"Our First Ever College Rankings".The Economist.2016.Retrieved21 October2016.
  84. ^"The Top 200 World Universities".Times Higher Education.2016.Retrieved12 June2016.
  85. ^"10 Worst Colleges for Free Speech: 2020".theFIRE.org.Foundation for Individual Rights in Education. 29 January 2020.Retrieved8 September2021.
  86. ^"About ECSE | Electrical, Computer, and Systems Engineering".ecse.rpi.edu.Retrieved1 April2022.
  87. ^"EE and CSE FAQ | Electrical, Computer, and Systems Engineering".ecse.rpi.edu.Retrieved1 April2022.
  88. ^"Research Areas | Electrical, Computer, and Systems Engineering".ecse.rpi.edu.Retrieved1 April2022.
  89. ^"Notable ECSE Alumni | Electrical, Computer, and Systems Engineering".ecse.rpi.edu.Retrieved1 April2022.
  90. ^"Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute".Retrieved5 May2020.
  91. ^"Research Priorities".Retrieved26 January2008.
  92. ^"Office of the Vice President for Research".Retrieved17 March2017.
  93. ^"Table 20. Higher education R&D expenditures, ranked by FY 2018 R&D expenditures: FYs 2009–18".ncsesdata.nsf.gov.National Science Foundation.Retrieved28 January2021.
  94. ^"Center for Biotechnology and Interdisciplinary Studies".Retrieved17 March2017.
  95. ^"The Center for Biotechnology & Interdisciplinary Studies at Rensselaer".Retrieved17 March2017.
  96. ^"Industry Partners Program".Retrieved17 March2017.
  97. ^"Rensselaer Data Project Addresses Childhood Stunting in Developing Nations".News.rpi.edu.Retrieved17 March2017.
  98. ^"Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Agree To Jointly Promote Adoption of High Performance Computing".Cci.rpi.edu.Retrieved17 March2017.
  99. ^"Addressing Complex Global Challenges Through Multidisciplinary Collaboration: School of Engineering Reflects on NASA Juno Mission and Role of Research Center in the Modern Rensselaer Experience".RPI News.Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. news.rpi.edu. 21 October 2016. Archived fromthe originalon 14 February 2020.Retrieved7 October2017.
  100. ^"Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and IBM unveil the world's first IBM Quantum System One on a university campus".IBM Newsroom.Retrieved8 April2024.
  101. ^"President's Report 2016"(PDF).Retrieved17 March2017.
  102. ^"Common Data Sets – Office of the Provost".2 August 2014. Archived fromthe originalon 2 August 2014.Retrieved4 October2018.
  103. ^"President's Report 2016"(PDF).Retrieved17 March2017.
  104. ^ab"Facts & Figures".Retrieved17 March2017.
  105. ^"Historical Revenue, Balance Sheet, and Selected Data (1998–2019)".Renew Rensselaer.Retrieved23 May2020.
  106. ^"Archived copy"(PDF).Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 21 October 2016.Retrieved21 October2016.{{cite web}}:CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  107. ^ab"College Navigator – Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute".Nces.ed.gov.Retrieved14 March2014.
  108. ^"Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute – Common Data Set 2006–2007"(PDF).2007. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 5 March 2016.Retrieved17 July2007.
  109. ^About.com(2006)."Ranking of American Universities by Their Male/Female Ratios".Archived fromthe originalon 23 March 2006.Retrieved26 January2008.
  110. ^"RPI Class of 2020 – Ready To Change the World".2016. Archived fromthe originalon 10 February 2017.Retrieved21 October2016.
  111. ^"RPI Annual Report FY2018"(PDF).renewrensselaer.org.Retrieved5 November2018.
  112. ^"RPI Grand Marshal".www.rpi.edu.Retrieved1 April2022.
  113. ^ab"Grand Marshal and President of Union – Historical List | Institute Archives and Special Collections".archives.rpi.edu.Retrieved1 April2022.
  114. ^"The President of the Union".
  115. ^"Greek Organizations, Residence Life, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute".Reslife.rpi.edu.Retrieved4 October2018.
  116. ^"RPI 2017 - Theta Chi and Chi Phi - A St. Baldrick's Event".Stbaldricks.org.Retrieved4 October2018.
  117. ^"E to the X".RPI Information.Retrieved4 September2011.
  118. ^"Witness's recollection of the cheer originating at RPI".Lanuguagehat.com.Retrieved2 March2010.
  119. ^"RPI Hockey FAQ".Retrieved3 March2010.
  120. ^"At the beginning of the Hockey Line".RPI History Revealed. 8 September 2009. Archived fromthe originalon 18 July 2011.Retrieved8 March2010.
  121. ^Women's Hockey Headed to ECAC Hockey Semifinals.RPI Athletics. Retrieved 21 November 2013.
  122. ^"Timeline of RPI History-1959".Retrieved21 January2007.
  123. ^DiTursi, Dan (14 January 2004)."Football 2003: A season to remember".Retrieved18 February2009.
  124. ^"Houston Field House Renovation"(PDF).Retrieved10 September2008.
  125. ^"Giving to Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute - Athletics".Retrieved5 September2011.
  126. ^"Rensselaer Breaks Ground for East Campus Athletic Village; First Phase to be Completed by Fall 2009"(Press release). RPI. 4 September 2007.Retrieved3 March2010.
  127. ^"East Campus Athletic Village on Schedule for Fall 2009".Archived fromthe originalon 11 January 2009.Retrieved20 December2008.
  128. ^The Polytechnic (2 August 2007)."Master Plan Undergoes Public Review".Archived fromthe originalon 16 July 2011.Retrieved2 December2007.
  129. ^"Rensselaer Union: Clubs and Organizations".Rensselaer Student Union.Retrieved27 February2010.
  130. ^RPI press release (2006).""Princeton Review ranks RPI 2nd for" Most to do on Campus "".Retrieved21 January2007.
  131. ^"Our Union no longer student-run".The Polytechnic.Troy, NY. 5 September 2018.Retrieved18 September2018.
  132. ^"Phalanx".Retrieved9 October2007.
  133. ^"Phalanx Honor Society".Retrieved30 September2014.
  134. ^"Ski Club website".
  135. ^"Rensselaer Outing Club website".Archived fromthe originalon 30 April 2010.
  136. ^"The PolytechnicHomepage ".Archived fromthe originalon 21 January 2007.Retrieved21 January2007.
  137. ^"Statler & Waldorf".Retrieved26 May2008.
  138. ^"Sheer Idiocy Homepage".Retrieved9 February2016.
  139. ^"Duly Noted A Cappella".Retrieved2 February2009.
  140. ^91.5 WRPI - The Upstate Underground - RPI College Radio - Troy, NY.Wrpi.org. Retrieved 21 November 2013.
  141. ^"RPI Players History".Archived fromthe originalon 25 January 2012.Retrieved18 May2010.
  142. ^"RPI Songs".RPI Archives and Collections.Retrieved2 March2010.
  143. ^"Songs".Stutt.net RPI Information.Retrieved5 September2011.
  144. ^"About FYE".Archived fromthe originalon 18 February 2007.Retrieved23 February2007.
  145. ^"Rensselaer's First-Year Experience Program recognized Among the Best in the Country".Archived fromthe originalon 4 March 2007.Retrieved23 February2007.
  146. ^"Rensselaer's CLASS Program: a Transformation in the Making".Inside Rensselaer. 5 December 2008. Archived fromthe originalon 27 May 2010.Retrieved25 February2010.
  147. ^"Housing grant policy changes announced".Retrieved19 February2010.
  148. ^Lottman, Kelley (17 February 2010)."Housing policy not quite there".The Rensselaer Polytechnic.Retrieved25 February2010.
  149. ^abRensselaer Polytechnic Institute."Naval Reserve Officers' Training Corps (NROTC)".Retrieved13 February2022.
  150. ^"Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps - Midshipmen Regulations - Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute"(PDF).2019. p. 6.
  151. ^"RPI-Sage Hillel".Retrieved7 July2022.
  152. ^"Facebook - Rpi Sage Hillel".Facebook.Retrieved7 July2022.
  153. ^"About Hillel".Default.Retrieved14 February2022.
  154. ^"Cru RPI".Retrieved6 July2022.
  155. ^"Facebook - Cru RPI".Facebook.Retrieved7 July2022.
  156. ^"History of Cru".Retrieved7 July2022.
  157. ^ab"Women's History Month: Those Who Led the Way | Institute Archives and Special Collections".archives.rpi.edu.Retrieved14 February2022.
  158. ^"Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Gender Diversity".www.collegefactual.com.Retrieved14 February2022.
  159. ^Graduate's Guide to Alumni Resources.Rensselaer Alumni Association. 2010.
  160. ^ab"Rensselaer Alumni Hall of Fame".Retrieved22 May2010.
  161. ^"Alumni Hall of Fame: Allen B. Du Mont".RPI.Retrieved2 March2010.
  162. ^"Alumni Hall of Fame: Keith D. Millis".RPI.Retrieved2 March2010.
  163. ^"Alumni Hall of Fame: Marcian E. Hoff".RPI.Retrieved2 March2010.
  164. ^"Alumni Hall of Fame: Raymond S. Tomlinson".RPI.Retrieved2 March2010.
  165. ^"The Rediff Interview/Steven J Sasson, inventor of the digital camera".Rediff.com India Limited.
  166. ^"Alumni Hall of Fame: Ivar Giaever".RPI.Retrieved2 March2010.
  167. ^"Alumni Hall of Fame: Myles Brand".RPI.Retrieved2 March2010.
  168. ^Tracey Leibach, "Why is this man smiling?Archived2 June 2017 at theWayback Machine
  169. ^Moynihan, Colin (19 June 2019)."Nxivm Trial: Leader Convicted After Trial Exposed Sex Cult's Sordid Inner Workings".The New York Times.ISSN0362-4331.Retrieved19 June2019.

Further reading

[edit]
[edit]