Rutgers Cooperative Extension (RCE) will present a new, urban-focused version of the popular Annie’s Project held in three locations over the course of six weeks, one evening per week. Annie’s Project offers important farm management lessons to help women succeed and this newest course is extended to military veterans in New Jersey. The training course, […]
Archives for October 2019
Open house prepares NJ community colleges for transferring to SEBS
Carol Andrew, Office of Academic Programs
Hunger should never haunt a child’s life | Opinion
David Krol – New Jersey Healthy Kids Initiative; Institute for Food, Nutrition, and Health
Murphy creates new climate initiative, Rutgers issues report, on Sandy anniversary
Robert E. Kopp – Institute of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences
Rockettes’ Athletic Trainer Marissa Piloto (SEBS ‘14) Got Her Start With Rutgers Football
Athletic trainer Marissa Piloto still pinches herself when she stands in the stage wing of New York City’s Radio City Music Hall watching the Rockettes perform. “This is my dream job,” said Piloto, who is in her fourth season training the stars of the Christmas Spectacular. The 27-year-old is also head athletic trainer for the […]
Annie’s Project farm management and business training course for women, veterans
Robin Brumfield – Rutgers Cooperative Extension
Superstorm Sandy’s ‘Left Turn’ into New Jersey: Could It Happen Again?
Jennifer Francis – Department of Marine and Coastal Sciences
Lead in NJ water: The murky problem between property rights and replacing pipes
Daniel Van Abs – Department of Human Ecology
Open House Prepares NJ Community Colleges for Advising Students on Transferring to SEBS
When community college students are preparing to further their education and transfer to a four-year institution, they look to their advisors for where to transfer and what courses they need. For years, Carol Andrew, assistant dean, Office of Academic Programs, for the Rutgers School of Environmental and Biological Sciences (SEBS) has been connecting with New […]
Study finds NJ is more vulnerable to climate change today than in 2012
Robert Kopp – Institute of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences