IMPACT Magazine makes campus research accessible to more than 45,000 readers
By Julia Vaz | September 11Founded in 2018, IMPACT magazine is dedicated to highlighting top faculty and student research engagements at the University.
Founded in 2018, IMPACT magazine is dedicated to highlighting top faculty and student research engagements at the University.
Several campus buildings faced flooding and leakages following a flash flood warning in some parts of Providence County Sunday afternoon.
This past weekend, the City of Providence hosted PVDFest in collaboration with the Department of Art, Culture and Tourism and FirstWorks, a non-profit organization. The festival had performers, vendors and other events across three days at the 195 District Park.
The Brown Activist Coalition hosted its second Activist Coalition Conference on Saturday, creating a space for progressive campus organizations to share their missions with interested students and discuss inter-club collaborations.
Provost Francis J. Doyle III identified the intersection of artificial intelligence and higher education as a University priority in an Aug. 31 letter ...
Celebrations for the new statue of painter Edward Mitchell Bannister continued Sunday despite the afternoon’s thunderstorms and the movement of the unveiling ceremony from Market Square to the RISD Museum auditorium.
“Up Home: One Girl's Story” is an autobiographical account that follows the former Brown president's personal and professional life and experiences facing adversity.
Silently floating through the Providence River, a handful of BioPods — modular, wedding-cake sized pods built out of mycelium mushrooms and topped with native wetland plants — are naturally working to reestablish a whole ecosystem.
The Graduate Student Council approved a fall budget of $124,000 at Wednesday night’s meeting.
The Rhode Island General Assembly passed laws addressing housing, lead pipes and abortion, among other issues, in its 2023 session running from January to June.
A Herald analysis of compensation data — from IRS form 990 tax filings since 2013 and the Office of Institutional Research — identified a growing gap between compensation for Paxson and faculty members. And professors from Brown’s chapter of the American Association of University Professors ...
After negotiations between TALO and the University, undergraduate TA wages increase to $18 an hour.
The Office of Institutional Research released findings from its latest undergraduate survey, measuring student community engagement and perceptions of campus.
Of the 1,700 first-year students, 710 answered questions about their political views, admissions files, lifestyle and more.
Try The Herald's interactive quiz and explore data about the class of 2027 from our first-year poll.
Meiklejohns give first-years the advice they wish got.
Both President Christina Paxson P'19 P'MD'20 and Provost Francis J. Doyle III pointed to the national dialogue on admission practices as reasoning for the committee’s formation. But Doyle also emphasized the independent nature of the committee's work.
The proposed agreements provide for more than $174 million in voluntary payments from Brown to Providence between 2024 and 2043, according to a press release provided at the conference.
Several peer institutions, including Harvard, Columbia, Cornell and Penn, announced that they would withdraw from the rankings earlier this year.
The interim contract only lasts for the 2023-2024 academic year and is expected to be replaced by a full contract that TALO and the University will negotiate in the coming months, according to Joe Maffa ’24, a TALO organizer.