Photo Spotlights

  • October 28, 2024

    Striking autumn colors are bountiful on campus despite a week of unseasonably warm temperatures. University students, faculty, and staff are in week 10 of the fall semester, looking ahead to the Thanksgiving break starting Nov. 27.

  • October 28, 2024

    RIT hosted its third annual Together RIT on Oct. 25. This year’s theme was Deaf culture, disability, and neurodiversity. The closing panel featured alumnae Kaitlin Sommer, left, and Amie Fornah Sankoh, center. It was moderated by Amberlee Jones, associate director of advancement for NTID, right.

  • October 21, 2024

    The men’s hockey team faced Bowling Green in front of a sellout crowd of 10,566 at Blue Cross Arena in downtown Rochester. The event was a highlight of Brick City Homecoming and Family Weekend.

  • September 20, 2024

    From left to right, Sam Antoniak, Naomi Chuukwu, Cameron Bibbus, and Lam Mach pose in a photo booth during the Get Ready to ROAR rally on Sept. 19. ROAR Day (Raise Our Annual Responses) is RIT’s annual day of giving that this year runs for 1,829 minutes from noon on Oct. 31 through 6:29 p.m. on Nov. 1. RIT was founded in 1829.

  • September 11, 2024

    Army and Air Force ROTC cadets at RIT held a remembrance vigil Wednesday morning for those who died in the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks in 2001. The event, outside the Student Alumni Union, featured 2,977 flags planted in the grass, honoring each life lost in the attacks. The vigil was hosted by the Colonel Andrew J. Dougherty Squadron of the Arnold Air Society.  

  • August 30, 2024

    More than 200 students, faculty, and staff attended the annual Lighting the Way event on Aug. 29, welcoming incoming women and non-binary students to RIT. New student participants received a commemorative lantern to light their route through campus. The annual event was sponsored by RIT’s Women, Gender, and Sexuality Resource Center.

  • August 28, 2024

    The 15th class of Destler/Johnson Rochester City Scholars was welcomed to RIT at the annual ceremony held Aug. 27 at Liberty Hill. The event included the announcement of the Destler/Johnson residence endowment, a $2 million gift to provide on-campus room and board to RCS scholars.

  • August 27, 2024

    Path of Discovery Counseling Services founder Fatima Banister, center, captured the $25,000 grand prize in the ROC the Pitch competition hosted by RIT’s Center for Urban Entrepreneurship. The sold-out event on Aug. 22 featured six local start-ups that pitched their business plans to a panel of judges, who examined the businesses’ unique competitive advantage, marketability, industry expertise of the owner or team, financial strength of the business, and company growth. Pictured with Banister is Ryne Raffaelle, RIT vice president for Research, and Ebony Miller-Wesley, director of the Center for Urban Entrepreneurship.

  • August 25, 2024

    Hundreds of RIT students prepared 115,000 meals of red lentil jambalaya in the Gordon Field House and Activities Center for RIT's FoodShare and Rochester's Foodlink programs as part of RIT's Connect & Serve: Hunger Project program during orientation on Aug. 23.

  • August 20, 2024

    Twenty-four students from Kyushu and Nagoya Universities arrived at RIT Aug. 12 for a visit as part of UPWARDS, the international semiconductor education, research, and workforce development initiative. The group learned about finding junction depths through groove and stain process steps from microsystems engineering doctoral student Eli Powell (seated) in RIT’s clean room, the Semiconductor Nanofabrication Laboratory.

  • August 5, 2024

    More than 150 projects were on display at the 33rd annual Undergraduate Research Symposium on Aug. 1. The 400-plus students made public presentations about work done this summer with faculty researchers. Research projects represented work from all of RIT’s colleges.

  • June 13, 2024

    RIT hosted the GENIUS Olympiad, an international high school project competition focused on environmental issues, in the Gordon Field House and Activities Center on June 12. More than 1,000 high school students from 33 states and 64 countries presented projects to judges in several categories including science, writing, business, robotics, music, short film, coding, and art. More than 2,400 proposals were submitted for the 2024 competition, yielding 727 selected projects. In addition, international students who achieve certain levels at the competition may be eligible for annual scholarships if they attend RIT. The competition, which was founded in 2011, is organized by Terra Science and Education and RIT.