UNDERGRADUATE STUDENT LIFE
There are over 70
student clubs and organizations at Stevens, and the community
is always planning something to do - informal get-togethers, mixers and
formal parties, cultural celebrations and residence-hall social functions. Throughout
the year, there are also lectures, workshops and
concerts sponsored by the Entertainment Committee.
The Interdormitory Council hosts a weekly
coffeehouse. The Student Government Association (SGA) sponsors
"Techfest" each fall and "Boken" in the spring. Both events feature
fun-filled, festive activities. Special outings, such as the New
York City Opera, New York City Ballet and other interesting and
cultural affairs, are organized by the Office of Student Life. The
Office of Student Life annually hosts the Spring Gala at the end of
“Boken.”
Throughout both semesters, you can take
advantage of our own well-attended, on-campus cinema, where
discount-price feature films are shown each week from Sunday to
Tuesday evenings. Colonel John’s, an a la carte style eatery, is
also a popular gathering place.
Unique and impromptu recreational activities
are also common. Each fall, students, staff, faculty and
administrators help inflate the giant balloons used in the Macy’s
Thanksgiving Day Parade, and each spring students operate a water
station for the New Jersey Waterfront Marathon that runs through
Hoboken’s streets.
Student Government
At Stevens, you are an important member
of the community. The keystone of the undergraduate division is
the SGA; it directs and funds all student activities with the assistance
of the Office of Student Life. Other elected groups include the
Co-op Student Council, Ethnic Student Council, Interdormitory Council,
Interfraternity Council and Panhellenic Council, and all serve the
interests of their members. Members of the administration frequently
hold informal meetings with small groups of students, providing
an opportunity for an exchange of ideas and opinions.
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Athletics Stevens
competes at the NCAA Division III level
for intercollegiate sports. Men participate in baseball, basketball, cross-country,
golf, fencing, track and field, lacrosse, soccer, swimming,
tennis and volleyball. Women represent Stevens in basketball, cross
country, fencing, lacrosse, equestrian, track and field, soccer, swimming,
tennis and volleyball. Nearly all are affiliated with the
Skyline Conference and compete in the ECAC Conference. Our mascot is
Attila the duck.
Stevens also offers
intramural sports, a variety of club sport teams, http://www.stevensducks.com/campusrecreation/club
, an extensive outdoor
recreation program and a wide offering of informal sport/recreational
opportunities. We want you to enjoy our full program of activities
throughout the year.
For a closer look, visit
our state-of-the-art Charles V. Schaefer, Jr., Athletic and
Recreation Center, Walker Gym and DeBaun Field, and our web site at
www.stevensducks.com
.
Ethnic, Cultural And Religious
Groups
The student body comes to Stevens from all
corners of the nation and around the world. Stevens welcomes the
dozens of ethnic, cultural and religious groups that have been formed
on campus. These include the Black Student Union, Chinese Student
Association, Christian Fellowship, Filipino Association, Hellenic
Student Association, Indian Student Association, Korean Student
Association, Latin American Association, Muslim Student Association,
Newman Association, Pakistani Student Association and Vietnamese
Student Association.
Honor and Professional
Societies
Membership in honor societies, both local
and national, is by invitation and extended to juniors and seniors.
National societies include Tau Beta Pi, an honorary engineering
society involved in community-based public service projects, and
Alpha Phi Omega, a national service fraternity. Other honorary engineering
societies with chapters on the Stevens campus are Eta Kappa Nu,
the electrical engineering honor society, Epsilon Mu Eta, the engineering
management honor society, and the Phi Omicron chapter of Pi Tau
Sigma, the mechanical engineering honorary fraternity. The National
Society of Collegiate Journalists, an honor society, recognizes
students who serve with distinction in the media. If you have distinguished
yourself in the dramatic arts, you may be eligible for Theta Alpha
Phi.
The Stevens honor societies are Gear and Triangle,
which honors juniors and seniors for outstanding work
in extracurricular activities, and Khoda, which selects its members from the senior
class on the basis of noteworthy contributions to the Stevens community in
general.
A number of national professional
engineering and scientific societies have student chapters at
Stevens, and membership in them gives you a better chance
of judging your career choices. They include the American Society of
Mechanical Engineers-which held its first organizational meeting at Stevens in
1880, the American Chemical Society, the American Institute of Chemical Engineers,
the American Society of Civil Engineers, the Institute
of Electrical and Electronic Engineers, the National Society
of Black Engineers, the Society of Automotive Engineers, the Society of Hispanic
Professional Engineers, the Society of Physics Students and the Society of Women
Engineers.
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Social Fraternities
and Sororities
The decision to join a fraternity or sorority
at Stevens is strictly up to you - about 35 percent of undergraduates
choose to do so. The Interfraternity Council and the Panhellenic
Council establish rules and oversee rushing and pledging. The formal
rushing and pledging period occurs during the spring semester. It
is Stevens’ policy to actively advise fraternities and sororities
on compliance with state statutes against "hazing."
Nine national social fraternities have chapters at Stevens: Alpha Sigma Phi,
Beta Theta Pi, Chi Phi, Chi Psi, Delta Tau Delta,
Phi Sigma Kappa, Sigma Nu, Sigma Phi Epsilon and Theta
Xi. Two national social sororities have chapters at Stevens: Delta
Phi Epsilon and Phi Sigma Sigma. There is also
a local sorority, Omicron Pi, on campus.
Two multicultural Greek
organizations also have chapters on campus, Lambda Upsilon
Lambda Fraternity and Chi Upsilon Sigma Sorority.
Special Interest Clubs
Stevens has dozens of special interest clubs,
such as the Equestrian Club, Paintball Club, Photography Club and
Stevens Yacht Club, just to name a few.
For those interested in
media and communications we have The Stute, our weekly student
newspaper; WCPR radio; WSIT-TV, an experimental television station;
Red Shift, our student literary
magazine and Link, the yearbook. Each gives
you practical experience in a media function and affords the
college community an outlet to express their opinions.
In the performing arts,
we have the Stevens Choir, Jazz Band and Pep Band, organized through
the Music Department. The Stevens Dramatic Society, our oldest
active student organization, produces several productions per year.
Students handle all aspects of production, from acting to scenery
design,
lighting and sound to stage and business
management. Performances are given at the Grace E. and Kenneth
W. DeBaun Auditorium in Edwin A. Stevens Hall.
Graduate Student Life
The graduate population at Stevens includes
full-time students (most of whom live on or near campus), domestic
and international students, part-time commuting students and a growing
number of part-time students at off-campus corporate sites. The
$95 enrollment fee for graduate students included with each semester’s
enrollment helps support graduate professional activities and many
of the extracurricular clubs, professional societies and services.
All graduate students may avail themselves of these activities.
Career planning and placement services are available to graduate
students and include informational talks on career path, on-campus
interviews and databases of job opportunities.
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Graduate Student
Activities As
a member of the Student Life Office, the Assistant Director of
Student Life develops and implements the Graduate Calendar of Events
for both the fall and spring semesters. The events on this calendar
range from professional seminars and presentations to numerous
social events such as a coffee house series, picnics and tours of
nearby attractions. Events sponsored by graduate organizations are
also included in the Graduate Calendar of Events. The Calendar of
Events is mailed out to all enrolled graduate students at the
beginning of the fall and spring semester. If you would like more
information, log on to the graduate activities web page at www.stevens.edu/grab/gsa/index.html
or stop by the Student Life Office on the 10th floor of the Howe
Center.
Professional and
Honor Societies
Graduate students are eligible to
become members of professional and honor societies. Honor societies
of interest to graduate students are Tau Beta Pi, the national
engineering honor society, Eta Kappa Nu, the electrical engineering honor
society, Pi Tau Sigma, the mechanical engineering honor society, and
Sigma Xi, the Scientific Research Society of North America. Of
particular note is that the Tau Beta Pi chapter, established before the
turn of the last century, was the fourth in the country and the
first in the state of New Jersey.
The
Society of Sigma Xi, whose founder was a Stevens
alumnus, recognizes and encourages original research in science and engineering. Election
to full membership is based on noteworthy achievement as an
original investigator, as evidenced by publications or the successful defense
of a doctoral dissertation. Associate membership can be achieved by
showing marked excellence in studies and demonstrated aptitude for research. As part
of its activities, the Stevens chapter sponsors a series of lectures by authorities
in various fields of science and engineering.
Among the professional
societies of interest to graduate students are the American Society
of Mechanical Engineers,
which held its first organizational meeting
at Stevens in 1880, the Society of Automotive Engineers,
the Association of Computing Machinery, the American Chemical Society, the American
Institute of Chemical Engineers, the American Society of Civil Engineers,
the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, the American Institute
of Physics, the American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical and Petroleum
Engineers, the American Society for Metals and the American Institute of Aeronautics
and Astronautics. Many academic departments either independently or in conjunction with these or
other organizations sponsor technical colloquia and seminars.
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SOCIAL LIFE OFF CAMPUS
Hoboken:
You’ll discover that Hoboken is a
unique, one mile-square community and a center of urban renaissance.
Once known as the birthplace of the late Frank Sinatra and baseball,
it is a wonderful place to live and is home to thousands of artists
and professionals, among others. Washington Street, the main thoroughfare,
has taken on a European flair with over 50 restaurants, delis and
cafes, as well as art galleries, bookstores, and music and dance
clubs. Hoboken’s picturesque streets with renovated brownstones
and quaint parks have also become the backdrop for motion pictures
and television sitcoms.
Located on the west
bank of the Hudson River, the waterfront plays a dominant
role in the life of the city. During World War I, Hoboken
was the port of embarkation for hundreds of thousands of soldiers, and later (as
portrayed in the award-winning film, On the Waterfront) the
city became a major center of the shipping industry. Now, in the
new millennium, the waterfront is the focus of renewed interest and
activity; construction is underway to turn the
old ferry slips and empty piers into complexes for housing, office
and recreation facilities.
Just minutes away from Hoboken is Secaucus
and the exciting Meadowlands Sports Complex, home to the Giants, Jets,
Devils and Nets. You can also see
the circus, Ice Capades and popular musical groups perform at the
Continental Airlines Arena.
Further north and west are a variety of suburban towns where
many Stevens faculty and staff reside. There are shopping centers, lakes
and parks, as well as farms, horse
stables, water parks and ski resorts toward the Pennsylvania border, which
many students visit.
New York City:
Our campus overlooks the Hudson River and
New York City, the cultural capital of the nation. Whether you prefer
to haunt museums or art galleries, attend the theater, or hear music
ranging from classical to rock, New York City is the place to go.
Eat in Little Italy or Chinatown, pick up bargain-basement-priced
tickets to a Broadway or off-Broadway play, ride a bike or rollerblade
in Central Park, stroll through SoHo, catch a Knicks or Rangers
game at Madison Square Garden, or go to the famous Bronx Zoo. A
ten-minute train ride whisks you from the Hoboken PATH Terminal
into midtown and downtown Manhattan. You can also take a bus from
the Hoboken Terminal into the Port Authority Terminal in midtown,
or a ferry from the Hoboken Terminal to Battery Park downtown and
from 13th Street to midtown.
Taking Advantage of Local
Events and Activities:
The Office of Student Life can provide specific details about
events in Hoboken, at other nearby colleges and in New York City,
and can arrange for tours or discount tickets to many
events. Special rate movie tickets for Loews Cineplex Theaters.
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CONDUCT AND STUDENT
RESPONSIBILITIES
We ask that you act
in a responsible and mature manner, taking the safety of yourself
and others seriously. Stevens complies with government regulations
for health and safety; therefore, we also expect you to comply with
all federal, state and local laws. The student handbook can be found
online at http://www.stevens.edu/student_affairs/handbook/index.htm
Alcohol Policy:
The legal age for consumption of alcoholic
beverages in New Jersey is 21 years of age. No alcoholic beverages
are permitted in residence halls where freshmen reside. Other resident
students and guests may consume alcoholic beverages in private living
units provided that such consumption meets the conditions listed
below. Failure to adhere to the following regulations results in
the termination of the gathering and/or judicial action.
A. Persons may not transport open
containers of alcoholic beverages, nor may they consume alcoholic beverages in hallways, foyers, stairwells, bathrooms, in open air
or public areas.
B. No kegs,
"beer balls" or other such containers are permitted on
campus.
C. No authorized
distribution of alcoholic beverages, or possession of alcoholic beverages for
purposes of distribution on the Institute’s premises or at Institute- sponsored
or supervised activities is permitted.
D. Any event where alcoholic beverages are
sold or where any charge or donation is made for admission to the
event requires a special Alcoholic Beverage Commission permit, as well as registration and approval
by the Institute. This permit may be obtained through the Office
of Student Life.
E. Drunken or disorderly behavior on property owned or controlled
by the Institute or at functions sponsored or supervised by Stevens
is not permitted.
Drug Policy:
The Stevens drug policy is as follows: "Stevens
Institute of Technology will not condone the use, sale or possession
of illicit drugs or narcotics on the property of the Institute or
on the property of any affiliated organization recognized by the
Institute. No warnings will be issued. An infraction will subject
the student to disciplinary action by the Institute in the form
of suspension or dismissal. In addition, the student may be subject
to prosecution under federal, state and local law."
Additional information
about the drug and alcohol policy, or the drug and alcohol
assistance program, is available from the Office of Student Life and
in the Student Handbook on the web site at http://www.stevens.edu/student_affairs/handbook/index.htm
.
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If you violate the rules, you may be put
on probation, be required to fulfill community service and, depending
on severity and/or repetition, be suspended or expelled. You have
the right to appeal any such action before the Non-Academic Committee
on Appeals. If you are suspended or expelled, you will not receive
any refund of tuition or fees paid.
Honor Board for Undergraduate Students
The term "honor," when used in
the context of the Stevens Honor System, connotes the desire to
see that students do not shortchange themselves or their classmates
by receiving credit for work that is not the student’s own
or for work that is not fairly produced. To this purpose the Honor
Board was established in 1908.
The Honor Board is composed of
a group of students elected by their classmates. They investigate a
situation when a student’s honor is questioned and present the
evidence to the accused student. This can result in a confession
or a presentation of the evidence and its rebuttal by the accused student
to the panel of students.
If a
student confesses or is found guilty, the Honor Board recommends a
penalty to the Dean of Undergraduate Academics. The accused student can appeal the
decision of the Honor Board. Appeals are directed to
the Faculty Committee on Appeals by submitting a letter to the Dean
of Undergraduate Academics up to 14 days after the penalty decision
of the Honor Board.
The constitution and by-laws of the Honor Board
can be reviewed by visiting their web site at http://www.stevens.edu/honor_board
.
Cheating Policy for Graduate Students
Cheating during
in-class tests, take-home examinations or homework is, of course, illegal and
immoral. A Graduate Academic Evaluation Board exists to
investigate academic improprieties, conduct hearings and determine any necessary actions.
The term "academic impropriety" is meant to include, but is not
limited to, cheating on homework, during in-class or take home
examinations and plagiarism. The accused may elect to be present at the hearing
along with any witnesses he or she chooses. Appeals of
the Board’s decisions are first made to the Academic Appeals Committee and
then, if necessary, to the chief academic officer, i.e., the Chair
of the Dean’s Council. Members, chosen from the Graduate
Committee, which includes a faculty member from each school, a graduate
student, and the Dean of Graduate Studies.
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