It turns out the Nintendo “Wiimote” can be used for more than just playing “Super Mario Brothers.” A team of TCNJ researchers is helping physics teachers use the handheld controllers to conduct classroom experiments. Continue Reading

It turns out the Nintendo “Wiimote” can be used for more than just playing “Super Mario Brothers.” A team of TCNJ researchers is helping physics teachers use the handheld controllers to conduct classroom experiments. Continue Reading
Ralph Nader, the Reverend Jesse Jackson, and Harriet Fulbright visited campus this past semester. Read what they had to say. Continue Reading
This semester, TCNJ students taught their counterparts everything from how to shoot pool, take great photos, speak Russian, and improve their video-game skills. Continue Reading
A chance meeting between two students got TCNJ’s Figure Skating Club on the ice. Though still relatively new, the team has two competitions under its belt and is looking to expand its roster. Continue Reading
Community Advisers from several decades share amusing anecdotes about incidents they witnessed while enforcing the rules in their dorms. Continue Reading
After being crowned Miss NJ last fall, Julianna White ’11 is busy preparing for the next step — competing for the title of Miss USA. Continue Reading
TCNJ’s “Gateway to Graduate School” program will fund two cohorts of 10 students through four years of intensive research and mentoring from biology faculty. Continue Reading
In “Ashlynn’s Dreams,” by Julie Gilbert ’07, a kidnapped girl discovers she has the power to enter and even shape a person’s dreams. The girl must learn how to use her powers because her life isn’t the only one at stake. Continue Reading
A study conducted by a TCNJ research team suggests that it does, in fact, take a village to raise a child. Continue Reading
With help from the Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship program, which encourages recipients to select non-traditional study-abroad destinations, these TCNJ students have immersed themselves in new cultures—and had life-changing experiences. Continue Reading