Per the college's Common Data Set, section C7. The Importance the Institution Places on Each of the Following Academic and Nonacademic Factors in Their First-Time, First-Year, Degree-Seeking Admission Decisions.
Admissions Advantages
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Application Fee
Accepted Platforms
Required Essays
Interview
Sources
Nationally Ranked Programs
Programs by Median Earnings (1 Year After Graduation)
Janice M. Beitz, Professor, Program Director WOCNEPh-index 22
Notable: “Parkinson s disease a review” (2014) · 763 citations
Brigitte S. Cypress, Associate Professorh-index 17
Es on optimizing family engagement during patient- and family centered interdisciplinary rounds (PFCC-IR), reducing sychological distress among families of critically ill patients, and strengthening communication and shared decision-making
Notable: “Rigor or Reliability and Validity in Qualitative Research: Perspectives, Strategies, Reconceptualization, and Recommendations” (2017) · 969 citations
Donna M. Nickitas, Dean and Professorh-index 9
Notable: “Does Service-Learning Increase Cultural Competency, Critical Thinking, and Civic Engagement?” (2005) · 104 citations
Claudia Beckmann, Professor Emeritah-index 8
Improving perinatal outcomes and the impact of bullying on patient care outcomes. Expertise Maternal-Child Nursing Maternal-Infant Nursing Nursing Education Midwifery Nursing Research Education PhD: University of Texas Austin, Mater
Notable: “The effects of a teaching-modeling intervention on early mother-infant reciprocity” (1987) · 51 citations
Notable: “Business Group Affiliation, Firm Governance, and Firm Performance: Evidence from China and India” (2009) · 294 citations
Kenneth E. Kendall, Distinguished Professorh-index 20
Notable: “Metaphors and Methodologies: Living Beyond the Systems Machine” (1993) · 253 citations
Chester Spell, Professorh-index 19
Notable: “A meta-analytical integration of over 40 years of research on diversity training evaluation.” (2016) · 588 citations
Rakesh B. Sambharya, Professor, Area Headh-index 19
Notable: “FOREIGN EXPERIENCE OF TOP MANAGEMENT TEAMS AND INTERNATIONAL DIVERSIFICATION STRATEGIES OF U.S. MULTINATIONAL CORPORATIONS” (1996) · 537 citations
Hao Zhu, Associate Professor, Graduate Program Directorh-index 79
Notable: “WEGO: a web tool for plotting GO annotations” (2006) · 2,843 citations
Sean O'Malley, Chair, Associate Professorh-index 57
My research interests include the synthesis of nanoparticles via the Pulsed Laser Ablation in Liquids (PLAL) method, thin-film deposition using Matrix Assisted Pulsed Laser Evaporation (MAPLE), photovoltaic and piezoelectic activity in nov
Notable: “Convective instability: A physicist's approach” (1977) · 609 citations
Benedetto Piccoli, Associate Provost for Research, Distinguished Professorh-index 52
Notable: “Dissipation of stop-and-go waves via control of autonomous vehicles: Field experiments” (2018) · 775 citations
John Dighton, Professor, Director Rutgers Pinelands Field Stationh-index 51
Notable: “The Rhizosphere: Biochemistry and Organic Substances at the Soil-Plant Interface” (2001) · 799 citations
Notable: “Wet corn distillers byproducts compared with dried corn distillers grains with solubles as a source of protein and energy for ruminants” (1994) · 294 citations
Angelica L. Gonzalez, Associate Professor, Graduate Program Directorh-index 25
Notable: “Shifting species interactions in terrestrial dryland ecosystems under altered water availability and climate change” (2011) · 203 citations
Eric Klein, Associate Professor, Graduate Program Director of CCIBh-index 23
Notable: “Cell-Cycle Control by Physiological Matrix Elasticity and In Vivo Tissue Stiffening” (2009) · 427 citations
Anthony Geneva, Assistant Professorh-index 22
Notable: “SIRT6 represses LINE1 retrotransposons by ribosylating KAP1 but this repression fails with stress and age” (2014) · 435 citations
Daniel Hart, University Professor, Distinguished Professor of Psychologyh-index 39
Es on adolescent development in context. One facet of this work examines the development of civic life, including political knowledge, volunteering, social trust, and activism. In a series of papers, my colleagues and I have explored the ef
Notable: “The Development of Self-Understanding from Infancy Through Adolescence” (1982) · 487 citations
Charlotte Markey, Chair of Department of Health Sciences, Professorh-index 35
Notable: “Confirmatory factor analysis of the Child Feeding Questionnaire: a measure of parental attitudes, beliefs and practices about child feeding and obesity proneness” (2001) · 1,669 citations
Notable: “Association of Cannabis Use in Adolescence and Risk of Depression, Anxiety, and Suicidality in Young Adulthood” (2019) · 895 citations
Lauren Daniel, Associate Professorh-index 23
Es on sleep as a modifiable behavior that can be targeted to improve health and quality of life outcomes in children and adolescents. My research has described the bidirectional relationship between pediatric chronic health conditions and s
Notable: “Stakeholder Validation of a Model of Readiness for Transition to Adult Care” (2013) · 144 citations
Richard Stansfield, Associate Professor, Department Chairh-index 22
Nathan Link, Associate Professor, Graduate Program Directorh-index 17
Laura Napolitano, Associate Professorh-index 11
Notable: “WE NEVER CALL THE COPS AND HERE IS WHY: A QUALITATIVE EXAMINATION OF LEGAL CYNICISM IN THREE PHILADELPHIA NEIGHBORHOODS*” (2007) · 641 citations
Joan Maya Mazelis, Associate Professorh-index 11
Notable: “Urbanism and happiness: A test of Wirth’s theory of urban life” (2016) · 108 citations
Faculty counts are directory headcounts; the named list may be a subset. h-index shown only for ORCID-backed or high-confidence OpenAlex matches. Partial — enrichment ongoing.
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About Rutgers University, Camden. Rutgers University, Camden in Camden, NJ reports an overall acceptance rate of 77.7%, an SAT middle 50% of 1050–1300, a class size of 531, and a yield of 6.2% based on the most recent Common Data Set filings. Urban Rutgers campus across the river from Philadelphia offering small-school experience with big-university resources. Strong in nursing, business, and criminal justice.
Admissions and cost data as of July 3, 2026 (CDS 2024–25 cycle), from the most recent Common Data Set, IPEDS, and College Scorecard.
Rutgers University, Camden: key admissions facts
Rutgers University, Camden's overall acceptance rate is 77.7% (the most recent Common Data Set). Rutgers University, Camden's SAT middle-50% range is 1050–1300 (the most recent Common Data Set). The average unweighted GPA of admitted students at Rutgers University, Camden is about 3.7 (the most recent Common Data Set). Rutgers University, Camden's yield rate (the share of admitted students who enroll) is 6.2% (the most recent Common Data Set). The average net price at Rutgers University, Camden for families earning under $75,000 is about $10,346 per year (U.S. Department of Education College Scorecard/IPEDS data).
How much does Rutgers University, Camden cost for a family earning $75,000?
A family earning under $30,000 pays about $9,152 per year in net price at Rutgers University, Camden, while families earning over $110,000 pay about $23,914 (source: U.S. Department of Education College Scorecard/IPEDS data). A family earning $75,000 falls in the $48,001–$75,000 bracket and pays about $12,688 per year after grants and scholarships.
Rutgers University, Camden: average annual net price by household income (most recent College Scorecard/IPEDS data)
Household income
Average net price per year
Under $30,000
$9,152
$30,001–$48,000
$9,199
$48,001–$75,000
$12,688
$75,001–$110,000
$17,521
Over $110,000
$23,914
Tuition (in-state, before aid)
$14,222
Tuition (out-of-state, before aid)
$33,734
Room and board
$14,376
Frequently asked questions
What is the acceptance rate at Rutgers University, Camden?
Rutgers University, Camden's overall acceptance rate is 77.7%, based on the most recent Common Data Set.
What SAT score and GPA do you need for Rutgers University, Camden?
Admitted students at Rutgers University, Camden typically have an SAT middle-50% range of 1050–1300 and an average unweighted GPA of about 3.7, according to the most recent Common Data Set. These are the middle of the range, so scores above them strengthen an application.
Is it hard to get into Rutgers University, Camden?
Getting into Rutgers University, Camden is relatively accessible: it admits 77.7% of applicants. Your realistic odds depend on how your GPA and test scores compare to its middle-50% ranges and on your application round — you can estimate them with the free College Monte Carlo chances calculator.
Does Rutgers University, Camden offer early decision or early action?
Rutgers University, Camden offers early action (non-binding).
How much does Rutgers University, Camden cost after financial aid?
The average net price at Rutgers University, Camden — the real cost after grants and scholarships, not the sticker price — is about $10,346 per year for families earning under $75,000, based on U.S. Department of Education College Scorecard/IPEDS data. Higher-income families generally pay more; see the full net-price-by-income breakdown.
How much does Rutgers University, Camden cost for a family earning $75,000?
A family earning under $30,000 pays about $9,152 per year in net price at Rutgers University, Camden, while families earning over $110,000 pay about $23,914 (source: U.S. Department of Education College Scorecard/IPEDS data). A family earning $75,000 falls in the $48,001–$75,000 bracket and pays about $12,688 per year after grants and scholarships.