The students of RPI have created and participate in a variety of clubs and organizations funded by the Student Union. About 170 of these organizations are funded by the Student Union, while another thirty, which consist mostly of political and religious organizations, are self-supporting. In 2006 the
Princeton Review ranked RPI second for "more to do on campus." The Union was the last entirely student-run union at a private university in the United States until September 2017.
Student organizations Phalanx is RPI's Senior Honor Society. It was founded in 1912, when Edward Dion and the Student Council organized a society to recognize those RPI students who had distinguished themselves among their peers in the areas of leadership, service and devotion to the
alma mater. It is a fellowship of the most active in student activities and has inducted more than 1,500 members since its founding. RPI has around twenty
intramural sports organizations, many of which are broken down into different divisions based on level of play. Greek organizations compete in them as well as independent athletes. There are also thirty-nine club sports. Given the university's proximity to the
Berkshires,
Green Mountains and
Adirondacks, the Ski Club and the Outing Club are some of the largest groups on campus. The Ski Club offers weekly trips to local ski areas during the winter months, while the Outing Club offers trips on a weekly basis for a variety of activities.
The Rensselaer Polytechnic is the student-run weekly newspaper.
The Poly printed about 7,000 copies each week and distributed them around campus until 2018 when the newspaper switched to online-only distribution due to budget concerns. Although it is the Union club with the largest budget,
The Poly receives no subsidy from the Union and obtains all funding through the sale of advertisements. There is also a popular student-run magazine called
Statler & Waldorf which prints on a semesterly basis. RPI has an improvisational comedy group, Sheer Idiocy, which performs several shows a semester. There are also several music groups ranging from
a cappella groups such as the rusty pipes, Partial Credit, the Rensselyrics and Duly Noted, to several instrumental groups such as the orchestra, the jazz band and a classical choral group, the Rensselaer Concert Choir. Another notable organization on campus is
WRPI, the campus radio station. WRPI differs from most
college radio in that it serves a radius including the greater
Albany area. With 10 kW of broadcasting power, WRPI maintains a stronger signal than nearly all college radio stations and some commercial stations. WRPI currently broadcasts on 91.5 FM in the Albany area. The RPI Players is an on‑campus theater group that was formed in 1929. The Players resided in the Old Gym until 1965 when they moved to their present location at the 15th Street Lounge. This distinctive red shingled building had been a USO hall for the
U.S. Army before being purchased by RPI. However, the building is currently closed to the public due to flood damage caused by a burst pipe in February 2023. The Players have staged over 300 productions in its history.
RPI songs There are a number of songs commonly played and sung at RPI events. Notable among them are: • "The Alma Mater (Here's to Old RPI)" – sung at formal events such as
commencement and
convocation, also played and sung by the
Pep Band at hockey and football games, and played daily at noon by the quadrangle bell tower. It was published in the first book of
Songs of Rensselaer printed in 1913. • "Hail, Dear Old Rensselaer" – used to be the
fight song during the 1960s. It is still played today by the Pep Band at athletic events. • "All We've Learned at Rensselaer" – sung at the RPI commencement ceremonies by the Rensselyrics. Although the Rensselyrics are an
a cappella group, this song is accompanied by piano. Each verse or section has a different musical style, several of which are closely based on
Billy Joel songs or other popular songs.
First Year Experience and CLASS programs Another notable aspect of student life at RPI is the "
First-Year Experience" (FYE) program. Freshman begin their stay at RPI with a week called "Navigating Rensselaer and Beyond" or NRB week. The Office of the First-Year Experience provides several programs that extend to not only freshman, but to all students. These include family weekend, community service days, the Information and Personal Assistance Center (IPAC), and the Community Advocate Program. The FYE program was awarded the 2006
NASPA Excellence Gold Award, in the category of "Enrollment Management, Orientation, Parents, First-Year, Other-Year and related". Starting in 2008, the Division of Student Life updated the structure of its residential college model based upon the concept of "Clustered Learning Advocacy and Support for Students" (CLASS), which included a planned requirement for all sophomores to
live on campus and to live with special "residence cluster deans". The transition to this program began in early 2010 among some resistance from some fraternities and students who had planned to live off campus.
NROTC RPI
Naval Reserve Officers Training Corps is an officer accession program hosted at RPI with the goal of developing
Midshipmen into commissioned officers into the
United States Navy and
Marine Corps. The unit consists of students from RPI as well as
Union College. The program was officially started at RPI in September 1941, just a few months before the US involvement in
WWII. RPI NROTC was part of the
V-12 training program that was aimed at increasing the number of total commissioned officers during WWII. It focused on developing officers for the military specializing in technical degrees such as
engineering,
medicine, and foreign languages. The RPI class of 1945 had a large majority of its student body in the NROTC program with around 70% of the 932 students. Since 1926, over 75 Naval Officers have attained flag officer rank with a degree from RPI. Besides the
US Naval Academy, this is the largest number of flag officers produced from one single institute. RPI NROTC is home to several notable alumni including NASA Astronaut
Reid Wiseman and
RDML Lewis Combs. The first GM was Albert M. Harper. The President of the Union is elected by the student body (typically in the spring). Their main responsibility is to appoint an executive board of 15–20 students (responsible for the Rensselaer Union's budget). The executive board is the chief financial body of the Rensselaer Union. They are responsible for preparing and approving the budget for the following fiscal year, keeping track of and distributing union funds, and managing the business affairs with other facilities. In addition to appointing the executive board, they also work closely with the union's staff, athletics staff, and student clubs. The first PU was W.C.H. Slagle. Of those Greek organizations, three were founded at Rensselaer including the
Theta Xi national fraternity, the
Sigma Delta Hispanic-interest local sorority, and the
Rensselaer Society of Engineers local engineering fraternity.
Theta Xi fraternity was established by RPI students on 29 April 1864, the only national fraternity founded during the Civil War. The
Theta Xi Fraternity Chapter House is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Additionally, Rensselaer is home to the
Epsilon Zeta chapter of the
Alpha Phi Omega, or "APO," national service fraternity, which operates a test-bank and office at the top floor of the Student Union. The organization also hosts a campus lost & found, universal can tab collection, and a public 3D printing service. In 2017,
Chi Phi and
Theta Chi at Rensselaer co-hosted an event called "Brave A Shave For Kids With Cancer," along with several other Greek organizations - raising over $22,000 for pediatric cancer research with dozens of participants shaving their heads to spread awareness of pediatric cancers. Many fraternities and sororities also engage in
Adopt-a-Highway and host events in the local community. Since its inception, all members of Greek Life have also participated in Navigating Rensselaer & Beyond - RPI's official continuation of student orientation through hosting annual events open to all students such as Beach Day/Hike with Greek Life, a day of hiking and team building activities for incoming freshmen, and Saratoga Therapeutic Equine Program, a day of service focused on horse rehabilitation programs. Greek Life organizations also operate Greek-affiliated groups including the Alumni Inter-Greek Council, Greek Greeks - a student-run venture which aims to promote sustainability and safe environmental practices in Greek chapter houses, Greek Spectrum - an
LGBTQIA support and advocacy group, and the undergraduate Greek leadership society
Order of Omega. ==Student body==