Campus Overview

American International College is a small, private university in Springfield, Massachusetts with an undergraduate enrollment of roughly 1,097 students, competing in Division II's Northeast 10 Conference. What makes AIC distinctive isn't prestige or leafy quads — it's the school's deeply rooted mission of serving first-generation, immigrant, and working-class students, a mission that dates back to its 1885 founding as a school for French-Canadian immigrants. If you're a student-athlete who didn't grow up with a trust fund or a family legacy at some elite New England school, AIC was literally built for people like you — it's a place where grit, diversity, and second chances are baked into the institutional DNA, not just printed in a brochure.


Location & Setting

AIC sits in Springfield, the third-largest city in Massachusetts, about 90 miles west of Boston and 30 minutes north of Hartford, Connecticut. This is an urban campus in a real, working city — not a quaint New England college town. Springfield has a complicated reputation: it's the birthplace of basketball (the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame is literally in town) and home to the Springfield Armory National Historic Site and the Dr. Seuss National Memorial. But it's also a city that has wrestled with economic decline, poverty, and crime for decades. Stepping off campus, you'll find a mix of residential neighborhoods, small businesses, and some rough edges. The Baskethall Hall of Fame and MGM Springfield (a casino and entertainment complex downtown) have brought some energy, but this isn't a place where students wander aimlessly through boutique shops. The surrounding Pioneer Valley, however, is genuinely beautiful — the Connecticut River runs through the area, and the Berkshires and hiking trails are within a short drive. The Five College Consortium (UMass Amherst, Amherst, Smith, Mount Holyoke, Hampshire) is about 30 minutes north, which gives you a sense of the broader academic ecosystem in the region, even if AIC isn't part of it.

Where Students Live & How They Get Around

AIC is a residential campus at its core, though a meaningful number of students commute, especially older and nontraditional students. Freshmen typically live on campus in residence halls, and the school encourages residential life as part of the experience, but by junior and senior year many students move into apartments in the surrounding Springfield area, where rent is significantly cheaper than eastern Massachusetts. A car is genuinely helpful here — Springfield's public transit (PVTA buses) exists but isn't robust enough to make car-free life seamless. Campus itself is compact and walkable, so day-to-day class life doesn't require wheels, but weekend trips, grocery runs, and getting to anything interesting usually do. Winters in western Massachusetts are serious — cold, snowy, and gray from November through March. You'll be slogging through slush to early morning lifts. Spring and fall are beautiful, though, and the outdoor access in the Valley makes those months feel earned.

Campus Culture & Community

With just over a thousand undergrads, AIC feels small and tight-knit — sometimes to a fault. Everybody knows everybody, and that can mean strong friendships and genuine community, but also limited anonymity. There is no Greek life at AIC, so the social scene revolves around athletic teams, student organizations, and off-campus gatherings. Athletes make up a significant chunk of the student body, which means the locker room and the weight room function as social hubs as much as any student center. Weekend social life tends to be low-key: house parties, trips to nearby Hartford or Northampton, or hanging out on campus. The school hosts events — homecoming, cultural celebrations, game nights — and turnout is decent because the community is small enough that things feel personal. School spirit exists but it's more of a "support your teammates" energy than a big-time gameday atmosphere. The culture is generally welcoming and unpretentious. Students here tend to be practical, hardworking, and not especially cliquish.

Mission & Values

AIC's founding mission — educating immigrants and underserved populations — still genuinely shapes the place. This is one of the most diverse small colleges in New England, and that diversity isn't performative. The school actively recruits and supports students who might not have had a clear path to college. Faculty and staff tend to be accessible and invested in student success, partly because the institution knows its students often face real obstacles. There's a whole-person ethos here: advising is hands-on, professors know your name, and the support infrastructure (tutoring, counseling, career services) is designed for students who may be the first in their families to navigate higher education. AIC has no religious affiliation — it's a secular institution — so there are no required theology courses or faith-based expectations.

Student Body

The student body is strikingly diverse for a small school in western Massachusetts. You'll find a significant percentage of students of color, international students (particularly athletes recruited from abroad), first-generation college students, and students from working-class backgrounds across New England and beyond. Politically and culturally, the campus leans practical rather than ideological — students are focused on getting degrees and building careers more than campus activism, though awareness of social justice issues runs through the community given its demographics. The vibe is unpretentious. People are here to get something done, not to signal status. International student-athletes — especially in sports like soccer, tennis, and hockey — add a genuinely global flavor that's unusual for a school this size.

Academics

AIC offers programs through its School of Business, Arts and Sciences, Health Sciences, and Education. The strongest and most career-oriented programs are in health sciences — nursing, occupational therapy, and physical therapy are the marquee draws, with the OT and PT programs (at the graduate level) being particularly well-regarded regionally. For undergrads, criminal justice, psychology, business, and health science pre-professional tracks are popular and practical. Class sizes are small — many courses have 15–20 students, sometimes fewer — and the student-to-faculty ratio hovers around 15:1. Professors here teach; this is not a research university where you're competing with grad students for attention. Faculty accessibility is a genuine strength. If you show up and put in effort, professors will invest in you. The academic culture is more supportive than cutthroat — students lean on each other and on faculty. Study abroad exists but isn't a dominant part of the culture. The academic experience is straightforward and professionally oriented: AIC isn't the place for deep liberal-arts exploration or cutting-edge research labs, but it is a place where you can earn a solid degree with real mentorship.

Athletics & Campus Sports Culture

Athletics are central to AIC's identity, arguably more than at most D2 schools its size. The Yellow Jackets compete in the Northeast 10 Conference, one of the stronger D2 conferences in the country, fielding around 20 varsity sports. Men's and women's ice hockey have historically been flagship programs — AIC men's hockey has made NCAA tournament appearances and generates real buzz. Football, soccer, basketball, lacrosse, and wrestling also have solid followings. Because athletes represent such a large share of the undergraduate population, sport isn't a sideshow — it's woven into the fabric of daily life. As a student-athlete, you won't feel like an outsider; you'll feel like the norm. Facilities are functional rather than flashy — the Butova Gymnasium and Olympia Ice Center serve their purpose, though they're not the gleaming complexes you'd find at well-funded D1 programs. Strength and conditioning support is solid for the level. The NE-10 means you'll travel to opponents across New England and into New York, with competitive matchups that matter without the pressure cooker of Division I.

What Else Should You Know

AIC's tuition sticker price is high relative to its profile, but the school discounts aggressively — most students receive significant financial aid, and athletic scholarships (available at D2) can make the math work. Ask hard questions about your aid package and how it renews year to year. Springfield's safety is a real consideration: students generally feel fine on campus, but the surrounding neighborhoods require awareness, especially at night. The school has invested in campus security, but this isn't a bubble. AIC's alumni network is regional rather than national — strongest in western Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the broader Northeast — so if you're planning to build a career in this part of the country, the connections are real and useful. Finally, know that AIC's small size means limited options in some areas: fewer clubs, fewer elective courses, fewer dining choices. But for a student-athlete who wants to be known, supported, and challenged at a human scale — and who doesn't need the prestige game — AIC offers something genuine.

Field Hockey

  • Head Coach Kylie Gargiulo led AIC to playoff contention in her first season (2024) as nation's youngest D2 head coach.
  • 81% of roster from out-of-state; 31% international recruits create diverse, globally-connected team culture.
  • Goalkeeper Frederique den Hartog won NE10 Rookie of the Year in 2024—first ever for AIC field hockey.

About the School

  • Founded 1885 to serve first-generation, immigrant, and working-class students—mission still defines campus culture today.
  • Urban Springfield campus 90 miles west of Boston; Berkshires hiking, Basketball Hall of Fame nearby.

Field Hockey (2025)

Level
D2 Low
FHC Rank
#28 of 34 (D2)
Massey Score
26.8 *
Conference
Northeast 10 Conference
Coach
Kylie Gargiulo
Trajectory
→ Stable
Season Results
'25: W 6-2 vs Molloy
'24: L 0-2 vs Franklin Pierce
'23: W 2-1 (2 OT) vs Franklin Pierce

Programs

Popular Majors

Health Professions (33%)
Registered Nursing, Nursing Administration, Nursing Research and Clinical Nursing (72%)
• Public Health (16%)
• Health Services/Allied Health/Health Sciences, General (11%)
• Health and Medical Administrative Services (2%)
Homeland Security (16%) (D2 avg: 8%)
Psychology (11%)
Business (10%) (D2 avg: 20%)
Business Administration, Management and Operations (48%)
• Accounting and Related Services (21%)
• Marketing (21%)
• International Business (9%)
Recreation (8%)

My Programs

Environmental Science
Psychology (10.8%)
Biology (1.9%)
Sports Med / Kinesiology (41.1%)
French
Popular (top 25%) Available Not found

School Profile

Type
Private
Classification
Doctoral/Professional

Student Body

Total
1,908
Undergrad
57%
Demographics
50% women
Student:Faculty
16:1

Academics

Admission Rate
97%
Retention
68%
Graduation
42%

Events & Clinics

No recruiting events listed

Costs

Total Cost
$55,463
Tuition
$42,970
Room & Board
$16,260

Avg Net Price
$25,299
Net Price ($110k+)
$37,851

Financial Aid

Avg Aid ($110k+)
~$17,612
Pell Recipients
50%
Take Loans
80%
Median Debt at Grad
$27,000
Source: Scorecard

Location & Weather

Setting
City (City: Midsize)
Nearest City
Hartford, CT (25 mi)
Major Metro
New York, NY (122 mi)

HighLow
January35°16°
April60°35°
July85°61°
October63°39°

Admissions

No admissions data available

Season History

Season Record GF/G GA/G GD SO OT Last Game
2025 4-13 1.5 3.4 -33 1 1 W 6-2 vs Molloy
2024 6-11 1.2 1.9 -12 2 5 L 0-2 vs Franklin Pierce
2023 7-10 1.3 1.8 -9 3 2 W 2-1 (2 OT) vs Franklin Pierce
2022 2-16 0.8 2.7 -34 0 4 L 0-1 vs Bentley
2021 6-12 1.2 2.6 -25 1 3 L 0-1 vs Bentley
2019 10-8 1.9 1.7 +3 2 4 W 4-1 vs Molloy
2018 3-14 1.1 4.1 -51 0 1 L 1-7 vs Liu Post
2017 2-16 0.8 3.8 -53 0 0 L 0-9 vs Saint Anselm
2016 10-8 1.3 1.6 -5 5 7 L 1-2 (OT) vs Saint Michael's
2015 4-14 1.7 2.6 -17 2 1 W 2-1 vs Mercy
Click any season to view full schedule

Coaching Staff

Name Position Contact Bio
Kylie Gargiulo Head Field Hockey Coach Kylie.Gargiulo@aic.edu View Bio
Maryann Macdonald Assistant Field Hockey Coach Maryann.Macdonald@aic.edu View Bio
Brenna Sullivan Athletic Trainer

Roster Breakdown

16 players

Geographic Recruiting

In-State: 19% (3 players)
US Out-of-State: 50% (8 players)
International: 31% (5 players)
Massachusetts: 19% (3 players)
New York: 19% (3 players)

Position Breakdown

Forward: 10 (62.5%)
Midfielder: 3 (18.8%)

Full Roster (16 players)

# Name Position Year Height Hometown High School
1 Mia Wood Forward - 5-2 Agawam, MA Agawam
3 Thalia Zweeres Defense - 5-0 East Haven, CT East Haven
4 Chloe Moss Defense/Forward - 5-4 Belchertown, MA Belchertown
6 Grace Boisvert Defense - 5-5 Uxbridge, MA Uxbridge
7 Mia Purchiaroni Defense - 5-4 East Syracuse, NY East Syracuse Minoa
8 Milagros Zanatelli Forward - 5-6 Mar Del Plata, Argentina Instituto Juvenilia / Snow College
9 Fenna Voll Forward/Midfield - 5-8 Zwijndrecht, Netherlands Develsteincollege
10 Kylee Rinker Defense - 5-4 Henryville, PA Pocono Mountain East
11 Mar Busqueta Midfield/Forward - 5-2 Matadepera, Spain Institut Matadepera
12 Anella Rossi Forward/Midfield - 5-5 Buenos Aires, Argentina Brick Towers College / Lincoln Memorial
14 Julya Mae Jones Forward - 5-2 Ann Arbor, MI Huron
15 Victoria Nelson Defense/Forward - 5-2 Shirley, NY William Floyd
16 Maddie Darling Defense/Forward - 5-8 Scotia, NY Scotia Glenville
22 Lucy Barzev Goalkeeper - 5-3 Stroudsburg, PA Stroudsburg
55 Frederique den Hartog Goalkeeper - 5-5 Rotterdam, Netherlands Zadkine Business College
86 Quinlyn Moll Goalkeeper - 5-5 Medford, NJ Shawnee / Colby-Sawyer