Campus Overview

Keuka College is a tiny private school of about 920 undergraduates sitting directly on the western shore of Keuka Lake in New York's Finger Lakes wine country — and that lakefront location isn't just scenery, it's central to the experience. What sets Keuka apart is its Field Period program, a required experiential learning component every year that sends students into internships, service projects, and hands-on work placements starting freshman year — not as an optional add-on but as a graduation requirement baked into the calendar. This is a school for students who want a close-knit, outdoorsy environment where professors know them by name, the lake is their backyard, and learning by doing isn't a slogan but a literal curricular mandate.


Location & Setting

Rural, and genuinely so. Keuka Park is an unincorporated hamlet on the bluff above Keuka Lake, one of the smaller Finger Lakes. The nearest real town is Penn Yan (population ~5,000), about ten minutes north, which has a grocery store, a few restaurants, and the essentials but not much nightlife. Hammondsport, the charming village at the lake's southern tip, is about fifteen minutes the other direction and is the heart of Finger Lakes wine country. Geneva and Canandaigua are 30–40 minutes away for bigger shopping or dining. This is beautiful country — rolling hills, vineyards, farmland, and the lake itself — but students who need urban energy or walkable commercial districts will feel isolated. The nearest city of any size is Rochester, about an hour and fifteen minutes northwest.

Where Students Live & How They Get Around

This is a residential campus — most traditional undergrads live on campus, and freshmen are required to. The college has several residence halls clustered on the hillside above the lake, and upperclassmen have some apartment-style options on campus. There's limited off-campus housing in the area, and most students stay in college housing. A car is genuinely useful here. Campus itself is walkable (it's not large), but getting anywhere beyond campus — grocery runs, restaurants, weekend trips to the wineries or Rochester — basically requires a vehicle or a friend with one. The Finger Lakes climate is real upstate New York weather: beautiful but short autumns, cold and snowy winters that last well into March, and gorgeous springs and summers. Lake-effect patterns can dump snow, and the hills make for some slippery walks between buildings in January. Summers are spectacular, but most students only experience May and September on campus.

Campus Culture & Community

With 920 undergrads, everyone knows everyone — or at least recognizes most faces. There's no Greek life at Keuka, which removes that social stratification entirely. Social life revolves around campus events, athletic teams, clubs, and friend groups. Weekend options include college-sponsored activities, house gatherings, and trips to the wineries that dot the lake (for those of age). The lake itself is a genuine social hub in warmer months — students kayak, swim, and hang out on the waterfront. The college owns lakefront property and has a beach area. The small size creates a family-like atmosphere that students either love for its intimacy or find limiting. School spirit exists but it's more of a quiet loyalty than a rah-rah culture. The annual traditions and events — homecoming, spring activities on the lake — matter more because the community is small enough that most people participate.

Mission & Values

Keuka was founded in 1890 with connections to the Free Will Baptist tradition, but it operates as a fully nonsectarian institution today. Religion plays essentially no role in daily campus life or curriculum. The animating mission is experiential learning — the Field Period program is the institutional identity. Every student completes a Field Period each academic year (140 hours of hands-on experience connected to their major), which means by graduation you've done four substantive experiential placements. This isn't just resume padding; it shapes how courses are structured and what faculty emphasize. The college genuinely invests in knowing students as individuals — with a student-faculty ratio around 11:1, there's nowhere to hide, and advisors and professors tend to be actively involved in students' academic planning and career development. The culture emphasizes service, practical preparation, and personal growth over pure academic prestige.

Student Body

The draw is heavily regional — most students come from upstate New York and the broader Northeast, with a significant number from small towns and rural communities in the Finger Lakes and Southern Tier. This is not a cosmopolitan campus. Students tend to be practical-minded, often first-generation, and career-focused rather than abstractly intellectual. The vibe is friendly and unpretentious — more flannel and hiking boots than blazers and boat shoes. Diversity is limited; the student body is predominantly white and reflects the demographics of the surrounding region. International student presence is small. Students who thrive here tend to value hands-on learning, outdoor access, and tight community over urban amenities and social scene variety.

Academics

Keuka's genuine strengths are in its professional and pre-professional programs. Nursing is the flagship — it's competitive to get into and well-regarded regionally, with clinical placements at hospitals throughout the Finger Lakes. Occupational therapy (the college offers a combined BS/MS pathway), education, social work, and criminal justice are all strong draws. The sciences are solid for a school this size, and pre-health students benefit from small lab sections and faculty who invest in their med school or graduate applications. The humanities and liberal arts exist but aren't what most students come here for. The Field Period requirement means every program has a built-in practical component — an English major might work at a publishing house, a criminal justice major at a local police department. Class sizes are typically 12–18 students, and most classes are taught by full-time faculty, not adjuncts or graduate assistants. Professors are teaching-focused and genuinely accessible — office hours feel more like conversations than appointments. The academic culture is collaborative, not competitive; students help each other, and faculty root for everyone to succeed. Study abroad options exist but participation rates are modest — the Field Period sometimes substitutes for that itch.

Athletics & Campus Sports Culture

Keuka competes in Division III as a member of the Empire 8 Conference, fielding around 15 varsity sports. As a D3 program, athletes are students first, and the time commitment is manageable alongside academics and Field Period obligations. Athletics matters to campus life more than you might expect at a school this small — with 920 undergrads, a significant percentage of the student body plays a varsity sport, which means athletes aren't a separate caste but are woven into every social group and residence hall. Game attendance is modest but loyal; it's the kind of place where your classmates and professors show up to cheer. The Empire 8 is a competitive small-college conference, and Keuka has had success in sports like lacrosse and basketball. For a field hockey recruit, the D3 model here means you'll play a meaningful role from early on, and the small-school setting means coaches know you as a person, not a jersey number.

What Else Should You Know

The lakefront location is Keuka's most underrated asset and biggest quality-of-life factor — waking up to lake views and having waterfront access steps from your dorm is genuinely unusual for a college campus. Financial aid is worth investigating carefully; Keuka's sticker price is moderate for a private school, and the college tends to offer substantial institutional aid to most students, making the net cost significantly lower than the published tuition. The Field Period program is both a strength and a logistical reality — you'll need to plan for those 140-hour placements each year, which can mean staying near campus during breaks or finding local opportunities, though the college has a network of partner organizations. The biggest honest challenge is isolation: if you need regular access to a city, diverse dining options, or a large social scene, the rural Finger Lakes setting will wear on you. But if you want a place where the community is tight, the lake is your stress relief, and your education has a hands-on spine running through it, Keuka offers something most small colleges can't match.

Field Hockey

  • Head Coach Jessica Franklin leads the program with stable roster development and Empire 8 conference play.
  • Team recruits regionally with out-of-state presence; attended Disney Showcase for talent identification.

About the School

  • Field Period is a required experiential learning component every year—internships and hands-on work start freshman year.
  • Lakefront campus on Keuka Lake in Finger Lakes wine country with 11:1 student-to-faculty ratio.

Field Hockey (2025)

Level
D3 Low
FHC Rank
#148 of 163 (D3)
Massey Score
8.4 *
Conference
Empire 8
Coach
Jessica Franklin
Trajectory
→ Stable
Season Results
'25: L 1-6 vs Hartwick
'24: L 0-6 vs Hartwick
'23: L 0-8 vs Hartwick

Programs

Popular Majors

Health Professions (20%)
Registered Nursing, Nursing Administration, Nursing Research and Clinical Nursing (52%)
• Rehabilitation and Therapeutic Professions (48%)
Public Administration (18%) (D3 avg: 11%)
Business (17%)
Business Administration, Management and Operations (86%)
• Marketing (9%)
• Accounting and Related Services (5%)
Education (10%)
Special Education and Teaching (63%)
• Education, General (20%)
• Teacher Education and Professional Development, Specific Subject Areas (17%)
Psychology (10%)

My Programs

Environmental Science (1.5%)
Psychology (9.8%)
Biology (3.4%)
Sports Med / Kinesiology (19.6%)
French (3.8%)
Popular (top 25%) Available Not found

School Profile

Type
Private
Classification
Master's: Medium Programs

Student Body

Total
1,282
Undergrad
72%
Demographics
74% women
Student:Faculty
11:1

Academics

Admission Rate
94%
SAT Median
1,095
SAT Range
1,008-1,183
Retention
71%
Graduation
49%

Events & Clinics

Recruiting Events:
Disney Showcase 2026

Costs

Total Cost
$53,506
Tuition
$38,000
Room & Board
$13,556

Avg Net Price
$25,989
Net Price ($110k+)
$31,596

Financial Aid

Avg Aid ($110k+)
~$21,910
Pell Recipients
44%
Take Loans
87%
Median Debt at Grad
$27,000
Source: Scorecard

Location & Weather

Setting
Town (Town: Distant)
Nearest City
Rochester, NY (46 mi)
Major Metro
Buffalo, NY (93 mi)

HighLow
January33°18°
April56°36°
July81°62°
October61°43°

Admissions

No admissions data available

Season History

Season Record GF/G GA/G GD SO OT Last Game
2025 2-14 1.1 4.1 -48 0 1 L 1-6 vs Hartwick
2024 2-14 1.2 5.6 -69 0 0 L 0-6 vs Hartwick
2023 4-12 2.2 3.7 -24 3 0 L 0-8 vs Hartwick
2022 5-13 2.0 4.3 -41 2 2 L 1-6 vs Houghton (Empire 8 Quarterfinals)
2021 6-10 2.1 2.5 -7 3 2 L 1-3 vs Hartwick
2019 5-11 2.4 3.0 -9 2 2 W 12-0 vs Wells (NEAC Championship)
2018 6-11 2.2 3.2 -17 5 2 L 1-2 vs Wilson (CSAC/NEAC Crossover)
2017 5-13 2.1 3.7 -29 1 2 L 2-8 vs Husson (NEAC/NAC Crossover)
2016 1-15 0.6 4.2 -59 0 0 L 0-4 vs Geneseo
2015 2-13 0.5 5.7 -78 1 1 L 0-8 vs Nazareth
Click any season to view full schedule

Coaching Staff

Name Position Contact Bio
Jessica Franklin Head Coach View Bio
Erin Norris Assistant Coach View Bio
Ryan Johnson Strength and Conditioning Coach

Roster Breakdown

19 players

Geographic Recruiting

In-State: 95% (18 players)
US Out-of-State: 5% (1 player)
New York: 95% (18 players)
Pennsylvania: 5% (1 player)

Position Breakdown

Forward: 6 (31.6%)
Midfielder: 4 (21.1%)
Defender: 6 (31.6%)
Goalkeeper: 3 (15.8%)

Roster Composition

Graduating '27: 4 players (21%)
Forward: 1
Midfielder: 1
Defender: 2
Class of 2026: 6 (32%)
Class of 2028: 3 (16%)
Class of 2029: 6 (32%)

Full Roster (19 players)

# Name Position Year Height Hometown High School
00 Nijeylie Torres G SR 5-4 East Irondequoit, NY Eastridge
2 Isabella Dunn F FY 5-6 Port Byron, NY Port Byron
3 Paige Bull D FY 5-4 Lockport, NY Starpoint
4 Tori Nelson M SR 5-7 Vernon Center, NY Vernon-Verona-Sherrill
5 Mackennah Decker F SO 5-0 Tioga, NY Tioga
6 Brianna Broadwell M JR 5-2 Cato, NY Cato-Meridian
7 Alexis Dodge F SR 5-1 Verona, NY Vernon-Verona-Sherrill
9 Emma Mantione F JR 5-8 Baldwinsville, NY C.W. Baker
10 Sarah O'Brien D SR 5-5 Trout Run, PA Montoursville Area
11 Anna Dewey M SR 5-2 Sidney, NY Sidney
12 Erika Coville M SR 5-7 Spencer, NY Spencer-Van Etten
15 Emmah Decker D FY 5-3 Tioga, NY Tioga
17 Alexis McGregor F SO 5-2 Liverpool, NY Liverpool
18 Jaime Harrigan D FY 5-3 Little Falls, NY Little Falls
19 Skyler Bishuk F FY 5-5 Auburn, NY Auburn
22 Cassidy Scheftic D JR 5-4 East Syracuse, NY East Syracuse-Minoa
23 Ashley Pospiech D JR 5-6 Fairport, NY Fairport
66 Khadeeja Reed G SO 5-2 Webster, NY Webster Schroeder
99 Abby Clark G FY 5-8 Auburn, NY Auburn