Penn State is a massive Big Ten research university — 41,862 undergrads on a campus that functions as its own small city in the geographic center of Pennsylvania. What makes it distinctive isn't just its size but the intensity of its community identity: this is a school where 107,000 people pack Beaver Stadium on fall Saturdays, where THON (the largest student-run philanthropy in the world) raises tens of millions of dollars, and where alumni loyalty borders on tribal. Penn State is for students who want the full big-university experience — D1 athletics as a heartbeat, hundreds of clubs and organizations, serious academics across virtually every field — and who thrive when they take initiative rather than waiting to be guided.
Location & Setting
University Park sits in the middle of Pennsylvania's Centre County, surrounded by farmland and forested ridges in a region locals half-jokingly call "Happy Valley." State College (pop. ~42,000, roughly doubling when students arrive) is the definition of a college town — the university doesn't just anchor it, the university *is* it. Downtown State College runs right up against campus along College Avenue, packed with restaurants, bars, coffee shops, and bookstores. Step beyond downtown and you're quickly into rolling Pennsylvania countryside. The nearest cities of any size — Harrisburg, Pittsburgh, Altoona — are 1.5 to 3 hours away. This isolation is a feature for some students (everything revolves around campus life) and a limitation for others (there's no easy weekend trip to a major city). The surrounding area offers solid hiking, skiing at Tussey Mountain, and genuinely beautiful fall foliage, but this isn't an urban playground.
Where Students Live & How They Get Around
Penn State is deeply residential despite its size. Freshmen are required to live on campus, and roughly 35-37% of all undergrads live in university housing — impressive given the enrollment. East Halls is the classic freshman experience: massive dorm complex, communal bathrooms, instant social network. After freshman year, most students move to apartments or houses in State College, particularly along Beaver Avenue and in the neighborhoods ringing campus. Greek housing absorbs another chunk. You don't need a car — campus is walkable and the CATA bus system (free with student ID) is solid — but a car helps for grocery runs and weekend escapes. Winters are real: cold, gray, and snowy from November through March, with temperatures regularly in the 20s. Students adapt with layers and the underground tunnels connecting some buildings, but the climate shapes daily life. Spring and fall are genuinely beautiful, and those first warm days after a long winter bring the entire campus outside.
Campus Culture & Community
The social fabric here is layered. Greek life is significant — roughly 16-17% of undergrads participate — and fraternities and sororities are visible in the social scene, but they're far from the only option at a school this size. Football Saturdays are the closest thing to a universal experience: tailgating starts at dawn, the student section (the largest in the Big Ten) is a wall of white for "White Out" games, and the energy is genuinely electric. Beyond football, THON — a 46-hour no-sitting dance marathon benefiting pediatric cancer research — is the other defining tradition. Students fundraise year-round through organizations, and the February event in the Bryce Jordan Center is an emotional, communal peak. The Creamery (Penn State's famous ice cream operation) is a quieter tradition — alumni and students alike treat it as sacred ground. Friday and Saturday nights split between downtown bars (State College has a dense bar scene along College Avenue), house parties, and Greek events. But there are 1,000+ student organizations, and students who aren't into the party scene find communities in club sports, outdoor recreation, arts, faith groups, and more. The sheer scale means you can find your people, but you have to actively look — nobody's going to find you.
Mission & Values
Penn State is a land-grant university, and that heritage shows up in its commitment to access, applied research, and public service. The Commonwealth Campus system (20+ satellite campuses across Pennsylvania) means Penn State touches every corner of the state, and there's a real "Pennsylvania's university" identity. At University Park, the experience is less about feeling individually known and more about finding your own smaller communities within the whole. The university invests heavily in career services, undergraduate research, and alumni networking — the Penn State alumni network (over 700,000 living alumni) is legendarily tight and genuinely useful professionally. Students who take advantage of office hours, research opportunities, and mentorship programs report strong faculty relationships, but the institution doesn't hand-hold. There's a service ethic embedded in THON culture and in programs like the Center for Character, Conscience, and Public Purpose, but the dominant culture is pragmatic and career-oriented.
Student Body
Penn State draws heavily from Pennsylvania (roughly 55-60% in-state) but pulls nationally and internationally — you'll meet students from all 50 states and 140+ countries. The vibe skews toward mainstream, social, and school-spirited. There's a strong pre-professional energy — business, engineering, and health sciences draw big numbers — alongside genuine intellectual curiosity in the liberal arts. Politically, the student body leans moderate with active contingents on both sides; it's not a politically homogeneous campus. Diversity has been a stated institutional priority, with about 25-28% students of color, though students of color sometimes describe the campus as feeling less diverse than the numbers suggest, particularly given the overwhelmingly white surrounding community. International students, especially in graduate programs and engineering, add meaningful global perspective.
Academics
Penn State offers over 275 majors across 18 colleges, and several programs are nationally elite. The Smeal College of Business (supply chain management consistently ranked #1-2 nationally), the College of Engineering (particularly industrial, mechanical, and aerospace engineering), the College of Earth and Mineral Sciences (meteorology and geosciences are world-class), and the College of Information Sciences and Technology are standouts. The science programs are research-heavy with strong undergraduate research opportunities. Penn State's journalism program in the Bellisario College of Communications has a strong reputation, and the agriculture and food science programs reflect the land-grant heritage. Pre-med advising is solid, and the proximity to Penn State Hershey Medical Center creates clinical opportunities. The Schreyer Honors College (roughly 2,000 students) offers a smaller, more personalized academic experience within the larger university — smaller seminars, thesis requirements, priority registration, and dedicated housing. For students not in Schreyer, introductory courses can be large (200-400 students in lecture halls), but upper-division classes shrink considerably. The student-faculty ratio is about 16:1. Study abroad participation is strong, with Penn State sending around 3,000 students abroad annually across 50+ countries. Academically, the culture is more collaborative than cutthroat — study groups are common, and the shared identity softens competition.
Athletics & Campus Sports Culture
Athletics aren't just part of Penn State's identity — they're central to it. The university fields 31 varsity sports, and the athletic program is one of the most comprehensive in the country. Football is king (Beaver Stadium's 106,572 capacity makes it the second-largest stadium in the Western Hemisphere), but Penn State also has elite programs in wrestling (one of the most dominant programs in NCAA history), women's volleyball (perennial Final Four contender), men's and women's hockey, and women's soccer. The field hockey program competes in the Big Ten Conference, which is consistently one of the strongest conferences in the country for field hockey. Student-athletes are visible and generally well-integrated — the athletic culture is celebrated rather than resented. Club and intramural sports are also huge, with extensive facilities including the recently expanded IM Building. White Out football games and the student section's coordinated cheers are bucket-list college experiences.
What Else Should You Know
The Sandusky scandal and its aftermath are part of Penn State's recent history, and the university has made significant institutional changes in response, including mandatory reporting requirements and expanded compliance infrastructure. It's worth understanding that history. Financial aid: Penn State's sticker price is moderate for in-state students (~$19,000 tuition) but rises significantly for out-of-state (~$38,000), and the university's financial aid packaging has historically been less generous than peers — merit aid exists but isn't as abundant as at some competing schools. The Penn State alumni network is a genuine professional asset; "We Are" isn't just a chant, it's a networking password that opens doors across industries. Finally, the isolation of State College means campus life is self-contained in a way that's rare for a school this size — which creates an incredibly tight community but can feel claustrophobic if you crave urban energy.

| High | Low | |
|---|---|---|
| January | 34° | 20° |
| April | 59° | 39° |
| July | 81° | 63° |
| October | 61° | 43° |
| Season | Record | GF/G | GA/G | GD | SO | OT | Last Game |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 7-10 | 2.0 | 2.4 | -7 | 3 | 4 | L 2-4 vs Rutgers |
| 2024 | 8-9 | 2.1 | 2.5 | -7 | 1 | 2 | L 2-4 vs Maryland |
| 2023 | 9-8 | 2.4 | 1.6 | +12 | 2 | 4 | L 3-4 (2 OT) vs Ohio State (B1G Quarterfinals at Michigan) |
| 2022 | 17-4 | 2.9 | 1.1 | +37 | 8 | 3 | L 0-3 vs North Carolina (NCAA Semifinals at UConn) |
| 2021 | 14-6 | 2.5 | 1.6 | +18 | 3 | 5 | L 1-4 vs Syracuse (NCAA First Round at Maryland) |
| 2020 * | 7-7 | 1.9 | 1.4 | +6 | 4 | 3 | L 3-4 (OT) vs Ohio State (B1G Quarterfinals at Iowa) |
| 2019 | 8-12 | 1.9 | 2.0 | -4 | 2 | 3 | L 0-1 (OT) vs Iowa (B1G Final) |
| 2018 | 12-6 | 3.4 | 1.6 | +33 | 7 | 2 | L 1-6 vs Harvard (NCAA Second round at Princeton) |
| 2017 | 17-5 | 3.1 | 1.4 | +38 | 6 | 1 | L 3-4 vs Connecticut (NCAA Quarterfinals) |
| 2016 | 17-3 | 3.9 | 1.5 | +48 | 4 | 0 | L 1-2 vs Princeton (NCAA Second Round at PSU) |
| 2015 | 9-10 | 2.0 | 1.7 | +6 | 1 | 5 | L 1-2 (OT) vs Michigan (Big Ten Semifinals at Indiana) |
| Name | Position | Contact | Bio |
|---|---|---|---|
| Field Hockey Coaching Staff | Field Hockey Coaching Staff | — | |
| Field Hockey Support Staff | Field Hockey Support Staff | — |
| # | Name | Position | Year | Height | Hometown | High School |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| - | Natalie Freeman | M/F | Jr. | - | Ellicott City, Md. | Garrison Forest School |
| - | Katelyn Strawser | F | So. | - | Hummelstown, Pa. | Lower Dauphin |
| - | Lara Pyle | MF | Fr. | - | Brisbane, Queensland, Australia | Brisbane |
| - | Madison Tambroni | M | Sr. | - | State College, Pa. | State College |
| - | Riley O'Donnell | M | So. | - | Lansdale, Pa. | Springside Chestnut Hill Academy |
| - | Kerry O'Donnell | M | So. | - | Lansdale, Pa. | Springside Chestnut Hill Academy |
| - | Joji Purdy | F/M | Fr. | - | Virginia Beach, Va. | Norfolk Academy |
| - | Morgan Snyder | B | So. | - | Fleetwood, Pa. | Oley Valley |
| - | Morgan McMenamin | F | Sr. | - | Lafayette Hill, Pa. | The Episcopal Academy |
| 0 | Olivia Marthins | F/M | Fr. | - | Haddonfield, N.J. | Haddonfield |
| 1 | Madison Britton | M/D | So. | - | West Grove, Pa. | Avon Grove |
| 2 | Carly Seal | M | So. | - | Westampton, N.J. | Rancocas Valley |
| 3 | Aby Deverka | GK | So. | - | Houston, Texas | The Kinkaid School |
| 4 | Maren Brady | MF | Fr. | - | Ann Arbor, Mich. | Pioneer |
| 5 | Aubrey Semler | F | Sr. | - | Allentown, Pa. | Parkland |
| 6 | Elise DeWan | D | Jr. | - | Collegeville, Pa. | Methacton |
| 7 | Ella Jennes | F/M | Sr. | - | Aerdenhout, The Netherlands | Coornert Lyceum |
| 8 | Cooper Cutchins | M/D | Fr. | - | Virginia Beach, Va. | Norfolk Academy |
| 9 | Mia Clarkson | GK | Fr. | - | Virginia Beach, Va. | Norfolk Academy |
| 10 | Anouk Knuvers | B | Gr. | - | 's-Hertogenbosch, The Netherlands | Stedelijk |
| 11 | Brooke Weaver | MF | Fr. | - | Lancaster, Pa. | Manheim Township |
| 12 | Emmy McCulley | F/M | Jr. | - | Hummelstown, Pa. | Lower Dauphin |
| 14 | Hope Russo | M/F | Fr. | - | Summit, N.J. | Oak Knoll |
| 16 | Hadley Hoffsmith | MF | Fr. | - | Palmyra, Pa. | Palmyra |
| 21 | Hannah Schreckengaust | D | So. | - | San Marcos, Calif. | San Marcos |
| 22 | Sophia Mannino | M | Sr. | - | Doylestown, Pa. | Central Bucks East |