Campus Overview

Simmons University is a small women's undergraduate college (about 1,750 undergrads) tucked into Boston's Fenway neighborhood, offering something genuinely rare: the empowerment-focused environment of a women's college combined with the full resources of a major city. Founded in 1899 with a practical mission — preparing women for professional lives, not just intellectual ones — Simmons has always been more career-oriented than the typical liberal arts school. This is a school for students who want to be taken seriously from day one, who value mentorship over anonymity, and who want Boston as their extended campus without disappearing into it.


Location & Setting

Simmons sits in the Fenway-Longwood neighborhood, one of the most institutionally dense areas in Boston. You're surrounded by world-class hospitals (Beth Israel Deaconess, Brigham and Women's, Boston Children's, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute), the Museum of Fine Arts, the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, and a cluster of other colleges — Emmanuel, Wheelock (now part of BU), MCPHS, and Wentworth are all within a few blocks. The campus itself is urban and compact — two connected areas (the residential campus on Avenue Louis Pasteur and the academic campus a short walk away on the Fenway). Step off campus and you're immediately in the city: the Back Bay Fens park system is across the street, Fenway Park is a 10-minute walk, and Newbury Street's shops and restaurants are about 15 minutes on foot. This is not a bucolic quad-and-bell-tower campus — it's a working campus woven into a working city.

Where Students Live & How They Get Around

Simmons is primarily residential for the first two years; first-years are required to live on campus, and most sophomores do too. The residential campus has several halls clustered together, and upperclassmen often move into apartments in the surrounding neighborhoods — Fenway, Mission Hill, Brookline, and Allston are all popular and relatively affordable by Boston standards. A car is not just unnecessary, it's a liability — parking is expensive and scarce. Students rely on the T (the Green Line's Longwood Medical Area stop is right there, and the Orange Line is accessible too), walking, and the Colleges of the Fenway shuttle that connects partner institutions. Boston winters are real — cold, snowy, and gray from December through March — so a good coat matters more than a car. The compact campus means you're never walking far between classes, but you'll feel the wind off the Charles on those February mornings.

Campus Culture & Community

The social dynamic at Simmons is shaped by two forces: it's a women's college, and it's in Boston. On campus, the community is tight and supportive — with 1,750 undergrads, people know each other. There's no Greek life, and weekend social life often flows outward into the city or into cross-registration social circles with the Colleges of the Fenway consortium (Emmanuel, MassArt, MCPHS, Wentworth, Wheelock). Students go to concerts, explore restaurants, study in coffee shops in the South End, or head to parties at coed schools nearby. The campus itself is quieter on weekends — this isn't a self-contained social bubble. The culture leans progressive, feminist, and community-minded. Simmons students tend to be direct, motivated, and genuinely supportive of each other rather than competitive. Annual events like the Simmons Leadership Conference (one of the largest women's leadership conferences in the country) draw national speakers and are a genuine point of pride, not just an admin talking point. School spirit exists but manifests more as institutional loyalty and pride in the mission than as rah-rah athletics culture.

Mission & Values

Simmons was founded on the idea that women should be prepared for meaningful, independent professional lives — and that mission still runs through everything. This isn't a school that treats career preparation as secondary to intellectual exploration; both are expected to coexist. The women's college identity matters here: students consistently describe feeling empowered to speak up in class, take leadership roles, and see themselves as capable in ways that might feel harder at a large coed university. Faculty know students by name, advising relationships tend to be genuine, and the institution invests in mentorship and professional development. There's a strong service and social justice orientation — Simmons students care about equity, access, and community impact, and the curriculum reflects that. The school is not religiously affiliated.

Student Body

Simmons draws primarily from the Northeast, with a strong Massachusetts and New England base, though the student body is more diverse than many small women's colleges. Students tend to be practical, motivated, and professionally focused — you'll find more aspiring nurses, social workers, and public health professionals than aspiring poets (though the humanities are respected). The campus is politically progressive, and conversations about identity, equity, and inclusion are part of the everyday fabric. As a women's undergraduate institution, Simmons has a meaningful LGBTQ+ community and a culture that's genuinely inclusive. The graduate programs are coeducational, so the broader university community is mixed, but the undergraduate experience is distinctly women-centered. International students make up a modest but growing percentage.

Academics

Simmons punches above its weight in several professional and pre-professional fields. Nursing is the flagship — the program benefits enormously from being surrounded by Longwood Medical Area hospitals, and clinical placements are a major draw. The School of Library and Information Science is nationally ranked (consistently top-10) and has been for decades, though that's primarily a graduate program. Social work is another standout, again leveraging Boston's network of agencies and nonprofits. At the undergraduate level, strong programs include nursing, public health, biology, psychology, and exercise science — all of which benefit from proximity to hospitals and research institutions. The Dotson Bridge and Mentorship program and other pre-health advising are well-regarded. Class sizes average around 16-18 students, and the student-faculty ratio hovers near 9:1. Professors teach their own classes (no TAs running sections), and students describe relationships with faculty as genuinely mentoring, not transactional. There's a core curriculum with distribution requirements, but it's not unusually rigid. Cross-registration through the Colleges of the Fenway consortium opens up courses at partner schools, including studio art at MassArt — a real asset. Study abroad participation is moderate; the school encourages it but the professional programs with clinical requirements can make it logistically tricky.

Athletics & Campus Sports Culture

Simmons competes in NCAA Division III as part of the Great Northeast Athletic Conference (GNAC). Athletics are present but not central to campus identity — there are no packed stadiums or homecoming tailgates. The school fields about 10 varsity sports. Student-athletes are integrated into campus life rather than set apart, which is typical of D3 women's colleges. The athletics program emphasizes participation, personal growth, and balancing sport with academics. Facilities are modest and urban — don't expect sprawling fields. For a student-athlete, the draw is the D3 philosophy at its purest: you play because you love it, and your education comes first. The GNAC is a competitive but manageable conference, and the emphasis is on the student-athlete experience rather than spectator sports.

What Else Should You Know

The Colleges of the Fenway consortium is a genuine asset, not just a brochure line — it effectively gives you access to the social life, courses, and facilities of five other schools while keeping the intimacy of a small women's college. Financial aid is worth investigating carefully; Simmons is not cheap (tuition runs around $44,000-$46,000 before aid), but the school meets a reasonable portion of demonstrated need, and many students receive institutional aid. The campus has undergone significant investment in recent years, including a new Living and Learning Center residence hall. One honest note: the urban campus can feel institutional rather than charming — brick buildings, not ivy-covered stone — and students who want a traditional "college campus" feel may find it lacking. But for students who want Boston at their doorstep and a community that will know their name, Simmons delivers something that's hard to find elsewhere.

Field Hockey

  • Head Coach Tori Shaffer named 2024 GNAC Coach of the Year in her second season leading the program.
  • Program produced 2024 NFHCA All-American Sydney Gonyea and reached GNAC Runners-Up in same year.
  • 70% of roster recruited from out-of-state; recent postseason run to GNAC Quarterfinals shows upward trajectory.

About the School

  • Women's college in Fenway with direct access to teaching hospitals, museums, and Fenway Park—Boston is your lab.
  • Health Professions (37%) dominates academics; internship pipeline runs through Beth Israel Deaconess and Brigham.

Field Hockey (2025)

Level
D3 Low
FHC Rank
#138 of 163 (D3)
Massey Score
13.1 *
Conference
Great Northeast Athletic Conference
Coach
Tori Shaffer
Trajectory
→ Stable
Season Results
'25: L 0-5 vs St. Joseph's-ME (GNAC Quarterfinals)
'24: L 2-4 vs Johnson & Wales (GNAC Final)
'23: L 1-2 vs New England College (GNAC Quarterfinals)

Programs

Popular Majors

Health Professions (37%)
Registered Nursing, Nursing Administration, Nursing Research and Clinical Nursing (89%)
• Public Health (10%)
• Medical Illustration and Informatics (1%)
Recreation (11%)
Social Sciences (8%) (D3 avg: 17%)
Political Science and Government (43%)
• Economics (33%)
• Sociology (13%)
• International Relations and National Security Studies (10%)
Interdisciplinary (6%)
Psychology (6%)

My Programs

Environmental Science (0.7%)
Psychology (5.9%)
Biology (4.5%)
Sports Med / Kinesiology (47.6%)
French (0.2%)
Popular (top 25%) Available Not found

School Profile

Type
Private
Classification
Doctoral/Professional

Student Body

Total
5,043
Undergrad
35%
Demographics
100% women (Women-only)
Student:Faculty
9:1

Academics

Admission Rate
66%
SAT Median
1,310
SAT Range
1,230-1,390
ACT Median
28
Retention
82%
Graduation
71%

Events & Clinics

No recruiting events listed

Costs

Total Cost
$63,512
Tuition
$45,538
Room & Board
$17,104

Avg Net Price
$27,313
Net Price ($110k+)
$33,812

Financial Aid

Avg Aid ($110k+)
~$29,700
Pell Recipients
30%
Take Loans
64%
Median Debt at Grad
$24,840
Source: Scorecard

Location & Weather

Setting
City (City: Large)
Nearest City
Boston, MA (2 mi)

HighLow
January37°19°
April59°38°
July85°64°
October64°43°

Admissions

No admissions data available

Season History

Season Record GF/G GA/G GD SO OT Last Game
2025 5-13 1.8 2.8 -17 2 3 L 0-5 vs St. Joseph's-ME (GNAC Quarterfinals)
2024 18-4 4.0 1.1 +64 10 3 L 2-4 vs Johnson & Wales (GNAC Final)
2023 13-4 3.9 0.8 +53 8 1 L 1-2 vs New England College (GNAC Quarterfinals)
2022 16-3 4.8 0.7 +77 13 0 L 1-3 vs Johnson & Wales (GNAC Final)
2021 10-6 3.9 1.4 +39 4 3 L 1-2 (2 OT) vs Elms (GNAC Quarterfinals)
2019 8-12 1.6 1.8 -2 6 5 L 0-2 vs Lasell (GNAC Semifinals)
2018 4-11 1.2 2.5 -20 2 1 L 0-6 vs St. Joseph's-ME (GNAC Semifinals)
2017 12-7 2.9 1.7 +24 5 2 L 0-5 vs St. Joseph's-ME (GNAC Semifinals)
2016 11-8 2.6 1.4 +23 5 3 L 0-1 vs St. Joseph's-ME (GNAC Final)
2015 14-5 3.1 0.7 +45 12 0 L 0-1 vs New Paltz (NCAA First round)
Click any season to view full schedule

Coaching Staff

Name Position Contact Bio
Tori Shaffer Head Coach victoria.shaffer@simmons.edu View Bio
Amelia Mountford Assistant Coach View Bio
Lauren Schellhamer Assistant Coach View Bio

Roster Breakdown

20 players

Geographic Recruiting

In-State: 30% (6 players)
US Out-of-State: 70% (14 players)
Maine: 30% (6 players)
Massachusetts: 30% (6 players)

Position Breakdown

Forward: 5 (25.0%)
Midfielder: 8 (40.0%)
Defender: 3 (15.0%)
Goalkeeper: 4 (20.0%)

Roster Composition

Graduating '27: 7 players (35%)
Forward: 1
Midfielder: 3
Defender: 1
Goalkeeper: 2
Class of 2026: 2 (10%)
Class of 2028: 6 (30%)
Class of 2029: 5 (25%)

Full Roster (20 players)

# Name Position Year Height Hometown High School
00 Sam Buck GK Jr. 5-11 Portsmouth, N.H. Portsmouth
1 Ellie Foss F So. 5-5 Durham, Maine Freeport
3 Kaitlyn Frye M So. 5-2 Nashua, N.H. Nashua North
4 Ainslee Shrout D/F Sr. 5-6 Severna Park, Md. Severna Park Senior
5 Zoe Schmaling M Sr. 5-2 Standish, Maine Bonny Eagle
6 Avery Allaire M Fy. 5-1 Keene N.H., MA Keene
7 Piper Rickman D So. 5-4 Cape Elizabeth, Maine Cape Elizabeth
8 Penelope Long F Jr. 5-5 Vineyard Haven, Mass. Martha's Vineyard Regional
10 Emma Fissel D Jr. 5-3 Mechanicsburg, Pa. Mechanicsburg Area Senior
11 Ava Kahl M Jr. 5-6 Burlington, Vt. Burlington
13 Alex Wemple M Fy. 5-2 Shelbourne, Vt. Champlain Valley Union
14 Katy Paveglio M Jr. 5-10 Groton, Mass. Bishop Guertin
17 Lilly Taglieri M Jr. 5-2 Westfield, Mass. Westfield
21 Olivia Minotti D Fy. 5-8 South Berwick, Maine Marshwood
22 Nora Desrosiers F Fy. 5-5 Attleboro, Mass. Attleboro
24 Clio Cook-Sharp F Fy. 5-8 Cape Elizabeth, Maine Cape Elizabeth
25 Hailey Brisson M So. 5-5 Weare, N.H. John Stark Regional
30 Haley Bright GK Jr. 5-6 Norfolk, Mass. King Philip Regional
94 Trinity Williamson GK So. 5-9 Spofford, N.H. Keene
99 Jamila Mohamed GK So. 5-8 Scarborough, Maine Scarborough