Southern Connecticut State University is a mid-sized public university of about 6,180 undergraduates that grew out of one of Connecticut's original teacher-training colleges and still carries that DNA — a practical, career-oriented ethos with strong programs in education, nursing, and social work. What sets SCSU apart from similar regional publics is its location in New Haven, which gives students access to a genuinely interesting small city with real culture, real food, and real diversity, all at a public-school price point. This is a school for students who want affordable, hands-on professional preparation without pretense — particularly those drawn to helping professions — and who'll thrive in a diverse, largely commuter-influenced community where you make your own experience rather than having one handed to you.
Location & Setting
SCSU sits on a 168-acre campus on the southern edge of New Haven, about two miles from the downtown core. The neighborhood around campus is residential and working-class — not a college-town bubble, but a real neighborhood. New Haven itself punches well above its weight for a city of 130,000: the restaurant scene is legitimately excellent (New Haven-style pizza at places like Pepe's and Sally's is nationally famous), there's a strong arts and music scene partly fueled by Yale's presence across town, and Long Island Sound is a short drive south. The campus is set on a hill with some green space, but it reads more institutional than picturesque — functional buildings from various decades, with some newer additions. You're close to I-95 and the Metro-North train, which gets you to New York City in under two hours.
Where Students Live & How They Get Around
SCSU has historically been a commuter school, and that identity still shapes the culture even as the university has worked to become more residential. Roughly 30% of students live on campus, mostly freshmen and sophomores in the residence halls. Upperclassmen who stay tend to rent apartments in the surrounding New Haven neighborhoods, where rents are reasonable by Connecticut standards. A car is genuinely helpful here — campus is walkable internally but getting to New Haven's best spots or running errands is easier with wheels. The free SCSU shuttle helps, and New Haven's CT Transit buses serve the area, but most students who can drive do. Winters are real New England winters — cold, gray, and sometimes snowy from November through March — so campus life tends to turn inward during those months.
Campus Culture & Community
The social fabric at SCSU is shaped by its commuter roots. During the week, campus empties out somewhat in the evenings as commuter students head home. Weekend social life centers more on off-campus gatherings, New Haven's bar and restaurant scene (for those 21+), and small house parties rather than a centralized campus party culture. There is no Greek system — it simply doesn't exist here, which means social life is less structured and more self-directed. Student organizations (there are roughly 100+) provide community, with cultural clubs being particularly active given the diverse student body. School spirit exists but isn't a dominant force — you won't find a stadium packed on fall Saturdays, but athletes have their circles and intramural sports have a following. The vibe is more "friendly and unpretentious" than "rah-rah." Students who engage find genuine community; students who treat it as a commute-in, commute-out experience can feel disconnected.
Mission & Values
SCSU was founded in 1893 as the New Haven Normal School, and that teacher-training mission still echoes through the institution. There's a genuine commitment to access and social mobility — this is a school that serves a lot of first-generation college students and students from working-class Connecticut families. The ethos is about practical preparation for meaningful careers, particularly in education, healthcare, and public service. Faculty generally know students by name, especially in the major programs, and advising relationships can be strong if you seek them out. Community engagement and service are woven into many programs, particularly education and social work, where fieldwork and clinical placements start early.
Student Body
SCSU draws heavily from Connecticut — the vast majority of students are from within the state, with a significant concentration from the Greater New Haven and broader southern Connecticut area. The student body is notably diverse for a Connecticut public university: roughly 40% students of color, with significant Black and Hispanic/Latino representation. This diversity is one of the more genuine things about the SCSU experience — it's not performative, it's just the reality of who shows up. Students tend to be pragmatic and career-focused rather than ideological, though there's an engaged activist streak particularly around social justice issues. The typical student is working a part-time job, commuting or paying their own rent, and studying something they can turn into a career. The vibe is more blue-collar and grounded than preppy or artsy.
Academics
Education is the flagship — SCSU's School of Education is one of the largest producers of teachers in Connecticut, and the program has genuine respect among school districts in the region. If you want to teach, this is a strong, affordable path with excellent field placement connections throughout southern Connecticut. Nursing is the other standout: the program is competitive to get into within the university and has strong clinical partnerships with Yale-New Haven Hospital and other area healthcare systems. Social work, public health, and communication disorders (speech-language pathology) are also well-regarded. The sciences are solid if unspectacular, with decent lab facilities and some undergraduate research opportunities, particularly in biology and environmental science. Class sizes are generally manageable — introductory courses might have 30-40 students, but upper-division courses often drop to 15-25, where you'll get real professor interaction. Faculty are primarily teaching-focused, which is a genuine advantage: your professors are there because they want to teach undergrads, not because they need grad students for their lab. The student-faculty ratio is approximately 14:1. Study abroad exists but isn't a major part of the culture — most students are rooted locally and focused on getting through their programs efficiently.
Athletics & Campus Sports Culture
SCSU competes in Division II as a member of the Northeast 10 Conference, fielding about 16 varsity sports. Athletics are a real part of campus identity but not the centerpiece. The gymnastics program has historically been a national-caliber standout — one of the few D2 gymnastics programs in the region and a genuine point of pride. Women's field hockey competes in the NE10, a solid D2 conference with competitive programs. Student-athletes are generally well-integrated into campus life rather than forming a separate social bubble, partly because the school's size and D2 status mean athletics is one piece of the puzzle, not the whole thing. Jess Dow Field and the Moore Field House anchor the athletic facilities, which are functional if not flashy — this is D2 public-school infrastructure, honest about what it is.
What Else Should You Know
The Connecticut State University system has faced real financial and political turbulence in recent years — budget cuts, consolidation of the community college system, and enrollment pressures are ongoing realities. SCSU's enrollment has declined from its peak, and you'll notice some deferred maintenance on campus. This isn't a crisis, but it's context worth having: you're choosing a school that's navigating the same headwinds as many regional publics. On the flip side, the price is genuinely affordable — in-state tuition and fees run around $12,000-$13,000, making it one of the better values in the Northeast for the programs it does well. New Haven's reputation for safety is mixed — the city has real crime statistics, but the campus itself and the areas students frequent are generally fine with normal urban awareness. Finally, the proximity to Yale creates an interesting dynamic: SCSU students can sometimes access Yale's cultural events, libraries, and lectures, getting a taste of a world-class university town without the price tag.
| High | Low | |
|---|---|---|
| January | 38° | 20° |
| April | 60° | 38° |
| July | 85° | 64° |
| October | 64° | 43° |
| Season | Record | GF/G | GA/G | GD | SO | OT | Last Game |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 9-10 | 2.4 | 2.8 | -9 | 1 | 2 | L 3-4 (OT) vs Adelphi (NE-10 Quarterfinal) |
| 2024 | 6-12 | 1.2 | 3.4 | -40 | 2 | 2 | W 4-3 vs Mercy |
| 2023 | 5-12 | 2.2 | 3.8 | -27 | 1 | 0 | L 1-5 vs Mercy |
| 2022 | 5-13 | 1.3 | 3.4 | -38 | 3 | 2 | L 1-7 vs Saint Anselm |
| 2021 | 3-14 | 1.0 | 4.9 | -66 | 0 | 1 | W 3-1 vs Molloy |
| 2019 | 1-16 | 0.8 | 3.9 | -53 | 0 | 1 | L 0-8 vs Adelphi |
| 2018 | 0-18 | 0.7 | 5.1 | -78 | 0 | 0 | L 0-7 vs Adelphi |
| 2017 | 2-16 | 1.0 | 5.4 | -79 | 0 | 0 | L 0-7 vs Southern New Hampshire |
| 2016 | 4-14 | 1.3 | 4.3 | -53 | 1 | 2 | L 0-2 vs Saint Michael'S |
| 2015 | 6-12 | 1.6 | 2.9 | -24 | 3 | 2 | W 1-0 vs Saint Michael's |
| Name | Position | Contact | Bio |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kelley Frassinelli | Head Field Hockey Coach | frassinellk1@southernct.edu | View Bio |
| Ann Berry | Assistant Coach | berrya4@southernct.edu | View Bio |
| Sarah Williams | Assistant Coach | — | View Bio |
| Loretta Dipietro | Volunteer Assistant Coach | — | View Bio |
| Megan Habakangas | Volunteer Assistant Coach | — | View Bio |
| Ken Sweeten | Associate Director of Athletics/Athletic Communications | — |
| # | Name | Position | Year | Height | Hometown | High School |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Rachel Miller | GK | Jr. | 5-8 | Norwalk, Conn. | Norwalk |
| 2 | Bridget Andros | F | Jr. | 5-9 | Burlington, Conn. | Lewis S. Mills |
| 3 | Jessica Nodell | F | Fr. | 5-6 | Nesconset, N.Y. | Sachem North |
| 4 | Isabella Taylor | M | So. | 5-7 | Enfield, Conn. | Enfield |
| 5 | Kaiya Mercier | M/D | Fr. | 5-4 | Boscawen, N.H. | Merrimack Valley |
| 7 | McKenzie Fairfax | D | Sr. | 5-9 | Waterbury, Conn. | Thomaston |
| 8 | Avery Vaccaro | M/D | Fr. | 5-6 | Norwalk, Conn. | Norwalk |
| 9 | Ruby Webb | M/B | Jr. | 5-7 | East Cape, South Africa | Woodbridge College |
| 10 | Kyla Hart-Perron | M | Jr. | 5-5 | Beverly, Mass. | Beverly |
| 11 | Ella Maloblocki | D | So. | 5-7 | Beverly, Mass. | Beverly |
| 12 | Keana Criscuolo | F | So. | 5-8 | Northford, Conn. | North Branford |
| 13 | Lark Johnson | D | So. | 5-7 | Hampstead, N.H. | Pinkerton |
| 17 | Natalia Fiato | F | Sr. | 5-4 | Methuen, Mass. | Methuen |
| 18 | Kate Salvador | F | Jr. | 5-4 | Danbury, Conn. | Danbury |
| 19 | Sofia Frassinelli | D | So. | 5-5 | Stafford Springs, Conn. | Stafford |
| 22 | Taylor Leckey | M/B | Sr. | 5-6 | Madison, Conn. | The Hotchkiss School |
| 24 | Isabella Fölster | M/D | Fr. | 5-11 | Hamburg, Germany | Sophie-Barat-Schule |
| 25 | Cambelle Jacobson | M/D | Fr. | 5-8 | Guilford, Conn. | Guilford |
| 26 | Lindsey Onofrio | M | So. | 5-3 | Northford, Conn. | North Branford |
| 29 | Julia McHenry | M | So. | 5-6 | Branford, Conn. | Branford |
| 97 | Lyla O'Connor | GK | Fr. | 5-5 | Canton, Conn. | Canton |
| 98 | Lyndsay Troisi | GK | So. | 5-5 | Salem, N.H. | Salem |