Temple University is a large public research university in the heart of North Philadelphia with 21,249 undergraduates, and it operates with a chip on its shoulder that defines everything about the place. Founded in 1884 by a Baptist minister who wanted to provide education to working-class Philadelphians, Temple has never lost that gritty, self-made ethos — this is a school where students hustle, where diversity isn't a brochure talking point but the actual texture of daily life, and where the city of Philadelphia is as much a classroom as any lecture hall. If you're a student-athlete who wants a D1 experience at a big university embedded in a major American city, who thrives when surrounded by people from wildly different backgrounds, and who doesn't need a manicured campus bubble to feel at home, Temple deserves serious consideration.
Location & Setting
Temple's main campus sits in North Philadelphia, roughly two miles north of City Hall, in a neighborhood that is honest-to-god urban. This isn't a college town with a cute main street — it's a section of a major city with all the complexity that entails. The campus itself has seen enormous investment over the past two decades: the Charles Library (opened 2019) is a genuinely striking modern building, and the TECH Center, student recreation facilities, and residence halls have all been upgraded or built new. But step a few blocks off campus and you're in a residential neighborhood that has historically struggled with poverty and crime. Students learn quickly which blocks to walk and which to avoid, and Temple's campus police presence is substantial. The Broad Street Line subway runs right through campus, connecting you to Center City, South Philly, and the sports stadiums in about 15 minutes. That access to greater Philadelphia — the food scene, the museums, the music venues, the professional sports — is a genuine asset. You can be at Reading Terminal Market, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, or a Sixers game without ever touching a car.
Where Students Live & How They Get Around
Temple is historically a commuter school, and that identity still lingers — only about 20% of students live on campus, though the university has been pushing hard to change that with new residence halls. Most freshmen live in the dorms (Morgan Hall and the newer residence complexes along Broad Street are the main options), and by sophomore year many students move into off-campus apartments in the surrounding blocks or slightly farther into neighborhoods like Fairmount or Fishtown. A car is not necessary and is often more hassle than it's worth; the subway, SEPTA buses, and Temple's own shuttle system handle most transportation needs. The campus itself is walkable — you can cross it in about 15 minutes. Philadelphia weather is four-season mid-Atlantic: humid summers, legitimate winters with some snow, and gorgeous springs and falls. The weather won't shock anyone from the Northeast or Midwest, but students from warmer climates should own a real coat.
Campus Culture & Community
Temple's social scene is decentralized, which is both a feature and a challenge. There's no dominant Greek system dictating weekend life — Greek organizations exist (about 30 chapters) but involve a small percentage of students. Friday and Saturday nights tend to scatter: some students head to house parties in the surrounding blocks, others take the subway to bars and restaurants in Center City or Northern Liberties, and plenty stay in because Temple draws a lot of students who work jobs alongside their studies. The student body is enormous and diverse enough that there's no single "Temple type." More than 400 student organizations exist, covering everything from cultural groups to club sports to media outlets (Temple's student-run radio station, WRTI, and the Temple News have real credibility). School spirit spikes hard around basketball season — more on that below — and Cherry and White Day and Homecoming generate energy, but day-to-day, Temple feels less like a rah-rah campus community and more like a collection of overlapping communities. It rewards people who are proactive about finding their crew.
Mission & Values
Temple was literally founded to educate people who couldn't afford or access elite institutions, and that founding DNA is alive. The phrase "Acres of Diamonds" — from Russell Conwell's famous lecture about finding opportunity where you already are — still resonates. Temple invests heavily in accessibility: it enrolls a high number of first-generation college students and Pell Grant recipients relative to peer institutions. There's a genuine service and civic engagement culture, partly because the university's location in North Philadelphia makes community partnership not abstract but immediate. Students won't feel like they're in a coddled bubble. The Baptist origins are essentially historical footnotes at this point — there are no religious requirements, no theology course mandates, and religion plays virtually no role in daily campus life. This is a thoroughly secular public university.
Student Body
Temple draws heavily from Pennsylvania, and especially from the Philadelphia metro area — you'll meet a lot of students from Philly, the suburbs, and South Jersey. But it's not exclusively regional; the university has been growing its national and international enrollment. The student body is genuinely one of the most diverse at any large public university on the East Coast — racially, socioeconomically, and in terms of life experience. You'll sit in class next to an 18-year-old from the Main Line suburbs and a 25-year-old commuter student working full-time. Politically, the campus leans left but isn't monolithic. The vibe is more pre-professional and practical than bohemian or activist, though activism absolutely exists. Students tend to be focused on what their degree will do for them — this is not a place where people spend four years pondering philosophy for its own sake (though you can).
Academics
Temple offers over 160 undergraduate majors across 17 schools and colleges, and several programs punch well above their weight. The Fox School of Business is the crown jewel for undergrads — nationally ranked, well-connected to Philadelphia's corporate ecosystem, and a pipeline for accounting, finance, and marketing careers. The Klein College of Media and Communication is one of the best communications programs in the country, with strong journalism, advertising, and film tracks and the kind of alumni network in East Coast media that opens doors. The Tyler School of Art and Architecture has a serious reputation in fine arts. The College of Engineering is growing and benefits from proximity to Philadelphia's healthcare and biotech industries. Pre-health students will find strong biology and chemistry programs and access to Temple University Hospital right on campus for clinical experience. Temple is an R1 research university ($301 million in annual research spending), so undergrads who seek out research opportunities will find them, though you have to be assertive — this isn't a small liberal arts college where a professor will tap you on the shoulder. Class sizes vary wildly: introductory lectures can hit 200+, but upper-division courses shrink significantly. The student-to-faculty ratio is about 13:1, which is reasonable for a school this size. Study abroad is available (Temple has a well-known campus in Rome and a Tokyo campus), though participation rates aren't as high as at wealthier private schools.
Athletics & Campus Sports Culture
Temple competes at the D1 level in the BIG EAST Conference with 18 varsity sports. Basketball is king — men's basketball has a passionate following, and games at the Liacouras Center on campus can get genuinely electric, especially against conference rivals. The student section (the "Broad Street Beaters") brings real energy. Football has had its ups and downs and plays at Lincoln Financial Field (the Eagles' stadium), which is exciting but also means the stadium isn't on campus, diluting some gameday atmosphere. Other programs like women's rowing, soccer, and track and field compete seriously. Student-athletes are visible on campus but don't exist in a separate social universe the way they might at a smaller school — Temple is big enough that athletics is one thread of campus life, not the whole fabric. The facilities have been upgraded significantly, and the athletic department benefits from being in a major media market. As a student-athlete, you'll have access to Philadelphia's professional sports culture and a city that genuinely cares about competition.
What Else Should You Know
Safety is the elephant in the room and you should address it honestly with yourself. Temple's North Philadelphia location means crime statistics are higher than at suburban or rural campuses, and there have been high-profile incidents in recent years that have drawn national attention. The university has invested heavily in security — expanded camera systems, increased police patrols, a robust alert system — but it's a real factor. Students generally feel safe on the well-lit, well-patrolled core of campus, but situational awareness off campus matters.
Tuition is a significant draw: in-state tuition is a fraction of what you'd pay at a private school, and even out-of-state costs are competitive for the D1 experience you get. Financial aid packages vary, but Temple is more affordable than most comparable urban research universities.
A note on data: the verified enrollment figure provided (21,249 undergraduates) and conference affiliation (BIG EAST) reflect the most current institutional data. Wikipedia's reference to the American Athletic Conference reflects Temple's previous conference home; the university officially joined the BIG EAST in 2025. Total university enrollment including graduate and professional students is approximately 30,000.
Temple isn't for everyone — it asks you to be independent, to navigate a real city, and to build your own experience rather than having one handed to you. But for the right student-athlete, it offers a combination of D1 competition, academic breadth, affordability, and urban immersion that's hard to match.
| High | Low | |
|---|---|---|
| January | 42° | 28° |
| April | 66° | 46° |
| July | 89° | 71° |
| October | 68° | 51° |
| Season | Record | GF/G | GA/G | GD | SO | OT | Last Game |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 12-6 | 2.6 | 1.8 | +14 | 4 | 3 | W 3-2 (OT) vs Providence |
| 2024 | 12-8 | 2.1 | 1.5 | +12 | 7 | 6 | L 0-1 vs Connecticut (Big East Final at Providence) |
| 2023 | 11-8 | 1.2 | 1.3 | -2 | 5 | 1 | L 0-2 vs Old Dominion (Big East Semifinals at Temple) |
| 2022 | 13-6 | 2.5 | 1.3 | +23 | 6 | 3 | L 3-4 (3 OT) vs Old Dominion (Big East Semifinals at ODU) |
| 2021 | 8-11 | 1.2 | 1.7 | -11 | 5 | 3 | L 2-4 vs Liberty (Big East Semifinal at UConn) |
| 2020 * | 8-10 | 1.2 | 1.7 | -9 | 5 | 4 | L 0-4 vs Connecticut (BIG EAST Semifinals at Villanova) |
| 2019 | 7-10 | 1.4 | 1.5 | -3 | 5 | 3 | W 3-0 vs Liu |
| 2018 | 2-16 | 1.2 | 4.1 | -51 | 0 | 3 | L 2-3 (OT) vs Saint Francis |
| 2017 | 4-14 | 1.3 | 3.3 | -36 | 1 | 3 | L 1-4 vs Lafayette |
| 2016 | 7-12 | 1.7 | 3.6 | -36 | 1 | 3 | L 1-8 vs Connecticut (Big East Semifinals at Temple) |
| 2015 | 8-13 | 2.4 | 2.9 | -10 | 2 | 4 | L 3-7 vs Connecticut (Big East Final at ODU) |
| Name | Position | Contact | Bio |
|---|---|---|---|
| Michelle Vittese | Head Coach | michelle.vittese@temple.edu | View Bio |
| Carissa Vittese | Head Coach | — | View Bio |
| Maite Sturm | Assistant Coach | — | View Bio |
| Janelle Ward | Assistant Coach | — | View Bio |
| # | Name | Position | Year | Height | Hometown | High School |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Marsha Ariesen | M | So. | 5' 1'' | Kerkrade, Netherlands | Grotius College |
| 2 | Kathryn Gauvin | F | Fr. | 5' 3'' | Fall River, Mass. | Moses Brown School |
| 4 | Izzy Vickery | M/F | Fr. | 5' 0'' | Hunt Valley, Md. | Garrison Forest School |
| 5 | Peyton Rieger | M/F | Sr. | 5' 4'' | Woolwich, N.J. | Kingsway Regional |
| 7 | Amanda Martin | F | Fr. | 5' 4'' | Leesburg, Va. | Riverside |
| 8 | Mallory Buzydlowski | M | Jr. | 5' 3'' | Reading, Pa. | Muhlenberg |
| 9 | Lina Neilson | M/F | Sr. | 5' 2'' | Mount Laurel, N.J. | Lenape |
| 10 | Lonneke Kerkhof | D | Fr. | 5' 2'' | Rotterdam, Netherlands | Montessori Lyceum Rotterdam |
| 11 | Marissa Cagliola | F | Fr. | 5' 3'' | Royersford, Pa. | Spring-Ford |
| 12 | Emmie Goldberg | F/M | Fr. | 5' 3'' | West Deptford, N.J. | West Deptford |
| 14 | Agustina Tucceri | M | Sr. | 5' 2'' | Buenos Aires, Argentina | - |
| 15 | Minke Stoker | D | So. | 5' 8'' | Groningen, Netherlands | Praedinius Gymnasium |
| 16 | Isabella Ospitale | GK | Sr. | 5' 5'' | South Setauket, N.Y. | Ward Melville |
| 17 | Lucia Magro | M/F | Fr. | 5' 5'' | Buenos Aires, Argentina | Colegio Ingles Horacio Watson |
| 18 | Bella Dell'Oso | F | Jr. | 5' 3'' | Wilmington, Del. | Archmere Academy |
| 19 | Winslow DiPeso | M | So. | 5' 9'' | Bel Air, Md. | C. Milton Wright |
| 20 | Mathéa Lassalle | F | Jr. | 5' 8'' | Rueil Malmaison, France | - |
| 21 | Lise Korver | M/F | Fr. | 5' 7'' | Bussum, Netherlands | Vituscollege Bussum |
| 22 | Mara Lenting | M | Fr. | 5' 4'' | Heino, Netherlands | Carmel College Salland |
| 24 | Reagan Stauts | D | So. | 5' 3'' | Oaklyn, N.J. | Camden Catholic |
| 25 | Isabella Pisano | M | Jr. | 5' 6'' | Pittston, Pa. | Wyoming Seminary College Prep |
| 26 | Halle Aschenbach | M/D | Sr. | 5' 4'' | Fairfield, N.J. | West Essex |
| 27 | Rozlyn Maciejewski | D/M | So. | 5' 8'' | Milanville, Pa. | Honesdale |
| 28 | Whitney Walker | F | So. | 5' 5'' | Chadds Ford, Pa. | Kennett |
| 31 | Madison Logan | F | Fr. | 5' 1'' | Burlington, N.J. | Camden Catholic |
| 32 | Riley Gallagher | M | Jr. | 5' 9'' | Garnet Valley, Pa. | Garnet Valley |
| 33 | Alex Lepore | GK | So. | 5' 3'' | Devon, Pa. | Conestoga |