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Youngstown State University
Youngstown State University
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Youngstown State University (YSU or Youngstown State) is a public university in Youngstown, Ohio, United States. It was founded in 1908 and is the easternmost member of the University System of Ohio.[3] It plans to open a satellite campus in Steubenville in 2026.

Key Information

The university is composed of six undergraduate colleges and a graduate college. Youngstown State University has over 100 undergraduate degree programs and 50 graduate degree programs serving over 11,000 students in studies up to the doctoral level. Beyond its current student body, the university has more than 115,000 alumni across the country and around the world.

Collectively known as the Penguins, Youngstown State's athletic teams compete in Division I of the National Collegiate Athletic Association. The university is a member of the Horizon League in all varsity sports, with the exception of football which competes in the Football Championship Subdivision of the NCAA as a member of the Missouri Valley Football Conference, bowling which competes in Conference USA, and lacrosse which competes in the Mid-American Conference (MAC).

History

[edit]

The Youngstown branch of the YMCA had provided high school and vocational education since 1888.[4] Youngstown State University traces its origins to 1908, when the YMCA introduced a commercial law course intended to meet local demand for college-level instruction.[4] It expanded its offerings to include business and engineering and in 1916, the YMCA consolidated its educational activities under the Youngstown Association School.[5] In 1921, the school became known as the Youngstown Institute of Technology,[5] and within the decade the Ohio State Board of Education authorized the School of Law and School of Commerce and Finance the authority to confer bachelor's degrees.[4] The school's teacher-preparation program developed into Youngstown College in 1927, the same year in which the College of Liberal Arts was established.[4]

The YMCA constructed Jones Hall north of downtown Youngstown in 1931.[4] By the mid-1930s, Youngstown College was incorporated as a separate entity from the YMCA.[4] Howard Jones was appointed its first president and remained in the role until 1966.[4] Governance of the college was fully transferred from the YMCA in 1944.[4] The institution was rechartered as Youngstown University in 1955 and became a public university in 1967 as Youngstown State University.[5][4] During this period, the university expanded its academic programs; Dana's Musical Institute became part of the college in 1941, the William Rayen School of Engineering was created in 1946, the School of Business Administration was created in 1948, and the School of Education was created in 1960.[4]

Further development occurred after the university became a public institution in the late 1960s. The Graduate School and the College of Applied Science and Technology were created in 1968, and the College of Creative Arts and Communication was created in 1974.[4] In 1972, Youngstown State University joined other universities in northeast Ohio in forming the Northeastern Universities College of Medicine.[4] In 1991, the engineering technology departments were reorganized into the newly formed College of Engineering and Technology, while remaining departments from the former CAST became the College of Health and Human Services.[4]

In August 2005, just before the start of the academic year, two of four campus unions were on strike. Following the conclusion of the strike, relations remained strained, with some faculty and staff calling for the resignation of YSU president David Sweet in May 2007.[6] A major reorganization in 2007 placed science and mathematics departments within the Rayen College of Engineering and Technology and consolidated the humanities and social sciences within a separate academic college.[4]

Following the February 2024 announcement that Eastern Gateway Community College was pausing enrollment, YSU announced that it was considering opening its first satellite campus in Steubenville, Ohio to serve displaced students in the Ohio Valley.[7] YSU acquired the former Eastern Gateway campus in November 2025 with the goal of offering classes by 2026.[8]

Campus

[edit]
The YSU clock tower, a distinctive structure which also functions as a cellphone tower.

YSU lies on a 160-acre (0.65 km2) campus just north of downtown Youngstown.

Kilcawley Center is the university's student center, located at the center of campus. It features reading rooms, computer labs, a copying center, a variety of restaurants and student affairs offices. Offices for many university student media outlets are housed here, including student newspaper The Jambar, student magazine The Yo, and student radio Rookery Radio. There are also many meeting and seminar rooms, which can be rented out for community events.[9]

Jones Hall

Jones Hall, often the building that welcomes those coming onto YSU's campus, was built in 1931 and is one of the campus's oldest buildings. The building was renamed Jones Hall in honor of the institution's first president, Dr. Howard Jones. Today, the building is used as administrative office space.[9]

Fok Hall houses the Sokolov Honors College, which consists of administrative offices and classrooms. It was built in 1893 and is the oldest building on campus.[9] Previously the Alumni Building, Fok Hall was renamed in 2014 after a $2.5 million donation to the university by Maria Fok, whose late husband was a professor and trustee of YSU.[10]

In 2013, the former Wick Pollock Inn was converted into the university president's house. The three-year project to renovate the mansion cost YSU over $4 million.[11]

The first facility of its kind at any university in Ohio, the 6,000 sq. ft., fully handicap-accessible Veterans Resource Center houses the Office of Veteran Affairs, as well as lounges, computer labs, and community spaces reserved for student veterans, currently serving members of the military, and military-dependent students.[9]

Home to the YSU Foundation, Melnick Hall is also home to the university's public radio station, WYSU-FM 88.5, which is affiliated with NPR and American Public Media.[9]

Bliss Hall is the home of the Cliffe College of Creative Arts, including the Departments of Art, Theater & Dance, and the Dana School of Music. This building also houses the Department of Communication with programs in communication studies, journalism, and multimedia communications. The building, completed in 1977, features the 390-seat Ford Theatre, the 248-seat Bliss Recital Hall, an experimental theatre, 80 practice rooms with Steinway pianos, a TV studio, and audio production labs, as well as the Judith Rae Solomon Gallery, and fully equipped ceramics, photography, metals, and other artistic studios.[9]

Ward Beecher Hall houses the departments of biology, chemistry, physics and astronomy. The five-story original unit was constructed in 1958, a major addition was built in 1967 and a small addition comprising chemical storerooms was completed in 1997. The building contains 31 laboratories, including a planetarium and greenhouse, nine classrooms, 53 faculty-research rooms, and a seminar room. Ward Beecher houses the university's planetarium, which opened in 1967 and includes a planetarium projector.

Tod Hall houses the administrative offices of many university officials, including the president, provost, and the Board of Trustees, as well as the Offices of Assessment, Marketing Communications, Human Resources, and others.[9] Other academic buildings on campus include Beeghly Hall, Coffelt Hall, Cushwa Hall, DeBartolo Hall, Fedor Hall, Cafaro Hall, Meshel Hall, Moser Hall, Silvestri Hall, Sweeney Hall, and Williamson Hall.[9]

Museums

[edit]

The McDonough Museum of Art is one of two art museums located in Youngstown, Ohio. The McDonough Museum of Art is closely affiliated with the university, acting as an outreach for the Department of Art. The 14,000 sq. ft. space serves as a showing facility for art students and faculty alike, as well as local and regional talents.[9][12]

The Butler Institute of American Art is located on Wick Avenue in Youngstown, Ohio. Falling directly on YSU's campus, it is the flagship art museum of the city.

Steubenville campus

[edit]

In 2025, YSU reached an agreement with the Jefferson County Board of Commissioners to acquire the property of Eastern Gateway Community College in Steubenville, Ohio, with plans to open a satellite campus on the site.[13] The deal was completed later that year and the campus is expected to open in fall 2026. 12 associate's degree programs and 4 certification programs will be offered in the first year.[14]

Academics

[edit]
Greenspace between Jones Hall and Maag Library (right)

The university comprises seven undergraduate and graduate colleges:[15]

  • Beeghly College of Liberal Arts, Social Science & Education
  • Bitonte College of Health and Human Services
  • Cliffe College of Creative Arts
  • College of Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics
  • Williamson College of Business Administration
  • College of Graduate Studies
  • Sokolov Honors College

YSU offers approximately 100 undergraduate majors, 40 master's programs, and five doctoral degrees. It has partnerships with various other postsecondary institutions, including a juris doctor track with the University of Akron, a doctor of medicine track with the Lake Erie College of Osteopathic Medicine or Northeast Ohio Medical University, and master's programs with the University of Akron and Cleveland State University.[16][17]

The Dana School of Music at Youngstown State University was deemed an "All-Steinway" school in 2004. The Dana School of Music is one of the oldest non-conservatory schools of music in the United States.[18] The Williamson College of Business is accredited by the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB).

In addition to traditional four-year programs, Youngstown State University also offers online degree programs and three-year degree pathways.[15] Since 2004, YSU has participated in the Youngstown Early College program, through which students from the Youngstown City School District can take courses for college credit and earn an associate's degree while in high school.[19]

Centers and institutes

[edit]

YSU operates several Centers of Excellence and designated research and economic development programs, including the Center for Transportation and Materials Engineering, the Center of Excellence in Materials Science and Engineering, the Center of Excellence in International Business, the Center for Applied Chemical Biology, the Institute for Applied Topology, and effective in 2012, the Natural Gas and Water Resources Institute.

Youngstown State University is also home to the Center for Working Class Studies and offers a Regional and American Studies program, which was the first of its kind in the United States. The school assisted the University of Chicago in developing a similar program.

The university's Center for Judaic and Holocaust Studies was put into jeopardy when Jacob Ari Labendz, the only professor at YSU qualified to teach Holocaust studies, was laid off in 2021.[20][21]

Library

[edit]

The Maag Library opened in 1976 and was named after one of the local public library and Youngstown State University's trustees, William F. Maag, Jr.[22] Before it opened, Maag Library became a member of the Federal Depository Library Program in 1971.[22] Currently, it is a six-story building with over 500,000 volumes in-house, as well as access to the collections of 84 other Ohio institutions via participation in the OhioLINK program. The building also houses the writing center and the university's English Language Institute.[9]

Located on the fifth floor of Maag Library, the Archives and Special Collections at Youngstown State is meant to preserve items with historical significance to the school, Youngstown and Mahoning County, as well as its history in the iron and steel industry.[23]

Rankings

[edit]
Academic rankings
Master's
Washington Monthly[24]365
Regional
U.S. News & World Report[25]99

In Washington Monthly's 2025 Master's University Rankings, Youngstown State University was ranked 365th out of 585 master's level institutions across the United States.[26] In the 2025 U.S. News & World Report college rankings, Youngstown State University was ranked 99th out of 165 regional universities in the Midwest, and 35th among public universities.[27]

Student life

[edit]

As of fall 2019, the student body totaled approximately 12,155, 10% of whom were dual-enrolled high school students.[2] YSU has approximately 2,100 full and part-time employees and 426 full-time faculty with 543 part-time faculty. 165 faculty members have full-professor rank, with 79% of the instructors holding doctorates or terminal degrees. The university has a student-to-faculty ratio of 14:1.

YSU owns and operates five on-campus residence halls: Cafaro House, Kilcawley House, Lyden House, Weller House, and Wick House.[28] Numerous privately owned student apartment complexes are located close to YSU's campus.[29][30]

Athletics

[edit]
Youngstown athletics monogram

The Youngstown State Penguins is the name given to the athletic teams of YSU. The university is a member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association's (NCAA) Division I, and the Penguins compete in football as members of the Missouri Valley Football Conference. Most other sports compete as members of the Horizon League. Sports teams include baseball, basketball, cross country, football, golf, swimming, diving, tennis, track and field, volleyball, softball, soccer, lacrosse, and bowling.[31]

Beeghly Center hosts several sports

The Youngstown State Penguins football team plays as a member of the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision. The Penguins have played their home games in Stambaugh Stadium since 1982.[9] YSU football has been one of the leading programs in NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision, winning four national championships under former head coach Jim Tressel, which is third behind North Dakota State's ten titles and Georgia Southern's six. Overall, YSU has made 14 playoff appearances since Division I FCS was formed in 1978.

The Youngstown State Penguins women's basketball and Youngstown State Penguins men's basketball teams compete at Beeghly Center, a 4,633-seat, multi-purpose arena built in 1972.[9] The women's team has appeared in the NCAA Division I Tournament three times. The men's team has appeared in the NCAA Division II Tournament nine times and the NAIA tournament four times.

Notable people

[edit]

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Youngstown State University (YSU) is a public research university located in , with roots tracing to a commercial law course offered by the local in 1908. It evolved through stages as Youngstown Association School, Youngstown College, and The Youngstown University before joining the state system as Youngstown State University in 1967. The institution serves the region on a 140-acre , emphasizing affordable and regional through applied and workforce training. YSU enrolls 12,240 students as of fall 2025, marking a 2.1% increase from the prior year after years of decline tied to regional and demographic shifts. It offers over 100 undergraduate majors and 80 graduate programs across five colleges, with strengths in , , , and advanced via facilities like the 2021-opened Excellence Training Center. The university's athletics teams, the Penguins, compete in the and earned the 2022-23 McCafferty Trophy for all-sports excellence. In recent years, YSU has faced internal challenges, including enrollment pressures and a controversial 2023 presidential appointment of former U.S. Representative Bill Johnson, a Republican with no prior higher education administrative experience, which prompted backlash from faculty, , and donors over the opaque selection process and perceived politicization. Faculty efforts in 2025 to challenge Ohio's higher education reforms via highlight ongoing tensions between institutional autonomy and state policy. Despite these issues, YSU maintains and focuses on to support lifelong opportunities in a .

History

Founding and Early Years (1908–1967)

Youngstown State University traces its origins to 1908, when the Youngstown branch of the initiated a course as part of its evening educational offerings. In 1910, the YMCA formalized its legal education by establishing a School of Law, which prepared students for the bar examination but did not yet award degrees. By 1916, the YMCA's broader educational programs were incorporated as the Youngstown Association School, expanding to include courses in , stenography, and related fields. The institution gained greater autonomy in 1921, operating as the Youngstown and beginning to offer degree programs; the Ohio State Board of Education authorized a in in the early and a Bachelor of Commercial Science in 1924. In 1927, was established with the creation of a of Liberal Arts, and the institution relocated to its current site on Wick Avenue; it was formally renamed around 1928–1931. The construction of Jones Hall in 1931 marked the first dedicated academic building, under the leadership of W. Jones, who became educational director and later the first president in the mid-1930s, serving until 1966. During the 1940s and 1950s, the college expanded its academic scope, incorporating separately from the YMCA in the mid-1930s and fully transferring control from the YMCA in 1944 to the Youngstown College Corporation. New schools were added, including in 1946 and in 1948, followed by in 1960. In 1955, it was rechartered as Youngstown University, reflecting its growing comprehensive offerings. The transition to public status began in 1966, with the establishment of the Youngstown Educational Foundation to safeguard private endowments, culminating in its integration into the public higher education system as Youngstown State University on September 1, 1967.

Expansion and University Status (1967–2000)

On September 1, 1967, Youngstown University transitioned to a public institution within Ohio's system of higher education and adopted the name Youngstown State University. This change facilitated increased state funding, enabling significant physical and academic expansion. Enrollment grew from 13,232 students in fall 1967 to 15,030 by fall 1970, reflecting rising demand amid regional economic shifts. Under President Albert L. Pugsley (1966–1973), the university initiated a building boom, constructing Moser Hall in 1968 for science facilities and the Lincoln Building in 1970 for administrative purposes. The Beeghly Center, completed in 1970, provided a new arena for athletics and events, while Maag Library opened in 1976 to support expanding academic needs. Further developments included Bliss Hall (1977) for performing arts, Cushwa Hall (1978) for technical education, DeBartolo Hall (1978) for classrooms, Stambaugh Stadium (1982) for football, and Meshel Hall (1986) for humanities. These projects, funded largely by state appropriations, transformed the urban campus layout and accommodated enrollment peaks near 15,500 in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Academically, the Graduate School and College of Applied Science and Technology were established in 1968, broadening offerings beyond undergraduate levels. In 1972, YSU joined the Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine consortium with the and , admitting its first medical students in 1975. The College of Creative Arts and Communication formed in 1974, enhancing arts programs. By 1991, under President Neil D. Humphrey (1984–1992) and successor Leslie H. Cochran (1992–2000), engineering technology programs separated to create the College of Engineering and Technology, with remaining applied science units forming the College of Health and Human Services. Enrollment stabilized around 15,000 through the 1990s before declining to 13,979 by 1994. Athletic achievements marked the era, with the Penguin football team securing NCAA Division I-AA national championships in 1991, 1993, 1994, and 1997 under coach , bolstering institutional pride amid infrastructure growth. President John J. Coffelt (1973–1984) oversaw much of the 1970s construction surge, while Cochran launched the 2000 initiative in the late to plan further property acquisitions and up to seven new buildings, setting the stage for early 21st-century developments.

21st Century Developments and Challenges

In the early , Youngstown State University experienced enrollment declines amid broader regional economic challenges in the , with headcount dropping from 12,858 in 2003 to around 12,471 by 2015, reflecting demographic shifts and competition from other institutions. These pressures led to financial strains, prompting program eliminations and faculty reductions; by late 2021, the university cut 26 associate, bachelor's, and master's programs due to low enrollment, followed by further instructional adjustments in 2022. Faculty unions contested the necessity of these measures, citing independent financial analyses that argued against additional cuts, while administrators defended decisions as essential for sustainability amid declining state funding and tuition revenue. Leadership transitions marked efforts to address these issues, with James P. Tressel serving as president from 2014 to 2023 and achieving initial enrollment stabilization through targeted recruitment. However, persistent demographic headwinds—such as shrinking high school graduate pools in —continued to challenge growth, leading to additional program deactivations in 2024, including degrees in physics, chemistry, and , while retaining science-focused options to align with demand. In 2024, Bill Johnson, a former U.S. Congressman with a background in and , assumed the amid controversy; critics, including faculty and former leaders, questioned the board's selection process and expressed concerns over his conservative potentially influencing campus discourse, though Johnson emphasized apolitical classrooms and fiscal prudence. Recent developments have shown resilience, with enrollment rebounding to 12,240 in fall 2025—a 2% increase from 2024 and the second consecutive year of growth—driven by surges in first-time undergraduates (up 13% in 2024), out-of-state students (up 25.6%), and international enrollment exceeding 1,200, bucking national downward trends. These gains supported exploratory expansions, such as plans for a Steubenville , while ongoing challenges include balancing athletics funding with academic priorities and adapting to persistent enrollment volatility tied to regional . Under Johnson, the university shifted Name, Image, and Likeness (NIL) compensation for athletes to an internal model in July 2025 to enhance control and competitiveness.

Campus

Physical Layout and Infrastructure

The Youngstown State University campus spans approximately 140 acres in downtown , forming a compact urban layout centered on a park-like quadrangle ringed by academic, administrative, and residential buildings. Anchoring this core is Jones Hall, constructed in 1930 as the university's original administrative building and often designated as "Old Main," which exemplifies the campus's blend of historic and . The layout emphasizes accessibility, with Wick Avenue serving as the primary north-south corridor lined by key facilities including the and Kilcawley Center. Major infrastructure encompasses over 50 buildings, including the 197,000-square-foot Beeghly Center for athletics and recreation, the Andrews Student Recreation and Wellness Center with more than 33,000 square feet of fitness space, and multiple parking structures such as the M1 deck accommodating commuter needs. Residence halls like Kilcawley Hall and off-campus options along Lincoln Avenue support on-campus living for about 1,800 students, integrated into the urban fabric adjacent to . Utility infrastructure includes campus-wide heating systems and recent envelope repairs to buildings like Beeghly Center and Maag Library, completed or planned as of 2024 to address in the region's variable . The campus boundary is delineated by streets including Rayen Avenue to the south and Elm Street to the east, with athletic fields and the Watson/Guilford houses extending residential presence; emergency assembly points and AED locations are distributed across the site for safety. This configuration facilitates efficient navigation, with sidewalks and roads supporting both vehicular and foot traffic in a setting recognized for its safety and scenic integration with surrounding green spaces.

Cultural and Specialized Facilities

The McDonough Museum of Art, established to support academic excellence in the , features rotating exhibitions, installations, performances, and lectures; it is situated at 525 Wick Avenue and open to the public Tuesday through Saturday from 11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. The collaborates with regional institutions and hosts community events such as First Fridays, which include artist meet-and-greets tied to current displays. Performing arts venues within the Cliffe College of Creative Arts include the 400-seat Ford Theater, a proscenium-style space for productions; the 120-seat Spotlight Theater, configured as a flexible black-box setup; and a 250-seat recital hall dedicated to performances. These facilities support the university's theater, dance, and programs, hosting student and professional events. The Ward Beecher Planetarium, located in Ward Beecher Science Hall at 100 Lincoln Avenue, provides educational astronomy programming with public shows scheduled from September 12, 2025, to May 1, 2026, including Friday evenings at 8:00 p.m. and Saturdays at 2:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m. Recent upgrades include new seating and enhanced star projection capabilities, making it one of the few such venues in northeastern . Additional specialized collections on campus comprise the Clarence R. Smith Mineral Museum, displaying geological specimens, and the Rose Melnick Medical Museum, focused on historical medical artifacts and instruments. These resources, alongside art department exhibition spaces equipped for , , , and , facilitate hands-on cultural and technical engagement.

Academics

Colleges, Degrees, and Enrollment by Program

Youngstown State University organizes its academic programs into five primary colleges, each focusing on distinct disciplinary areas, alongside the Graduate School for advanced degrees and the Honors College for enriched undergraduate experiences. These colleges collectively offer over 100 undergraduate majors, including associate and bachelor's degrees, and more than 50 graduate programs ranging from master's to doctoral levels. The Beeghly College of Liberal Arts, Social Sciences, and Education provides degrees in fields such as English, , , , , and , with bachelor's options like BA in and BSEd in , as well as associate degrees and graduate programs in counseling and . The Bitonte College of Health and Human Services emphasizes professional preparation in healthcare and public service, offering BS in , BS in , BS in , associate degrees in medical assisting, and graduate degrees like MS in Health and Human Services and . The Cliffe College of Creative Arts supports artistic disciplines through BFA in , BM in Music Performance, BS in Music , and theater programs, supplemented by minors and certificates in design and media arts. The College of Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) delivers technical degrees including BE in , BS in , BS in , and associate degrees in technology, with graduate options like MS in . The Williamson College of Business Administration grants degrees such as BS in , BSBA in , and MBA, with AACSB ensuring alignment with professional standards; associate degrees in are also available. University-wide, degrees conferred include Associate of Arts (AA), Associate of Applied Business (AAB), Associate of Science (AS), (BA), (BS), Bachelor of Science in Education (BSEd), (BE), (BFA), and (BM) at the undergraduate level, alongside master's (MA, MS, MBA), (EdS), and doctoral (EdD, PhD) degrees at the graduate level. Fall 2025 enrollment reached 12,240 students, the highest since 2018, with undergraduate headcount comprising the majority and notable growth in associate degree programs (up 37% on-campus), doctoral programs (up 28%), and online offerings (up 25%). Detailed breakdowns by specific program or college are reported internally via institutional data systems, but popular undergraduate majors include , , , and engineering, reflecting regional workforce demands in .

Research Centers, Institutes, and Initiatives

Youngstown State University maintains multiple research centers and institutes, many established to advance applied research in , , and regional economic needs, with a focus on facilities supporting faculty and student projects. The university's College of (STEM) houses seven centers dedicated to analytical techniques and material characterization. The Center of Excellence in Materials Science and Engineering, established in 2017 with involvement from 22 faculty across six STEM departments, emphasizes the preparation, characterization, and development of to foster education, research, and economic applications through state-of-the-art facilities. Similarly, the Center for Advanced Materials Analysis provides electron microscopy laboratories and soft material surface analysis capabilities to enable detailed material studies. In manufacturing and innovation, the Advanced Manufacturing Research Center, also founded in 2017, develops technologies such as additive manufacturing, , reverse engineering, digital metrology, and hybrid processes to bridge academic with industrial practice. The National Additive Manufacturing Innovation Institute pursues breakthroughs in precision parts and complex assemblies using novel designs and materials. Complementing these, the Excellence Training Center serves as a hub for workforce development, , and in advanced manufacturing, incorporating projects like Foundry 4.0 funded by federal grants. In February 2025, announced the creation of the Youngstown Innovation Hub for Aerospace and Defense at YSU, aimed at advancing additive manufacturing for national defense, supported by a $2.3 million Air Force Research Laboratory award for a hub-and-spoke R&D model. The Institute for Applied Topology and Topological Structures, established by the YSU Board of Trustees in June 2009 and housed in the Department of Mathematics and Statistics, promotes and education in topological methods and structures. The Natural Gas and Water Resources Institute conducts analysis of related to extraction and supports an in the field. In business and health, the Williamson College of Business Administration Center of Excellence in , created in 2017, integrates prior programs like the Williamson Center for International Business to support global , faculty , workshops, consulting, and export assistance across a 10-county region in . Affiliated centers include the Export Assistance Network, offering free services; the Entrepreneurship Center, promoting community-wide initiatives; the Center for Nonprofit Leadership, providing programming and internships for nonprofit management; the Ohio Small Business Development Center, aiding business startups and competitiveness; and the Ohio APEX Accelerator, assisting with government contracting in select counties. Health-related efforts feature the Center for and Applied , launched in 2017, which addresses biomedical needs through a dedicated , a minor, and a master's in biomedical offered by STEM and the Bitonte College of and Human Services. The Centofanti Center for and Welfare for Vulnerable Populations focuses on training and student programs for underserved groups, including support for the Midlothian Free Clinic. These centers, selected from competitive proposals and funded with $500,000 collectively in 2017, underscore YSU's emphasis on interdisciplinary, applied aligned with regional industries like and . The Office of Research Services oversees grant development, compliance, and administration to sustain these activities.

Library and Academic Resources

The William F. Maag Jr. Library serves as the primary library for Youngstown State University, opening in 1976 to replace earlier facilities including a small collection in Jones Hall used by students. Named after longtime trustee William F. Maag Jr., the library houses a collection of approximately 766,591 volumes, including print books, periodicals, microfiche, and digital resources. As of 2016, it held 793,450 print books, 97,681 print periodicals, over 2,300 DVDs, and 5 million items in microfiche and film across 82,000 linear feet of shelving. Maag Library provides access to extensive digital resources through participation in the OhioLINK since 1993 and as a Federal Depository for U.S. documents since 1971. Key databases include Academic Search Complete, offering more than 8,500 full-text periodicals with over 7,300 peer-reviewed journals, alongside , the Electronic Journal Center, and BrowZine for journal discovery. Services encompass course reserves, instruction sessions, open educational resources (OERs), and research guides tailored to subjects and courses. The Archives and Special Collections, located on the fifth floor, preserve university history and regional materials, open Monday through Friday. Complementing library resources, the Resch Academic Success Center offers peer tutoring for more than 200 courses across disciplines, staffed by tutors who have completed the subjects they teach, with sessions available in 's third-floor Room 306. Academic coaching provides one-on-one strategy sessions, either in-person or online, from Jones Hall. The Writing Center, operated by the English Department, delivers free consultations for writing tasks including essays, lab reports, and citation styles, with locations in , , and other sites, supporting both undergraduate and graduate students. These resources emphasize individualized support to enhance student learning and research capabilities.

Administration and Governance

Presidents and Leadership Transitions

Youngstown State University has had ten presidents since the formal establishment of the presidency in 1935, when Howard W. Jones was appointed by the Board of Trustees to lead what was then . Each president has overseen periods of expansion, transition to status in , and responses to regional economic challenges in the steel industry. Leadership changes have often followed retirements or strategic shifts, with interim appointments in recent decades amid enrollment pressures and reviews.
PresidentTerm
Howard W. Jones1935–1966
Albert L. Pugsley1966–1973
John J. Coffelt1973–1984
Neil D. Humphrey1984–1992
Leslie H. Cochran1992–2000
David C. Sweet2000–2010
Cynthia E. Anderson2010–2013
Randy J. Dunn2013–2014
James P. Tressel2014–2023
Bill Johnson2024–present
Jones's 31-year tenure laid the foundation for institutional growth, transitioning from YMCA oversight to independent college status and culminating in preparations for university elevation just before his retirement. Pugsley succeeded him immediately, presiding over the 1967 to Youngstown State University and initial doctoral program developments, but departed amid board evaluations of administrative direction. Subsequent leaders like Coffelt and Humphrey focused on expansion and advancements during the 1970s and 1980s economic downturns in Youngstown. The 21st century brought more frequent transitions, reflecting national trends in higher education leadership turnover. Cochran retired after stabilizing finances post-recession, followed by Sweet's emphasis on community partnerships until his departure to another institution. Anderson, the first and YSU alumna president, served briefly before resigning; Dunn acted as interim during a national search. Tressel, a former Ohio State football coach with local ties, was appointed in 2014 to address enrollment declines and fiscal constraints, implementing cost-saving measures and athletics enhancements until his 2023 resignation. Johnson, a former U.S. Congressman, assumed office on January 22, 2024, following a Board of Trustees selection process that drew scrutiny over his non-academic background despite his and business experience. These shifts underscore YSU's adaptive governance amid demographic declines and funding dependencies on state appropriations.

Board of Trustees and Policy Decisions

The governance of Youngstown State University is vested in a board of eleven trustees appointed by the Governor of , with the of the , as established under Ohio Revised Code Section 3356.01. Trustees serve terms typically lasting nine years, with two student trustees serving two-year terms selected through university processes. As of 2025, the board includes leaders, medical professionals, , and community figures such as Chair Charles T. George (CEO of Hapco Inc., term expiring 2027), Vice Chair Joseph J. Kerola (head of PI&I Motor Express), Secretary Anita A. Hackstedde (president/CEO of Salem Regional Medical Center, term to 2030), and student trustees Zane Perrico and Nadia C. Zarbaugh (term to May 1, 2027). Additional national/global trustees, such as former USA CEO Eric Allen Spiegel, provide advisory input without voting rights in core decisions. The board operates through standing committees that oversee key areas, including Finance and Facilities (chaired by George), Academic Excellence and Student Success, , and University Affairs. These committees review agendas, recommend actions, and ensure alignment with the university's mission of providing accessible education and , as reaffirmed in board-approved statements. Regular meetings, held quarterly with public notices and minutes, facilitate decisions on budgets, personnel, and strategic initiatives, with resolutions documented for transparency. The board's policy decisions encompass approvals of academic policies, personnel appointments, and operational modifications to address enrollment trends and fiscal constraints. In June 2023, it modified the Student Code of Conduct and Student Travel Policy to enhance clarity and risk management. More recently, on June 24, 2025, the board approved new policies on Awards, Equality of Opportunity for faculty, staff, and students, and FMLA leave for professional staff, while rescinding outdated provisions on background checks and bereavement leave to streamline human resources. It also authorized appointments such as Associate Provost for Academic Administration and Vice President for Intercollegiate Athletics. A prominent decision occurred in December 2023, when the board selected U.S. Representative Bill Johnson as university president, bypassing candidates with direct higher education experience; critics, including former trustees, argued this risked institutional stability due to Johnson's political background and lack of administrative credentials in academia. Reports indicated that multiple trustees had contributed over $86,000 to Johnson's congressional campaigns, prompting scrutiny over potential influences on the selection process despite board assertions of merit-based evaluation.

Enrollment, Finances, and Institutional Health

Youngstown State University experienced rapid enrollment growth following its transition to state-assisted status in , when fall headcount stood at 13,232 students. Enrollment peaked in the late 1970s and early 1980s, reaching approximately 15,784 by 1980 amid expanded access to higher education in Ohio's public system. Thereafter, headcount declined steadily through the and , dropping to 12,858 by , influenced by the collapse of Youngstown's steel industry, regional population stagnation, and competition from nearby institutions like the and . This downward trajectory persisted into the , with fall enrollment at 12,471 in 2015 before further erosion amid broader demographic cliffs in the and national shifts toward community colleges and online alternatives. By fall 2023, total headcount reached a recent low of 10,993, reflecting five consecutive years of decline attributed to these structural pressures.
YearFall Headcount
196713,232
198015,784
200312,858
201512,471
202310,993
Recent years mark a reversal, with fall enrollment surging 10.7% to 12,164—the highest since 2018—driven by a 13% rise in first-time undergraduates, 25.6% growth in out-of-state students, and expanded international recruitment amid global demand for U.S. degrees. Fall 2025 headcount increased further by 2.1% to 12,240, continuing the upward momentum with gains in in-state enrollment (up 4.5%), online programs (up 25%), and College Credit Plus participation (up 24%), defying national postsecondary decline trends linked to drops and economic uncertainty.

Budget, Funding Sources, and Financial Management

Youngstown State University's operating budget is developed annually by the administration in consultation with the Budget Advisory Council, which advises the president on priorities aligned with strategic goals, and approved by the Board of Trustees. The budget supports instruction, research, student services, and infrastructure, with revenues derived from multiple sources including state appropriations, tuition, grants, and auxiliary operations. Financial oversight includes annual audits by the Auditor of State to ensure compliance with standards and internal controls. For fiscal year 2024 (ended June 30, 2024), operating revenues reached $105,434,003, comprising net tuition and fees of $66,727,733 (63% of operating revenues), , and auxiliary enterprises such as and dining of $17,336,934 (16%). Nonoperating revenues supplemented this with $87,181,281, dominated by state appropriations of $48,856,576 (56% of nonoperating revenues), alongside gifts, , and contracts of $28,625,192 (33%) and investment income of $10,429,463 (12%). Capital appropriations added $5,124,718 for facilities maintenance. These figures reflect a funding model typical of regional , where state support via Ohio's State Share of Instruction (SSI) —based on enrollment, degrees awarded, and metrics—covers a significant but declining portion amid rising reliance on tuition and external . Operating expenses for FY2024 totaled $193,960,987, with major categories including instruction, academic support, , and institutional support; depreciation on capital assets valued at $228,947,726 net also contributed to the deficit, offset by nonoperating gains. The university's net position stood at $149,587,707 as of June 30, 2024, indicating overall despite operating losses common in public higher education due to subsidized tuition rates. Federal grants, totaling $67 million in expenditures (primarily student aid), represent another key revenue stream subject to single audits for compliance. Projections for fiscal year 2025 incorporate a 4.6% increase ($2.2 million) in SSI appropriations to approximately $51.2 million, driven by state formula adjustments, alongside anticipated tuition hikes of at least 3% approved in June 2025 to address inflationary pressures and enrollment trends. The Controller's Office manages financial reporting, policy development, and coordination, while internal audits monitor for , fiscal abuse, and policy adherence. The 2024 audit identified no material weaknesses but noted a significant deficiency in National Student Loan Data System reporting for two of 40 sampled federal aid recipients, with no financial impact. Private support through the YSU Foundation supplements public funding via endowments and donations.

Strategic Responses to Demographic and Economic Pressures

In response to persistent demographic declines in Ohio's , characterized by shrinking high school graduate cohorts and regional population stagnation, Youngstown State University (YSU) adopted a Board of Trustees resolution on , 2020, outlining strategies to sustain institutional viability amid enrollment drops and external disruptions like the . These pressures manifested in enrollment falling to a record low of 11,298 students in fall 2021, prompting fiscal adjustments including a projected $5.6 million structural deficit by late 2021. To address economic constraints, YSU pursued cost containment through program discontinuations announced on November 15, 2021, ensuring teach-out provisions for enrolled students while targeting under-enrolled offerings to realign resources. Further efficiencies included a net reduction of 20 full-time faculty positions in 2024, alongside voluntary separation incentives offering up to 80% of annual salary for one year in early 2024, and operational spending controls to close a $4.3 million budgeted gap in 2023. These measures, yielding savings such as $477,000 from targeted reductions post-fall 2021's 1,398-student drop, aimed to preserve core academic vitality despite faculty union critiques asserting sufficient reserves obviated deeper cuts, as per an independent 2022 analysis. On the growth front, YSU intensified an enterprise enrollment strategy emphasizing online expansion and workforce-aligned programs, launching eight new bachelor's degrees in fall 2025 via with Risepoint to meet regional demands in high-skill sectors. Additional initiatives included collaborations with businesses for apprenticeships through the STEM college and integration with DegreeSight in October 2025 to streamline transfers and boost retention amid demographic headwinds. A March 2025 academic master plan draft further proposed inter-university for emerging fields like , prioritizing to enhance employability. These efforts yielded enrollment reversals, with fall 2024 marking the first significant increase after nearly 15 years of decline, followed by continued growth into fall 2025 and a 9% spring 2025 rise, bucking national trends through targeted recruitment and program relevance despite ongoing regional uncertainties.

Student Life

Organizations, Traditions, and Campus Culture

Youngstown State University maintains over 180 registered student organizations, spanning categories such as academic and professional groups, cultural and religious associations, initiatives, special interest clubs, and club sports. These include college-specific entities like the American Marketing Association and in the Williamson College of Business Administration, as well as broader offerings in STEM, arts, and music disciplines. Greek life comprises 9 active chapters under three governing councils: the Interfraternity Council (with fraternities including , , and ), the Panhellenic Council (featuring sororities such as and ), and the (including Divine Nine organizations like Fraternity and Sorority). In the 2023-24 academic year, 2,048 students participated as members across these organizations, with 486 serving in leadership roles as officers. Key traditions at YSU revolve around annual events that build community and celebrate campus identity, particularly within Greek life and student programming. Greek Sing, originating in 1952, serves as the capstone of Greek activities, featuring performances by chapters at Stambaugh Auditorium and culminating the academic year's efforts. Greek Week and Week include competitive events, pep rallies with the YSU Marching Pride, and student-athlete engagements to foster spirit. Welcome Week orients new students through organization fairs and leadership summits, while the Dana School of Music upholds the Carols & Cocoa concert, a holiday tradition spanning over 40 years as of December 2024. Historical social customs, documented in university archives, encompass events like and the Snow-Flake Frolic, reflecting mid-20th-century campus festivities. Campus culture at YSU emphasizes inclusion and leadership development amid a predominantly commuter student body, where a majority live off-campus, often balancing part-time or full-time employment with studies. The Office of Student Experience promotes a sense of belonging through diverse programming that accommodates commuters, including accessible events and initiatives celebrating differences in a student population noted for above-average overall diversity relative to national peers. Student Activities coordinates efforts to integrate participants via organizations and events, countering potential isolation for non-residential attendees on the compact, walkable urban campus. This structure supports engagement without heavy reliance on residential life, aligning with YSU's role as a regional access institution serving nearly 11,000 students as of fall 2025.

Housing, Dining, and Support Services

Youngstown State University operates five primary on-campus residence halls—Kilcawley House, Lyden House, Cafaro House, Wick House, and Weller House—designed to house primarily first-year students with double and triple occupancy rooms, alongside limited single-occupancy options. These facilities collectively support around 1,200 residents, with Lyden House accommodating over 280 students, Cafaro House over 250, and Wick House up to 32 upper-division students of all genders. The housing model features 24/7 staffing for support, emphasizing a structured environment for transitioning students, while University Courtyard Apartments provide suite-style living for upperclassmen and a dedicated addresses and family needs. Off-campus options are facilitated through partnerships such as College Pads, aiding students in securing nearby rentals. Dining services revolve around Christman Dining Commons, which delivers all-you-care-to-eat meals with made-to-order stations and rotating menus crafted by on-site chefs. Complementary venues include Be Bowl'd for customizable noodle, rice, and acai bowls; ; Dunkin'; and cafes at Maag Library, Cushwa Hall, and Schwebel Hall, plus the Smoke & Fire Mobile Kitchen for . Meal plans bundle swipes redeemable exclusively at the dining commons, Flex Dollars for flexible campus spending, and Pete's Points for broader on- and near-campus purchases, with AVI Fresh assuming operations as the primary vendor starting May 5, 2025, to enhance culinary variety and efficiency. Accommodations for medical, physical, or psychological disabilities in housing and dining are evaluated case-by-case with documentation. Student support services integrated with campus living include free, confidential counseling through state-licensed professionals addressing , , and skill-building for academic and personal management. The CARE Team, coordinated by the Dean of Students office, responds to concerns like behavioral risks or barriers to success, promoting community safety and retention. Disability services offer academic , testing adjustments, and aids, while the Penguin Service centralizes enrollment, financial, and transitional guidance to bolster on-campus experiences.

Athletics

Programs, Teams, and Conference Affiliations

Youngstown State University sponsors 21 varsity intercollegiate athletic teams known as the Penguins, competing primarily at the level. The department fields nine men's teams and twelve women's teams across various sports. Most Penguins programs compete in the , a conference YSU joined in 2001 that includes institutions primarily from the Midwest and Northeast. Football participates in the within the NCAA Football Championship Subdivision (FCS), where the program has secured four national championships. The women's bowling team affiliates with , while women's lacrosse competes in the . Men's sports include , , cross country, football, , soccer, and diving, , and indoor and outdoor . Women's sports consist of , , cross country, , , soccer, , and diving, , indoor and outdoor , and . All non-football programs adhere to the schedule and championships unless otherwise specified by affiliate memberships.

Facilities, Performance Metrics, and Academic Integration

Youngstown State University's primary athletic facilities support its Division I programs across multiple sports. serves as the home venue for Penguins football, accommodating 20,630 spectators, with recent enhancements including new video boards and upgraded seating. The Zidian Family Arena within the Beeghly Center hosts men's and women's games for up to 6,300 fans and has undergone modernization featuring improved lighting and seating arrangements. Additional multi-purpose spaces, such as the Watson and Tressel Training Site, provide indoor practice capabilities with synthetic turf fields, batting cages, and a track, benefiting football, , and other teams during inclement weather or off-season training. Performance metrics for teams reflect competitive participation in the for most sports and the for football. In the 2025 football season, the team achieved a 5-2 record through October, highlighted by decisive victories including 56-17 over Robert Morris on September 7 and 51-17 against Murray State on October 25. Men's recorded a 21-13 overall mark in the prior season, securing fourth place in the with a 13-7 conference record. Academic integration emphasizes student-athlete success through dedicated support structures. The department maintains a four-year Academic Progress Rate (APR) of 994 for the 2019-2023 period, surpassing the national Division I average of 984, with 13 programs earning perfect single-year scores of 1,000 in 2022-23. Student-athletes benefit from specialized , where each receives guidance from both an athletic advisor and a major-specific advisor, alongside access to the Academic Center for tutoring and monitoring. Graduation rates for athletes stood at 62% in 2022, exceeding the university's general student population rate of 43%, while 78% of student-athletes posted a semester GPA above 3.00 in the fall term. These outcomes demonstrate effective policies prioritizing eligibility maintenance and degree completion amid athletic demands.

Controversies

NCAA Sanctions and Violations (2018–2022)

In April 2021, the NCAA imposed sanctions on Youngstown State University's football program following a negotiated resolution for recruiting violations that occurred between 2019 and 2020. An assistant coach engaged in 41 impermissible contacts, including 13 calls and 25 text messages, with a prospective student-athlete transferring from a Division II institution between November 26 and December 17, 2019, without obtaining required permission; this included facilitating an unofficial visit on December 6 and an official visit from December 13 to 15. Additionally, three coaches, including the and two assistants, conducted off-campus recruiting activities involving 16 prospects and two evaluations without first passing the required NCAA Coaches Certification (Recruiting) Test. The athletics department exhibited a to monitor compliance with recruiting rules, classified as a Level II violation. The football program's penalties included two years of from April 20, 2021, to April 19, 2023; a $5,000 fine; a reduction of three official paid visits in the 2021-22 ; a two-week ban on recruiting communications in 2020-21; three fewer evaluation days in 2021-22; and a public reprimand, along with mandated enhancements to the compliance program. The involved assistant coach faced a suspension from all coaching duties for three preseason practices on January 30, February 7, and February 14, 2021, and a ban from recruiting activities from February 13 to 26, 2021. In January 2022, the Committee on Infractions issued a decision on self-reported violations in the women's soccer program, stemming from breaches discovered in October 2018 and reported to NCAA on November 9, 2018. The former arranged falsified transcripts from the for three international student-athletes between May 2016 and January 2017, enabling their erroneous eligibility certification and participation in 61 contests while ineligible; this constituted a Level I violation of principles. Separate Level II recruiting inducements involved the providing the same three student-athletes with cost-free or reduced-cost housing, transportation, and payment of a $45 application fee for one additional student-athlete between December 2016 and July 2017, resulting in 33 contests of ineligible competition for one player. The also engaged in unethical conduct by providing false information during the investigation, refusing a second , and withholding cellphone records after separation from the , further classified as a Level I violation for failure to promote compliance. Sanctions for the soccer program included three years of probation to run consecutively with the existing football probation; a one-year postseason ban; a $5,000 fine plus 2% of the women's soccer operating budget; reductions in soccer scholarships; recruiting restrictions such as communication and visit limits; vacation of all records from ineligible participation; and return or vacation of any associated trophies or awards. The former head coach received a five-year from January 11, 2022, to January 10, 2027, requiring 50% suspension from contests in the first season of employment at any NCAA institution and additional restrictions thereafter. The university was required to publicize vacated records and inform prospective student-athletes of the violations.

2024 Presidential Hiring and Institutional Turmoil

In November 2023, the Youngstown State University Board of Trustees selected U.S. Representative Bill Johnson, a Republican who had served since 2011, as the university's next president, effective January 2024 following his resignation from on January 21, 2024. The decision followed the departure of interim president Cynthia Jackson-Haight and came after a search process conducted entirely in closed sessions without input from faculty, students, or broader campus stakeholders, prompting accusations of opacity and lack of transparency. The hire ignited widespread backlash on campus and beyond, centered on Johnson's limited experience in higher education administration—he held a from and had a pre-Congress in and but no prior roles in academia—coupled with his conservative political record, including support for former President Trump and opposition to certain federal policies on issues like and rights. Faculty passed resolutions of no confidence in the Board of Trustees on December 2023, citing the secretive process and perceived mismatch between Johnson's background and the demands of university leadership amid enrollment declines and financial pressures. Students and alumni organized protests, with notable critic , a YSU alumnus and , publicly denouncing the selection as undermining the institution's . Donors expressed concerns, with the YSU Foundation reporting incoming calls from supporters questioning the hire's implications for , and some threatening to withhold contributions over fears of politicization. Governor defended the trustees' prerogative, drawing parallels to the controversial 2019 hiring of former Ohio State football coach as YSU president, which initially faced similar resistance but led to stabilized enrollment and deficit reduction during Tressel's tenure from 2020 to 2023. Board members argued Johnson's external leadership experience, including and , positioned him to address YSU's challenges like a 20% enrollment drop since 2014 and regional economic stagnation in the . Tensions persisted into 2024, manifesting in union disputes and faculty skepticism during Johnson's inauguration on September 19, 2024, though he emphasized depoliticizing classrooms and focusing on operational efficiencies. Critics, including some media outlets and academic observers, framed the controversy as reflective of broader ideological clashes in higher education, where appointments diverging from progressive norms often provoke institutional resistance, while proponents viewed it as a pragmatic response to fiscal realities rather than ideological imposition. By late 2024, ongoing debates highlighted divisions, with Johnson's early initiatives targeting cost savings and program realignments amid calls for greater stakeholder involvement in governance.

Notable People

Notable Alumni Achievements

Ronald A. Parise received a in physics from Youngstown State University in 1973, with minors in , astronomy, and . He later served as a on Space Shuttle missions STS-6 in April 1983, deploying the first , and STS-46 in July 1992, operating the Tethered Satellite System. James Traficant earned a from Youngstown State University in 1976 after an earlier degree from the . He represented as a Democrat from 1985 to 2002, focusing on steel industry issues in the , but was expelled from the House following a 2002 conviction on 10 counts of , , , and forcing staff to perform farm work. In athletics, quarterbacked Youngstown State from 1969 to 1972, compiling 4,612 passing yards and 31 touchdowns before a 17-year career that included 22,802 passing yards and selection to the in 1978 with the . He was inducted into the YSU Athletics Hall of Fame in 1986. Jeff Wilkins, YSU's most prolific kicker, set school records with 62 field goals and 245 points from 1991 to 1993; in the , he played 14 seasons mainly with the , converting 307 of 375 field goals (81.9%) and scoring 1,416 points before induction into the YSU Hall of Fame in 2003.

Notable Faculty and Administrators

James Tressel served as the ninth president of Youngstown State University from July 2014 to March 2020, following a distinguished career as head football coach at , where he led the team to a in the 2002 and compiled a 106–22 record over ten seasons. During his tenure at YSU, Tressel focused on strategic enrollment management and community partnerships, contributing to campus infrastructure improvements amid fiscal challenges. Cynthia E. Anderson held the presidency from 2010 to 2013, during which she advanced initiatives in academic program development and received the 2004 ATHENA Award for professional excellence and community service; she previously served as YSU's provost and vice president for academic affairs. In 2012, under her leadership, YSU launched its first doctoral program in , expanding graduate offerings. Among faculty, Paul Louth, professor of music specializing in jazz, brass, and wind band pedagogy, was awarded the 2024 YSU Distinguished Professorship for his contributions to music education and performance. Corey Andrews, professor of English, was named the Grace Ruth Memorial Endowed Professor in August 2024, recognizing his scholarship in literature and cultural studies.

References

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