Staten Island, NYpublicwww.csi.cuny.edu/
The College of Staten Island (CSI) is CUNY's overlooked workhorse—a sprawling, suburban campus where nearly anyone can get in (92% acceptance rate) but where serious students find surprising value: rigorous nursing and business programs, a 96% graduation rate for its Liberty Partnerships cohort, and tuition so low the net price averages just $6,355. This is New York City’s most accessible senior college, where commuter students dominate but 50+ clubs and a waterfront campus create pockets of community.
With a 92.3% acceptance rate (12,929 admits from 14,002 applicants in 2024), CSI is among the most accessible four-year colleges in the CUNY system—practically open admissions, but with some academic guardrails. The middle 50% of admitted students have SAT scores between 910-1100 and an average high school GPA of 3.42. Notably, CSI is Test-optionalA policy where you choose whether to submit SAT or ACT scores. If you don't, the rest of your application carries more weight.: first-year applicants can choose whether to submit SAT/ACT scores, with emphasis instead on GPA and course rigor. About 10,049 enrolled from the admitted pool, suggesting modest YieldThe share of admitted students who actually choose to enroll. Colleges watch it closely, which is why some weigh how interested you seem. for a commuter school.
CSI offers 67 undergraduate programs across liberal arts, sciences, and pre-professional tracks, with standout departments in nursing, business, and psychology (the top three most popular majors). The college operates through four divisions: Humanities & Social Sciences, Science & Technology, Education, and Business. Unique offerings include a Doctor of Physical Therapy program—rare for a CUNY school—and partnerships with nearby Staten Island University Hospital for clinical placements. Classes are overwhelmingly taught by full-time faculty, with a student-faculty ratio that favors practical, hands-on learning over seminar-style instruction.
This is a commuter campus through and through—only 5% of students live on-site—but CSI makes efforts to combat anonymity. The Office of Student Life oversees 50+ clubs, ranging from the Anime Society to the Caribbean Students Association. The Instagram presence (@collegeofstatenisland) highlights kayaking trips on the nearby waterfront and multicultural festivals, while the Campus Center serves as a hub for commuters between classes. Greek life is virtually nonexistent; instead, students bond over affordable pizza in the Dolphin Café or intramural sports in the sprawling Sports and Recreation Center.
CSI’s six-year graduation rate hovers around 34%—low by national standards but typical for CUNY’s open-access mission. However, targeted programs like Liberty Partnerships boast a 96% graduation rate, far outpacing Staten Island’s district average. Alumni earn a median $36,427 one year post-graduation, with nursing and business majors likely pulling that average up. The college emphasizes workforce-ready skills: 47% of associate degree students in CUNY’s ASAP program graduate within three years, thanks to intensive advising and financial supports.
CSI is one of America’s best bargains: in-state tuition is $7,340/year, and the average Net priceWhat a family actually pays after grants and scholarships are subtracted from the sticker price — usually far less than the published cost. after aid drops to $6,355. Over half of students qualify for Pell Grants, and CUNY’s Excelsior Scholarship covers tuition for families earning under $125,000. The financial aid office aggressively promotes the Net Price Calculator to demystify costs—a necessity for its working-class student body, 40% of whom are First-generation (first-gen)A student who would be the first in their immediate family to earn a four-year college degree. Many colleges consider this in context.. Typical debt at graduation is $14,350, far below the national average.
CSI defies expectations. It’s a commuter school with a 204-acre waterfront campus that feels more like a SUNY than a typical urban CUNY. Its nursing program rivals private colleges at a fraction of the cost, while business majors benefit from NYC internships without Manhattan rents. The 96% graduation rate for Liberty Partnerships—a program targeting at-risk high schoolers—proves CSI’s transformative potential for students who might slip through the cracks elsewhere. For Staten Island’s blue-collar families and First-generation (first-gen)A student who would be the first in their immediate family to earn a four-year college degree. Many colleges consider this in context. strivers, this is the ticket to the middle class.