Frist Campus Center
Frist Campus Center is a hub of student and community life at Princeton. It offers food and snacks of many kinds, and is home to a box office, lounges and study spaces. Facilities include a film/performance theater, classrooms, computer clusters, student government offices and student mailboxes. Frist houses the LGBT Center, the Pace Center for Civic Engagement, Undergraduate Student Government (USG), the Women*s Center and more.
Media Gallery
Identity Affinity Spaces
Academic Support Services
In the Nation's Service
⭐ Identity Affinity Spaces
Through the Office of Diversity and Inclusion there are different centers and spaces on campus that support and reach our diverse student body across campus.
LGBT Center
Princeton's LGBT Center supports and empowers lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, questioning, intersex, and asexual students and employees by providing community-building, education, events and initiatives. They seek to affirm and help students explore their many identities, including a/sexuality, a/gender, race, ability, religion and class; the Center serves the campus community through training, consultation, and advocacy to ensure that Princeton's community is fully inclusive and respectful of all different identities.
Women*s Center
The mission of the Women*s Center is to recognize and redress historic and persistent gender inequality at Princeton and beyond. Through a series of events and programs, such as public lectures and discussions, the Women*s Center, helps students learn from the history of women’s and other movements for social equality, and empower them to identify systems that reproduce gender inequity in the present and to envision and create a more just future.
The Gender + Sexuality Resource Center (coming fall 2021)
The Gender + Sexuality Resource Center at Princeton will launch in fall 2021. The center will serve women and femme-identifying students and LGBTQIA+ students, and to offer gender and sexuality programming and co-curricular experiences for the University community. It will bring together the staff of the Women*s Center and LGBT Center, maintaining current services and allowing for more expansive programming that acknowledges the many intersections of gender and sexual identity. The center will affirm and assist students in their exploration of sexuality, gender, asexuality, agender, race, ability and religion, among other identities.
The AccessAbility Center
The AccessAbility Center is a gathering space designed for universal access and to foster conversation about ability, access, and difference. They provide opportunities for students to actively explore differing abilities, envision disability as part of diversity, and understand how difference can enrich the educational experience and lives of those in our campus community.
⭐ Academic Support Services
Many academic support services are available free for students, including the Writing Center, which offers one-on-one tutorials, and the McGraw Center for Teaching and Learning, which provides study halls and peer tutoring in select courses and organizes study skill and time management workshops.
For more information about the Writing Center explore their website.
For more information about the Writing Center explore their website.
McGraw Center for Teaching and Learning
The McGraw Center provides cost-free services and resources for students, faculty and instructors. For undergraduates, this center helps students prepare for and manage the Princeton academic workload through various programing and workshops through individual and group tutoring and learning consultations and strategies.
⭐ In the Nation's Service
In 2016, Princeton’s informal motto was revised to “In the Nation’s Service and the Service of Humanity,” reflecting the University's commitment to service.
Pace Center for Civic Engagement
The Pace Center for Civic Engagement is the hub for experiential service opportunities on and off campus, through such groups as the Student Volunteers Council and Community House. At the Pace Center, students learn how to serve and how to learn from service, in addition to having a positive impact on the individuals and communities with whom they work. Eighty-nine percent of students say service helps them feel like they belong at Princeton.