Campus Overview

Delaware Valley University is a small private school of about 1,644 undergraduates that runs on a simple premise: learning by doing, with dirt under your fingernails. Founded in 1896 as the National Farm School, DelVal has evolved into a full university but never abandoned its roots — there's a working 600-acre farm on campus, and the hands-on, applied ethos extends well beyond agriculture into sciences, business, and criminal justice. This is a school for students who'd rather be in a lab, a barn, or a field than a lecture hall — and who want a tight-knit community where professors know them by name.


Location & Setting

Doylestown is the county seat of Bucks County, about 30 miles north of Philadelphia — close enough to feel connected, far enough to feel like its own place. The town itself is genuinely charming, with a walkable downtown of independent restaurants, coffee shops, and the Michener and Mercer museums. It's affluent suburban Bucks County, so it's safe and well-maintained but not exactly a college town buzzing with student nightlife. Campus sits on the edge of town with a distinctly rural feel — rolling farmland, open fields, barns, and greenhouses mix with academic buildings. Step off the academic quad in one direction and you're in downtown Doylestown; step off in another and you're looking at cattle. That duality is DelVal in a nutshell.

Where Students Live & How They Get Around

DelVal is primarily residential for underclassmen, with most freshmen and sophomores living on campus in residence halls. Upperclassmen often move into apartments or houses in the surrounding area. A car becomes genuinely useful by junior year — Doylestown has SEPTA regional rail service to Philadelphia, but bus routes are limited and suburban Bucks County isn't designed for life without a car. Campus itself is walkable, though spread out enough that you'll log some steps getting from the science buildings to the farm complex. Winters in southeastern Pennsylvania are real but manageable — cold and occasionally snowy from December through February, with beautiful falls and warm, humid summers. The outdoor culture leans practical rather than recreational; students are outside because they're working with animals or crops, not because they're heading to a hiking trail (though Nockamixon State Park and the Delaware Canal towpath aren't far).

Campus Culture & Community

The social scene is small-school intimate. With under 2,000 undergrads, anonymity isn't really an option — you'll recognize most faces within a semester. There's no Greek life, which means the social fabric relies on clubs, athletics, and shared interests rather than houses and rush. Weekends are quieter than at larger schools; some students head home (the regional draw means many are within a couple hours' drive), while those who stay hang out in friend groups, attend campus events, or head into Doylestown or toward Philadelphia. The annual A-Day (Agriculture Day) is the signature campus tradition — a spring event where the farm opens up, student organizations showcase their work, and the whole community comes together. It's corny in the best way and genuinely beloved. The culture skews collaborative and unpretentious. Students bond over shared lab sections, barn shifts, and the general experience of going to a school where you might walk past goats on your way to chemistry.

Mission & Values

DelVal's institutional identity is built around experiential learning, formalized through its "Experience360" requirement — every student completes hands-on learning experiences, whether that's a research project, internship, co-op, or fieldwork. This isn't a checkbox; it's woven into the curriculum from early on, and it means students graduate with genuine professional experience, not just coursework. The school has a practical, career-oriented ethos — the goal is to prepare you to do something, not just to know things. There's a real sense of mentorship; with a student-faculty ratio around 12:1, professors are accessible and invested. Students generally feel known and supported as individuals, which is one of the strongest selling points for students coming from environments where they don't want to be a number.

Student Body

DelVal draws heavily from the mid-Atlantic — lots of students from eastern Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and the greater Philadelphia region. The typical student is practical-minded, often from a suburban or rural background, and chose DelVal because of a specific program rather than for prestige or social scene. There's a strong contingent of students who grew up around animals or agriculture, but the student body has diversified as the university has added programs. The vibe is more Carhartt than Vineyard Vines — students tend to be straightforward, hardworking, and not particularly image-conscious. Politically and culturally, it skews moderate to conservative relative to many northeastern colleges, though it's not overtly political. Diversity has been a growth area; the student body is still predominantly white, and students from urban or more diverse backgrounds may notice the homogeneity.

Academics

The standout programs are in agriculture and animal science — this is where DelVal has genuine national-level reputation. Equine science and management, dairy science, agribusiness, and food science are all distinctive strengths that you won't find at most small universities. The school has its own herds, flocks, and equestrian facilities, so students in these programs get hands-on experience that's hard to replicate elsewhere. Beyond the agricultural core, biology and chemistry are solid (many students are pre-vet, and DelVal has strong veterinary school placement rates), and the criminal justice and business programs have grown. The humanities and liberal arts are present but not the draw — if you want a deep English or philosophy curriculum, this isn't the place. Class sizes are small, typically 15-25 students, and the teaching is hands-on and discussion-oriented. Faculty are teaching-focused; you won't find big-name researchers, but you will find professors who answer emails at 9 PM and adjust their approach when students are struggling. The Experience360 program means academic advising is relatively proactive, since someone is helping you plan your experiential components alongside your coursework.

Athletics & Campus Sports Culture

DelVal competes in Division III in the Middle Atlantic Conference Freedom, fielding around 25 varsity sports. Athletics are a meaningful part of campus life — with a small student body, a high percentage of students are varsity athletes, which means sports are visible and athletes are integrated into the broader community rather than existing in a separate bubble. Football, field hockey, and equestrian tend to get solid support. Gameday isn't a massive cultural event the way it is at D1 schools, but there's genuine school spirit, and athletes are respected. The D3 model means student-athletes are students first — you'll be balancing practice with barn shifts and lab reports, and the expectation is that you can handle both.

What Else Should You Know

The working farm is not a gimmick — it's central to campus identity and daily life, even for non-agriculture students. If you have allergies to animals or hay, factor that in seriously. Financial aid is worth investigating carefully; DelVal's sticker price is moderate for a private university, and they work to make packages competitive, but the endowment is modest so aid can vary. The university's transition from "Delaware Valley College" to "Delaware Valley University" in 2015 reflected real program growth, but some alumni and locals still call it "DelVal College." For a prospective field hockey player specifically, the MAC Freedom conference is competitive D3 — you'll face schools like DeSales, Misericordia, and Eastern — and the small-school environment means you'll likely see playing time and have a genuine relationship with your coaching staff. If you want a school where your education is tangible, your professors know your goals, and you don't mind that the campus smells like a farm on certain days, DelVal is worth a serious look.

Field Hockey

  • Hannah Armstrong hired as tenth head coach January 2025; built team culture at Albright with two all-conference players.
  • Program rising in MAC Freedom; 50% out-of-state roster; ACR 92.7 rating shows competitive trajectory.

About the School

  • 600-acre working farm on campus; hands-on learning across agriculture, sciences, business, criminal justice.
  • Doylestown location: 30 miles north of Philadelphia with walkable downtown; rural-suburban campus duality.

Field Hockey (2025)

Level
D3 Mid
FHC Rank
#107 of 163 (D3)
Massey Score
23.8 *
Conference
Middle Atlantic Conference Freedom
Trajectory
↑ Rising
Season Results
'25: L 0-4 vs Misericordia
'24: L 0-4 vs Lebanon Valley
'23: L 1-3 vs Arcadia

Programs

Popular Majors

Agriculture (38%)
Natural Resources (16%) (D3 avg: 9%)
Business (14%)
Biology (13%)
Psychology (6%)

My Programs

Environmental Science (15.8%)
Psychology (6.2%)
Biology (12.7%)
Sports Med / Kinesiology
French
Popular (top 25%) Available Not found

School Profile

Type
Private
Classification
Master's: Small Programs

Student Body

Total
2,074
Undergrad
79%
Demographics
62% women
Student:Faculty
14:1

Academics

Admission Rate
92%
SAT Median
1,170
SAT Range
1,070-1,270
ACT Median
25
Retention
66%
Graduation
52%

Events & Clinics

No recruiting events listed

Costs

Total Cost
$58,661
Tuition
$43,300
Room & Board
$14,750

Avg Net Price
$27,243
Net Price ($110k+)
$31,988

Financial Aid

Avg Aid ($110k+)
~$26,673
Pell Recipients
29%
Take Loans
74%
Median Debt at Grad
$25,000
Source: Scorecard

Location & Weather

Setting
Suburban (Suburb: Large)
Nearest City
Philadelphia, PA (24 mi)
Major Metro
New York, NY (67 mi)

HighLow
January39°23°
April63°41°
July86°65°
October65°45°

Admissions

No admissions data available

Season History

Season Record GF/G GA/G GD SO OT Last Game
2025 8-9 1.3 1.8 -9 4 2 L 0-4 vs Misericordia
2024 8-12 1.5 2.5 -19 3 3 L 0-4 vs Lebanon Valley
2023 5-11 1.2 3.5 -37 1 0 L 1-3 vs Arcadia
2022 7-10 1.3 2.4 -18 4 1 L 0-5 vs Desales
2021 2-15 1.2 4.9 -63 1 1 L 0-7 vs Arcadia
2019 5-12 2.0 2.4 -7 2 3 L 2-3 vs Eastern
2018 5-11 1.6 2.4 -13 1 2 L 1-2 vs Eastern
2017 6-11 1.9 2.5 -10 4 2 L 1-4 vs Eastern
2016 6-12 1.2 2.3 -20 4 1 L 1-4 vs Eastern
2015 6-12 1.7 3.4 -31 1 1 L 1-3 vs Gwynedd-Mercy
Click any season to view full schedule

Coaching Staff

Name Position Contact Bio
Hannah Armstrong Head Field Hockey Coach Hannah.Armstrong@delval.edu View Bio
Mikayla Demichele Assistant Coach View Bio

Roster Breakdown

22 players

Geographic Recruiting

In-State: 50% (11 players)
US Out-of-State: 50% (11 players)
Pennsylvania: 50% (11 players)
New Jersey: 27% (6 players)

Position Breakdown

Forward: 11 (50.0%)
Midfielder: 8 (36.4%)
Goalkeeper: 3 (13.6%)

Roster Composition

Graduating '27: 5 players (23%)
Forward: 3
Midfielder: 1
Goalkeeper: 1
Class of 2026: 5 (23%)
Class of 2028: 4 (18%)
Class of 2029: 8 (36%)

Full Roster (22 players)

# Name Position Year Height Hometown High School
1 Devon Frantz MID/FWD Fr. 5-3 Hamburg, Pa. Hamburg Area
2 Kaylee Hartung MID Sr. 5-3 Glassboro, N.J. Gloucester County Institute of Technology
3 Alex Graffius FWD So. 5-4 Brigantine, N.J. Holy Spirit
4 Kenzie Boyd MID Sr. 5-2 Lurgan, Pa. Chambersburg Area
5 Olivia Rexrode DEF/MID Sr. 5-6 Harrington, Del. Caravel, Academy
7 Emma Schueller MID So. 5-4 Bernville, Pa. Tulpehocken
8 Brynne Miller MID Sr. 5-5 Blue Bell, Pa. Wissahickon
9 Sophia Latour DEF Fr. 5-6 Bantam, Conn. Lakeview
10 Danielle Geyer MID So. 5-0 Myerstown, Pa. Eastern Lebanon County
12 Maggie Fijal FWD Fr. 5-7 Berwick, Pa. Central Columbia
13 Jillian Collins DEF Jr. 5-2 Selbyville, Del. Indian River
14 Kaylee Hudson FWD Jr. 5-3 Wilmington, Del. Cab Calloway School of Arts
16 Isabella Davis FWD Jr. 5-10 Sicklerville, N.J. Saint Joseph Academy
17 Natalie Ott DEF Fr. 5-7 Elizabethtown, Pa. Elizabethtown
20 Lillian Plank DEF So. 5-3 Newport, Pa. Newport
21 Juliana Burns DEF Fr. 5-10 Middletown, Del. Odessa
23 Kylee McCracken DEF Fr. 5-3 Byram, N.J. Lenape Valley Regional
24 Ava Smadi MID/FWD Jr. 5-3 Califon, N.J. Voorhees
25 Rebecca Batz DEF Fr. 5-10 Kutztown, Pa. Kutztown Area
31 Shaelynn Castanaga-Acerra GK Jr. 5-6 Vernon, N.J. Vernon Township
44 Brooke Golbeski GK Gr. 5-5 Doylestown, Pa. Central Bucks West
51 Gracyn Shutt GK Fr. 5-10 Newport, Pa. Newport