Campus Overview

DePauw University is a private liberal arts college of about 1,804 undergraduates where the small-school experience comes with an outsized emphasis on leadership, public speaking, and getting comfortable in front of a room. What sets DePauw apart from peer liberal arts colleges is its suite of competitive fellows programs — Management Fellows, Media Fellows, Science Research Fellows, Honor Scholars — that pair classroom learning with real-world immersion in a way most schools this size can't match. This is a school for students who want a rigorous liberal arts education but also want to leave with a résumé that reads like they did something with it — and who are comfortable in a tight-knit, Greek-heavy social scene in a very small Indiana town.


Location & Setting

Greencastle, Indiana is a small town of about 10,000 people, roughly 45 minutes west of Indianapolis on I-70. This is genuinely rural central Indiana — cornfields, a courthouse square, a few local restaurants, and not much else within walking distance. The town square has some charm (a coffee shop, a pizza place, a bookstore), but students aren't choosing DePauw for the nightlife options. Indianapolis is the escape valve for concerts, restaurants, and airport access, but you'll need a car or a friend with one to get there. The upside of the isolation is that campus becomes the center of everything — students are deeply invested in what happens on the quad because there's nowhere else to go.

Where Students Live & How They Get Around

DePauw is a residential campus through and through. Students are required to live on campus for at least three years, and most stay all four. First-years live in residence halls, and upperclassmen move into Greek houses, themed living communities, or university-owned housing. Having a car is helpful for grocery runs and Indianapolis trips but not necessary for daily life — campus is compact and walkable. Indiana winters are real (cold, gray, with stretches of snow from November through March), and the humidity in early fall can be oppressive. Students learn to layer and to appreciate the DePauw Nature Park — a 520-acre preserve adjacent to campus that's genuinely one of the school's best features for runners, hikers, and anyone who needs space to breathe.

Campus Culture & Community

Here's the thing you need to know about DePauw: Greek life is the dominant social force on campus. Roughly 70-75% of students join a fraternity or sorority, which is among the highest rates in the country. Greek houses anchor the weekend social scene — parties happen there, and the social calendar revolves around chapter events, formals, and philanthropy weeks. If you're comfortable in that world, you'll find a ready-made community from the first semester. If you're not, the experience is different — not impossible, but you'll need to be more intentional about finding your people through athletics, arts organizations, or themed living communities. The school has been working to diversify social life beyond Greek houses, but the culture shifts slowly. The Monon Bell game against Wabash College is the campus tradition that genuinely matters — it's one of the oldest rivalry games in college football, and the entire campus shows up. School spirit peaks sharply around that game and simmers the rest of the year.

Mission & Values

DePauw was founded by the Methodist Church in 1837, but religion plays almost no role in daily campus life today. There are no required theology courses, it's not a dry campus, and most students wouldn't describe the school as religious in any meaningful way. A chapel exists and services are available, but attendance is entirely optional and sparse. What does show up in the institutional DNA is an emphasis on civic engagement, ethical reasoning, and leadership development. The Prindle Institute for Ethics — a striking building set in the Nature Park — hosts speakers, debates, and programming that actually draws student interest. The Compton Center for Peace and Justice reflects a genuine commitment to service. Professors know students by name (the student-faculty ratio is about 9:1), and the advising relationships tend to be real, not performative. Students generally feel known here — it's hard to hide in a school this small.

Student Body

DePauw draws primarily from the Midwest — Indiana, Ohio, Illinois, and Michigan are heavily represented — with a meaningful contingent from the coasts and a growing international population. The stereotypical DePauw student has historically been white, upper-middle-class, and Greek-affiliated, and while the school has made real progress on diversifying (about 25-30% students of color), the preppy Midwestern energy remains the dominant vibe. Students tend to be friendly, social, and career-oriented rather than deeply countercultural or activist. Political leanings skew moderate, with pockets of progressive energy and conservative tradition coexisting without much friction. The fellows programs attract ambitious, Type-A students who are already thinking about internships and career trajectories as first-years.

Academics

DePauw's academic strength lies in its fellows programs and the access they provide. Management Fellows pairs with Midwestern businesses for semester-long internships. Media Fellows connects students with media organizations (DePauw has produced a disproportionate number of journalists and TV personalities — this is where the school punches above its weight). Science Research Fellows gives undergrads genuine lab time that would be reserved for graduate students at larger universities. The Honor Scholar program adds depth for students who want an intellectual community within the college. Beyond fellows, economics, political science, English, and the sciences are consistently strong. The School of Music is excellent and a legitimate draw — it offers conservatory-quality training within a liberal arts context, and music students are well integrated into campus life rather than siloed off. Class sizes average around 15-18 students, and the teaching is genuinely the priority — professors are accessible, hold real office hours, and remember your name. About 80% of students study abroad, which is among the highest rates nationally. The academic culture is serious but not cutthroat — students work hard, but collaboration is more common than competition.

Athletics & Campus Sports Culture

As a D3 school in the North Coast Athletic Conference, DePauw competes in 21 varsity sports. The NCAC is a strong D3 conference — games are competitive and well-coached. Athletes make up a significant portion of the student body (roughly 25-30%), and being a student-athlete is a respected identity on campus without being a separating one. Football and basketball draw the most attention, particularly around the Monon Bell rivalry, but other sports have loyal followings. The athletics facilities are solid for D3 — the Lilly Center was renovated in recent years. The D3 model works well here: athletes are fully integrated into academic and social life, and the time commitment allows for study abroad, internships, and Greek involvement alongside competition. Field hockey competes in the NCAC, which includes strong programs at Kenyon, Oberlin, and Denison.

What Else Should You Know

Financial aid is worth a serious conversation — DePauw's sticker price is high (north of $65,000 total cost), but the school meets a significant portion of demonstrated need and merit scholarships can be substantial. Ask direct questions about net cost. The Greencastle isolation is a feature or a bug depending on your personality — some students thrive in the bubble, others feel trapped by junior year. The Greek system can feel exclusionary during rush, even if things settle afterward; go in with eyes open about what that culture means for the first semester especially. The Nature Park is an underrated gem — 520 acres of trails, ravines, and woods that provide a genuine counterweight to the social intensity of a small campus. DePauw alumni are fiercely loyal and well-connected, particularly in Indianapolis, Chicago, and media industries nationally, which pays dividends for internships and first jobs.

Field Hockey

  • Head coach Olivia Shagam joined DePauw in 2022 after helping Centre College reach NCAA round of 16 in 2021.
  • Program ranked #72 nationally with 10-4 record; advanced to NCAC Semifinal in 2025 on upward trajectory.
  • Assistant coach Abby McGue earned SAA Second-Team honors as four-year starter at Concordia University Wisconsin.

About the School

  • Competitive fellows programs (Management, Media, Science Research, Honor Scholars) embed real-world immersion alongside classroom learning.
  • Required on-campus housing through junior year creates tight residential community; Greek life shapes weekend social scene.
  • Small town setting (10,000 people) means campus is social hub; Indianapolis 45 minutes away for bigger city access.

Field Hockey (2025)

Level
D3 Mid
FHC Rank
#72 of 163 (D3)
Massey Score
31.8
2025 Record
In-Division: 10-4
Conference
North Coast Athletic Conference
Trajectory
↑ Rising
Season Results
'25: L 1-3 vs Denison (NCAC Semifinal)
'24: L 0-4 vs Ohio Wesleyan (NCAC Semifinals)
'23: L 0-2 vs Denison (NCAC Semifinals)

Programs

Popular Majors

Social Sciences (17%)
Economics (64%)
• Political Science and Government (20%)
• Sociology (11%)
• Anthropology (5%)
Computer Science (12%)
Communication (11%)
Biology (11%)
English (8%)

My Programs

Environmental Science (0.6%)
Psychology (7.5%)
Biology (10.7%)
Sports Med / Kinesiology (10.7%)
French (2.6%)
Popular (top 25%) Available Not found

Study Abroad
77%

School Profile

Type
Private
Classification
Baccalaureate: Arts & Sciences

Student Body

Total
1,804
Undergrad
100%
Demographics
50% women
Student:Faculty
10:1

Academics

Admission Rate
54%
SAT Median
1,285
SAT Range
1,140-1,430
ACT Median
28
Retention
89%
Graduation
80%

Events & Clinics

Recruiting Events:
Disney Showcase 2026

Costs

Total Cost
$72,560
Tuition
$57,070
Room & Board
$14,850

Avg Net Price
$24,546
Net Price ($110k+)
$33,816

Financial Aid

Freshmen Getting Aid
99%

Merit Aid

Avg Merit Grant
$39,482
Freshmen Merit Only
43%

Need-Based Aid

Freshmen w/ Need
55%
Avg % Need Met
89%
% Need Fully Met
33%
Avg Aid Package
$53,003
Grants / Loans
$49,430 / $2,900

Debt at Graduation

Avg Debt
$24,106
Grads w/ Loans
82%
Source: CDS 2024

Location & Weather

Setting
Town (Town: Distant)
Nearest City
Indianapolis, IN (38 mi)
Major Metro
Cincinnati, OH (131 mi)

HighLow
January34°17°
April62°38°
July83°61°
October65°41°

Admissions

No admissions data available

Season History

Season Record GF/G GA/G GD SO OT Last Game
2025 12-5 2.9 1.6 +22 5 1 L 1-3 vs Denison (NCAC Semifinal)
2024 11-7 2.6 1.2 +24 8 2 L 0-4 vs Ohio Wesleyan (NCAC Semifinals)
2023 11-7 2.0 1.9 +1 6 1 L 0-2 vs Denison (NCAC Semifinals)
2022 13-6 2.4 0.7 +32 10 1 L 0-1 (2 OT) vs Ohio Wesleyan (NCAC Final)
2021 5-11 1.0 1.4 -7 4 2 L 0-1 vs Earlham
2019 10-9 1.7 2.2 -8 3 3 L 0-2 vs Denison (NCAC Semifinals)
2018 9-10 2.5 2.2 +5 4 2 L 0-1 vs Earlham
2017 11-8 2.3 1.8 +10 5 1 L 0-3 vs Denison (NCAC Semifinals)
2016 17-4 3.9 1.6 +48 3 3 L 1-2 (OT) vs Kenyon (NCAC Final)
2015 15-5 3.5 1.6 +38 4 6 L 1-5 vs Rhodes (NCAA First round)
Click any season to view full schedule

Coaching Staff

Name Position Contact Bio
Olivia Shagam Head Field Hockey Coach oliviashagam@depauw.edu View Bio
Abby Mcgue Assistant Field Hockey Coach abigailmcgue@depauw.edu View Bio

Roster Breakdown

24 players

Geographic Recruiting

US Out-of-State: 92% (22 players)
Illinois: 42% (10 players)
Missouri: 17% (4 players)

Position Breakdown

Forward: 3 (12.5%)
Forward/Midfielder: 6 (25.0%)
Midfielder: 1 (4.2%)
Midfielder/Defender: 8 (33.3%)
Defender: 4 (16.7%)
Goalkeeper: 2 (8.3%)

Roster Composition

Graduating '27: 3 players (12%)
Midfielder/Defender: 1
Defender: 2
Class of 2026: 7 (29%)
Class of 2028: 6 (25%)
Class of 2029: 8 (33%)

Full Roster (24 players)

# Name Position Year Height Hometown High School
1 Ella Mickey D Sr. 5-10 Lake Bluff, Ill. Lake Forest
2 Hannah Zaiser F Fr. 5-4 St. Louis, Mo. Parkway West
3 Hailey Nowak F/M Sr. 5-7 Oak Park, Ill. Oak Park & River Forest
4 Ellie Lochhead F So. 5-9 St. Louis, Mo. MICDS
5 Rosie Ondrla F/M Fr. 5-4 Oak Park, Ill. Oak Park and River Forest
6 Ella Morris M/D Sr. 5-7 New Albany, Ohio Columbus Academy
7 Ella Harms F/M So. 5-5 St. Louis, Mo. Kirkwood
8 Lauren McGauley D Jr. 5-5 Ballwin, Mo. Marquette
9 Helen Harpenau D So. 5-4 Novi, Mich. Novi
10 Sophie Flynn F So. 5-2 Hartland, Wis. Arrowhead Union
11 Charlotte Hood M/D Sr. 5-4 Rockport, Maine Camden Hills Regional
12 Anna Marks M/D Jr. 5-7 Evanston, Ill. Evanston Township
13 Jane Fishback M/D Fr. 5-8 Louisville, Ky, DuPont Manual
14 Sydney Commo M/D Fr. 5-4 Glen Ellyn, Ill. Glenbard West
15 Maggie Volpe M/D Sr. 5-5 Lake Forest, Ill. Lake Forest
16 Tiala Ortega F/M Sr. 5-3 River Forest, Ill. Oak Park and River Forest
17 Brooke Morgan M/D Fr. 5-6 Winnetka, Ill. Loyola Academy
18 Sophie Schirmacher F/M So. 5-8 Chicago, Ill. Latin School of Chicago
19 Ava Gallagher F/M Fr. 5-5 Oak Park, Ill. Oak Park and River Forest
20 Claire Dixon M/D Fr. 5-5 Louisville, Ky, DuPont Manual
21 Sally Leithauser D Jr. 5-6 Granville, Ohio Granville
24 Ashley Appleby M Sr. 5-4 Fairfield, Conn. Lauralton Hall
38 Olivia Streifel G So. 5-2 Huntington Beach, Calif. Marina
99 Tea Jerro G Fr. 5-8 Strongsville, Ohio Magnificat