Campus Overview

Hood College is a small, private liberal arts school in Frederick, Maryland, where 1,202 undergraduates get the kind of individual attention that's hard to fake — a student-faculty ratio around 10:1 means professors know your name, your work, and probably your field hockey schedule. Originally founded in 1893 as a women's college, Hood went coeducational in 2003, and that history still shapes the culture: there's an undercurrent of empowerment and close community that feels distinct from schools that were always coed. This is a place for students who want rigorous academics without the anonymity — someone who'd rather be a big fish in a small, supportive pond than fight for oxygen at a larger institution.


Location & Setting

Frederick is one of those mid-Atlantic cities that punches above its weight. It's a genuine small city (population around 80,000) with a walkable historic downtown — think independent restaurants, coffee shops, antique stores, and a creek running through the center of town. Hood's campus sits in a residential neighborhood on the north side, about a 10-minute walk from the downtown strip along Carroll Creek. You're not isolated in a cornfield, but you're also not swallowed by a metro area. Washington, D.C. is about an hour south on I-270; Baltimore is roughly the same distance east. The Catoctin Mountains and Appalachian Trail are 20–30 minutes west, which matters if you like hiking and outdoor recreation. Frederick has grown significantly in recent years as a D.C. commuter corridor, which means there's more going on than you'd expect — farmers markets, a thriving local food scene, live music, and seasonal festivals. It feels like a college town even though Hood isn't the only reason the town exists.

Where Students Live & How They Get Around

Hood is a residential campus, and most students live on campus for all four years. First-years are required to live in residence halls, and upperclass housing includes traditional dorms and some apartment-style options. The campus itself is compact and walkable — you can cross it in under 10 minutes. A car is helpful for grocery runs, weekend trips to D.C. or Baltimore, and getting into the mountains, but it's not essential for daily life. Frederick's downtown is an easy walk. Weather-wise, you get four real seasons: humid summers, colorful falls, cold (but not brutal) winters with occasional snow, and pleasant springs. The mid-Atlantic climate means field hockey season starts hot and ends cold, which is standard for the region.

Campus Culture & Community

There is no Greek life at Hood, full stop — and that shapes the social scene more than almost anything else. Without sororities and fraternities structuring the weekend, social life revolves around campus events, student organizations, house parties in Frederick, and close-knit friend groups. Athletic teams function as a primary social unit, especially at a school this size where a significant percentage of students play a sport. The campus can feel quiet on weekends — some students head home or to D.C./Baltimore — which is a common reality at small schools in commuter-accessible locations. Students who stay tend to form tight bonds. Hood has a reputation for being welcoming and inclusive, and the small size means cliques are harder to maintain when you see everyone in the dining hall. Traditions include events like the annual Christmas Candlelight Service and various cultural programming, though school spirit is more of a warm undercurrent than a dominant force.

Mission & Values

Hood was affiliated with the United Church of Christ historically, but religion plays essentially no role in daily campus life today. There are no required theology courses, it's not a dry campus, and the culture is functionally secular. What does come through is a genuine commitment to developing students as whole people — the school emphasizes civic engagement, community service, and ethical leadership alongside academics. Hood's small size means the "you won't be a number" promise actually holds. Advisors, professors, and staff tend to know students individually. There's a mentoring culture, particularly in the sciences, where undergraduates work alongside faculty on research starting as early as sophomore year. Students generally report feeling supported and seen, which matters more than it sounds when you're also managing a varsity sport.

Student Body

Hood draws primarily from Maryland and the surrounding mid-Atlantic states — Pennsylvania, Virginia, New Jersey, and D.C. are well-represented. There's some geographic diversity beyond that, but this is largely a regional school. The student body is more diverse than many small liberal arts colleges in the region, with a meaningful percentage of first-generation college students. The vibe is more earnest and grounded than preppy — students tend to be here because they wanted small and personal, not because Hood was their safety school. Politically, the campus leans moderate to liberal, though Frederick itself is more mixed. With the relatively small enrollment, you'll know a lot of faces quickly, which is either comforting or claustrophobic depending on your personality.

Academics

Hood's standout programs are in the sciences — biology, chemistry, biochemistry, and environmental science are genuinely strong, with dedicated lab facilities and research opportunities that rival what you'd find at larger institutions. The school has produced a notable number of students who go on to medical school and graduate programs in STEM, partly because the faculty-to-student ratio means you're actually doing research, not just watching. Education has deep roots here from the women's college era and remains a solid program. The humanities and social sciences are competent but less distinctive — English, psychology, and history have dedicated faculty, and classes are small enough (average around 14 students) that seminar-style discussion is the norm rather than the exception. Hood has a core curriculum with distribution requirements across disciplines, so you'll take courses outside your major. Study abroad participation exists but isn't as robust as at wealthier liberal arts peers. The academic culture is collaborative rather than cutthroat — students study together, and professors hold genuine office hours rather than performative ones. Faculty are teaching-focused; you're not competing with graduate students for attention.

Athletics & Campus Sports Culture

Hood competes in Division III as part of the Middle Atlantic Conference Commonwealth, fielding around 25 varsity sports. D3 means no athletic scholarships, but it also means student-athletes are students first — you'll have a real academic experience alongside your sport. Athletes make up a large percentage of the student body at a school this size, so athletic culture is woven into campus life even if there aren't packed stadiums. Field hockey has been part of Hood's athletic tradition, and the MAC Commonwealth is a competitive D3 conference. The facilities are functional rather than flashy — you're not getting a Power Five experience, but for D3, they're solid. The coaching staff tends to be accessible and invested, which mirrors the broader institutional culture. Being a student-athlete here means your teammates will likely be your core social group, and your coaches will probably know your academic schedule.

What Else Should You Know

Hood's financial aid is worth investigating — the sticker price is typical for a private college, but the discount rate is high, and most students receive significant institutional aid. Don't let the published tuition scare you off without running the net price calculator. The college has gone through enrollment challenges common to small privates in the region, and you may notice some deferred maintenance or hear about budget tightening — this is honest context, not a dealbreaker, but worth asking about during a visit. Hood also has a growing graduate program, which means some campus resources serve both populations. The biggest thing a well-informed friend would tell you: visit Frederick. The town is a genuine asset, and the combination of a small, personal college campus with a real, interesting small city is harder to find than you'd think. If you're someone who thrives on close relationships with professors and teammates, wants solid science preparation, and doesn't need a big-school social scene, Hood deserves a serious look.

Field Hockey

  • Head coach Carley Kessler rebuilt the program in five seasons: 12 wins in first two years, program-record nine-game streak, two consecutive nine-win seasons.
  • 2025 MAC Commonwealth Semifinal appearance; ranked #87 of 163 D3 programs with rising trajectory and 50% out-of-state roster.
  • Assistant coach Jady van Gils played for Netherlands' AMHC Amersfoort and East Stroudsburg's 2022 DII National Championship team.

About the School

  • Founded 1893 as women's college, coeducational since 2003—culture of empowerment and mentorship still shapes the community.
  • Frederick's walkable downtown is 10 minutes away; D.C. one hour south; Catoctin Mountains and Appalachian Trail 20–30 minutes west.

Field Hockey (2025)

Level
D3 Mid
FHC Rank
#87 of 163 (D3)
Massey Score
28.9 *
Conference
Middle Atlantic Conference Commonwealth
Coach
Carley Kessler
Trajectory
↑ Rising
Season Results
'25: L 1-4 vs Stevenson (MAC Commonwealth Semifinal)
'24: L 0-6 vs York
'23: L 0-1 vs Stevenson

Programs

Popular Majors

Business (15%)
Business Administration, Management and Operations (90%)
• Accounting and Related Services (10%)
Biology (10%)
Psychology (9%)
Education (8%)
Special Education and Teaching (69%)
• Teacher Education and Professional Development, Specific Levels and Methods (31%)
Homeland Security (8%)

My Programs

Environmental Science (2.7%)
Psychology (8.8%)
Biology (10.4%)
Sports Med / Kinesiology (6.5%)
French (2.3%)
Popular (top 25%) Available Not found

School Profile

Type
Private
Classification
Master's: Larger Programs

Student Body

Total
2,071
Undergrad
58%
Demographics
64% women
Student:Faculty
11:1

Academics

Admission Rate
78%
Retention
80%
Graduation
55%

Events & Clinics

Recruiting Events:
Disney Showcase 2026

Costs

Total Cost
$59,174
Tuition
$45,870
Room & Board
$14,250

Avg Net Price
$23,707
Net Price ($110k+)
$27,254

Financial Aid

Avg Aid ($110k+)
~$31,920
Pell Recipients
36%
Take Loans
64%
Median Debt at Grad
$25,000
Source: Scorecard

Location & Weather

Setting
City (City: Small)
Nearest City
Washington, DC (41 mi)

HighLow
January43°26°
April69°45°
July89°68°
October69°47°

Admissions

No admissions data available

Season History

Season Record GF/G GA/G GD SO OT Last Game
2025 8-11 1.8 2.4 -10 3 5 L 1-4 vs Stevenson (MAC Commonwealth Semifinal)
2024 9-9 1.8 2.1 -4 5 0 L 0-6 vs York
2023 9-9 1.6 1.8 -5 5 2 L 0-1 vs Stevenson
2022 6-12 2.3 2.6 -4 5 0 W 4-0 vs Southern Virginia
2021 6-12 1.4 3.2 -33 3 2 W 3-2 (3 OT) vs Sweet Briar
2019 1-18 0.2 5.1 -93 0 1 L 0-12 vs Messiah
2018 1-17 0.2 5.8 -101 1 1 L 1-2 vs Neumann
2017 2-15 0.7 5.1 -74 1 0 L 0-3 vs Stevenson
2016 3-13 1.1 4.2 -50 3 1 L 0-12 vs Messiah
2015 0-16 0.3 5.3 -80 0 0 L 0-7 vs Messiah
Click any season to view full schedule

Coaching Staff

Name Position Contact Bio
Carley Kessler Head Coach ckessler@hood.edu View Bio
Jady Van Gils Assistant Coach jmv7@hood.edu View Bio
Jen Donahue Assistant Coach View Bio
Kindal Davis Student Manager View Bio
Emma Massey Student Manager View Bio

Roster Breakdown

22 players

Geographic Recruiting

In-State: 50% (11 players)
US Out-of-State: 50% (11 players)
Maryland: 50% (11 players)
New Jersey: 14% (3 players)

Position Breakdown

Forward: 3 (13.6%)
Forward/Midfielder: 4 (18.2%)
Midfielder: 5 (22.7%)
Midfielder/Defender: 4 (18.2%)
Defender: 4 (18.2%)
Goalkeeper: 2 (9.1%)

Roster Composition

Graduating '27: 3 players (14%)
Forward/Midfielder: 1
Defender: 2
Class of 2026: 7 (32%)
Class of 2028: 4 (18%)
Class of 2029: 8 (36%)

Full Roster (22 players)

# Name Position Year Height Hometown High School
1 Sydney Fleming M Fy. 5-7 Fredericksburg, Va. Courtland
2 Bianca Scally M So. 5-1 Thousand Oaks, Calif. Thousand Oaks
5 Morgan Hackett F Sr. 5-5 Hampstead, Md. Hereford
6 Lillie Kodrin F/M Jr. 5-4 Ijamsville, Md. Oakdale
7 Lindsay DeLauder F So. 5-5 Frederick, Md. Frederick
9 Grace de Wit F Fy. 5-6 Elkridge, Md. Long Reach High School
10 Abby Chiavetta D/M Sr. 4-11 San Jose, Calif. Leland
11 Natalie Badour D Jr. 5-2 New Freedom, Pa. Susquehannock
12 Madeline Moreno D Jr. 5-8 Mansfield, N.J. Warren Hills Regional
14 Hayden Avery F/M Fy. 5-3 Greenwood, Del. Woodbridge
15 Emma Numme D/M So. 5-6 Shrub Oak, NY Lakeland
16 Kylie Roessler M Sr. 5-5 Tewksbury, N.J. Vorhees
17 Elizabeth Buohl D Sr. 5-4 Middletown, Md. Middletown
18 Becca Medina M/D Fy. 5-6 Spotsylvania, Va. Fredericksburg Christian
21 Laura Tatman D/M Sr. 4-11 Bridgeville, Del. Woodbridge
22 Ava Snelsire M/F Fy. 5-9 Berlin, Md. Stephen Decatur
23 Ellie Dainton M So. 5-2 Mays Landing, NJ. Saint Joseph Academy
24 Kate Haufe F/M Sr. 5-8 Severna Park, Md. Severna Park
25 Nora Bachtel M Fy. 5-5 Westminster, Md. Francis Scott Key
30 Shyann Carlson D Fy. 5-1 Glen Burnie Md., MD North County
65 Grace Guy GK Sr. 5-2 Mechanicsville, Md. Chopticon
68 Allie Wallin GK Fy. - Frederick, Md. Tuscarora