Johns Hopkins is where you go when you want a world-class research university that still feels human-scaled. With 5,617 undergraduates on its Homewood campus, it's genuinely small for a school with this kind of global reputation — you'll have seminar-style classes and direct access to faculty who are leaders in their fields. The hook is the combination: the resources and name recognition of a major research institution, but the undergraduate experience of a place where professors know your name. Hopkins is for the student who's intellectually hungry, self-directed, and wants to be surrounded by people who care deeply about what they're studying — whether that's biomedical engineering, creative writing, or international relations.
Location & Setting Hopkins sits in the Charles Village neighborhood of north Baltimore, about three miles from the Inner Harbor. This is an urban campus — not a gated enclave, but a genuine part of a real city. The Homewood campus itself is a green, 140-acre quad anchored by red-brick Georgian buildings, and it feels like its own world once you're on it. But step off campus and you're in Baltimore — a city with world-class museums (the BMA is literally on campus, free), incredible food (crab cakes, obviously, but also a deep restaurant scene in neighborhoods like Hampden, Fells Point, and Federal Hill), and yes, real urban challenges including visible poverty and crime that students learn to navigate. Baltimore is not a college town — it's a mid-sized East Coast city, and that's part of the deal. DC is an hour south by car or MARC train, which matters for internships and weekend trips.
Where Students Live & How They Get Around Hopkins requires freshmen and sophomores to live on campus, and most juniors and seniors move to apartments in Charles Village or nearby Remington, where rents are reasonable by East Coast standards. About 50% of undergrads live on campus overall. The Homewood campus is very walkable — you can cross it in 10-15 minutes — and the free Blue Jay shuttle connects to the medical campus, Peabody Conservatory, and several neighborhoods. A car is helpful for exploring Baltimore but not necessary for daily life. Winters are mid-Atlantic standard: cold and gray from December through February, with occasional snow. Summers are hot and humid, but you'll mostly be gone by then. Fall and spring are genuinely pleasant, and outdoor culture picks up — students study on the Beach (the main quad lawn) when the weather cooperates.
Campus Culture & Community Let's be honest: Hopkins has historically had a reputation for being academically intense to the point of stress. The "grade deflation" era is largely behind it, but the culture still runs competitive, especially in pre-med tracks. That said, the social scene has evolved significantly. Greek life exists (about 25% of students participate) but doesn't dominate — it's one option among many. Students socialize in apartments, at bars in Charles Village, at cultural events, and through the 400+ student organizations. Spring Fair, a three-day music and arts festival on campus, is the biggest shared tradition and genuinely brings the campus together. Hopkins students tend to be passionate about their work but also surprisingly quirky — this is a place where you'll find a competitive Quidditch team and serious a cappella groups alongside future Nobel laureates. The culture is more "intense people who also know how to have fun" than "grind all day every day."
Mission & Values Hopkins was founded in 1876 as America's first research university, and that identity — knowledge exists to be applied, not just studied — still runs deep. The motto is *Veritas vos liberabit* (the truth shall set you free), and there's a genuine commitment to using knowledge to solve real problems. This shows up in strong community engagement programs, including the Center for Social Concern and robust tutoring/mentoring partnerships with Baltimore schools. Hopkins invests in the whole person more than its intense reputation suggests — the student-faculty ratio is 7:1, advising is accessible, and there's real infrastructure for mental health and wellbeing (partly because the school has been intentional about addressing its historical stress culture). Students generally feel known by their professors, less so by the institution's bureaucracy. The relationship with Baltimore is complicated and ongoing — the university is the city's largest employer and there's genuine town-gown tension alongside real partnership.
Student Body Hopkins draws nationally and internationally — about 90% of students come from outside Maryland, and international students make up roughly 15% of the undergraduate body. Students tend to be driven, intellectually curious, and pre-professionally minded (a lot of future doctors, researchers, and policy wonks). The vibe skews cerebral and earnest rather than preppy or party-oriented. Diversity has improved meaningfully in recent years — the student body is more racially and socioeconomically diverse than peer institutions, aided by a need-blind admissions policy and meeting 100% of demonstrated financial need. Politically, the campus leans liberal but isn't activist-dominated — you'll find engaged debate rather than uniform consensus.
Academics This is where Hopkins really separates itself. Biomedical engineering is the crown jewel — the #1-ranked BME program in the country, full stop. Pre-med is enormous and rigorous, with direct access to the Johns Hopkins Hospital (consistently ranked among the top hospitals in the world) for clinical exposure and research. But Hopkins is far more than a pre-med factory. The Krieger School of Arts and Sciences offers exceptional programs in international studies (the SAIS connection to DC is a pipeline), writing (the Writing Seminars program is one of the best undergraduate creative writing programs anywhere), neuroscience, public health, and the humanities. The Peabody Conservatory, a few miles away, allows cross-registration for serious musicians. Study abroad participation is solid at around 40%. Average class size is about 22, and many upper-level seminars have 10-15 students. The academic culture is collaborative in the humanities and social sciences, more competitive in the sciences — though even there, it's shifting. Professors are accessible and genuinely interested in teaching undergraduates, though some intro science courses are large and lecture-heavy. Undergraduate research opportunities are exceptional — over 80% of students do research before graduating, which is almost unheard of.
Athletics & Campus Sports Culture Here's what makes Hopkins unique athletically: it's D3 in the Centennial Conference for most sports, but lacrosse is D1 — and it's *the* lacrosse school. Men's lacrosse has 44 national championships (9 NCAA-era titles), and the program is woven into the university's identity. Lacrosse games at Homewood Field actually draw crowds and generate real school spirit. For everything else — and Hopkins fields 24 varsity sports — it's a more typical D3 experience. Student-athletes are integrated into campus life without the separation you see at D1 schools. You're a student first, and your teammates will be spread across every major. Club and intramural sports are popular, and the rec center (the Ralph S. O'Connor Recreation Center) is excellent. For a field hockey player, the Centennial Conference is competitive and well-run, and you'll be able to balance a serious athletic commitment with Hopkins's demanding academics — D3 makes that equation work.
What Else Should You Know Financial aid is strong — Hopkins meets 100% of demonstrated need and has been expanding aid significantly. The Bloomberg gift (the largest ever to a university at the time) specifically targeted making Hopkins accessible regardless of income. The name carries enormous weight in medicine, research, policy, and STEM fields — your degree will open doors. The campus can feel small socially — 5,600 undergrads means you'll see the same people regularly, which is either comforting or claustrophobic depending on your personality. Baltimore's food scene is underrated and affordable. The Homewood campus is genuinely beautiful in fall. And one practical note: Hopkins's academic calendar includes a January intersession (J-term), which is great for taking quirky one-credit courses, doing research intensives, or just exploring something outside your major.

| High | Low | |
|---|---|---|
| January | 42° | 27° |
| April | 66° | 45° |
| July | 86° | 69° |
| October | 66° | 48° |
| Talent/Ability | Important |
| Demonstrated Interest | Not Considered |
| Extracurriculars | Important |
| Interview | Not Considered |
| Character | Important |
| Season | Record | GF/G | GA/G | GD | SO | OT | Last Game |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 22-2 | 3.0 | 0.8 | +53 | 13 | 3 | L 1-2 (OT) vs Tufts (NCAA Final at Trinity) |
| 2024 | 19-4 | 3.2 | 0.8 | +55 | 10 | 2 | L 1-3 vs Middlebury (NCAA Quarterfinals) |
| 2023 | 21-2 | 2.8 | 0.6 | +50 | 12 | 2 | L 0-2 vs Middlebury (NCAA Final at CNU) |
| 2022 | 19-4 | 2.7 | 0.5 | +50 | 16 | 3 | L 0-1 (OT) vs Middlebury (NCAA Final at Rowan) |
| 2021 | 22-1 | 3.5 | 0.7 | +64 | 14 | 0 | L 1-4 vs Middlebury (NCAA Final at Trinity) |
| 2019 | 19-3 | 3.5 | 1.3 | +48 | 4 | 2 | L 1-3 vs Franklin & Marshall (NCAA Semifinals at Spooky Nook) |
| 2018 | 19-3 | 2.6 | 1.0 | +36 | 10 | 4 | L 1-3 vs Tufts (NCAA Semifinals at the Nook) |
| 2017 | 14-5 | 2.4 | 1.1 | +24 | 8 | 2 | L 1-2 vs Franklin & Marshall (Centennial Final) |
| 2016 | 7-10 | 2.3 | 2.8 | -8 | 3 | 2 | L 1-5 vs Gettysburg |
| 2015 | 6-11 | 2.7 | 2.7 | 0 | 3 | 3 | L 4-5 vs Gettysburg |
| Name | Position | Contact | Bio |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jane Wells | Head Coach | jane.wells@jhu.edu | View Bio |
| James Albanese | Associate Head Coach | jalbane5@jhu.edu | View Bio |
| Britt Walker Mcneil | Assistant Coach | — | View Bio |
| Claire Trilling | Assistant Coach | — | View Bio |
| Kristen O Rourke | Assistant Coach | — | View Bio |
| # | Name | Position | Year | Height | Hometown | High School |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Eliza Vander | Mid. | Jr. | 5-5 | Villanova, PA | Agnes Irwin School |
| 2 | Emi Hakutani | Def. | Jr. | 5-2 | Potomac, MD | Holton-Arms School |
| 3 | Catherine D'Arcy | Mid. | Fr. | 5-9 | Larchmont, NY | Mamaroneck |
| 4 | Ava Zimmerman | For. | Fr. | 5-10 | Millersville, MD | Severna Park |
| 5 | Sophia Albano | For. | Jr. | 5-4 | Pittsford, NY | Pittsford Mendon |
| 6 | Sienna Noh | For. | Fr. | 5-7 | Lansdale, PA | Mount Saint Joseph |
| 7 | An Tran | Mid. | So. | 5-0 | Ashburn, VA | Independence |
| 8 | Rosie Rockell | Def. | So. | 5-4 | Moorestown, NJ | Moorestown |
| 9 | Caeli Robinson | Def. | Jr. | 5-6 | Hong Kong, MD | The Hill School |
| 10 | Megan Chang | For. | Sr. | 5-1 | Houston, TX | St. John's School |
| 11 | Grace Nockolds | For. | Gr. | 5-2 | Houston, TX | St. John's School |
| 12 | Julia Widen | For. | So. | 5-7 | Bronxville, NY | The Hotchkiss School |
| 13 | Evie Hamm | Mid. | Fr. | 5-7 | Louisville, KY | Sacred Heart |
| 14 | Josephine Rich | Def. | Fr. | 5-6 | Shaker Heights, OH | Shaker Heights |
| 15 | Jenna Halpin | Mid. | Gr. | 5-4 | Locust Valley, NY | Locust Valley |
| 16 | Kaitlin Coward | Mid. | So. | 5-3 | Burke, VA | Robinson |
| 17 | Ada Farmer | Mid./Def. | So. | 5-4 | Pfafftown, NC | R.J. Reynolds |
| 18 | Zoey Bennett | Mid. | Sr. | 5-6 | New Canaan, CT | New Canaan |
| 19 | Mia Edmonds | Def. | Sr. | 5-6 | Hanover, NH | Hanover |
| 20 | Joyce Tao | Def. | Fr. | 5-7 | Hummelstown, PA | Hershey |
| 21 | Leah Froemming | Def. | So. | 5-8 | San Jose, CA | Leigh |
| 22 | Cameron Thiesing | Def. | Sr. | 5-2 | Louisville, KY | Dupont Manual |
| 23 | Eve Fowler | Def. | Fr. | 5-6 | Timonium, MD | Dulaney |
| 25 | Grace Waldeck | For. | Sr. | 5-7 | Concord, MA | Concord Carlisle |
| 26 | Sophia Builione | For. | So. | 5-4 | Short Hills, NJ | Kent Place School |
| 27 | Sarah Chilton | Mid. | Fr. | 5-6 | Henrico, VA | Douglas Freeman |
| 34 | Zoya Iyer | For. | So. | 5-2 | Dallas, TX | Greenhill School |
| 35 | Deedee Golla | Mid. | So. | 5-6 | Oak Park, IL | Oak Park & River Forest |
| 77 | Jessica Lapidus | GK | So. | 5-6 | Denver, CO | Colorado Academy |
| 99 | Aubrey Kilgore | GK | Jr. | 5-8 | Schwenksville, PA | Perkiomen Valley |