Campus Overview

Marian University is a small Catholic university of about 1,050 undergraduates in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, where the defining experience is being genuinely known — by professors, coaches, and classmates — in a way that larger schools simply can't replicate. Founded in 1936 by the Congregation of Sisters of St. Agnes, Marian has a quiet, service-oriented identity that shapes campus life without overwhelming it. This is a school for students who want a tight-knit community, who don't need a big-campus social scene, and who value personal attention over prestige — particularly those drawn to nursing, education, or the health sciences.


Location & Setting

Fond du Lac is a small city of about 43,000 at the southern tip of Lake Winnebago, roughly 60 miles northwest of Milwaukee and 90 miles north of Madison. It's not a college town in the classic sense — Marian doesn't dominate the city the way a flagship dominates a small town — but it's not rural either. The campus sits on the south side of Fond du Lac on roughly 80 acres of well-maintained grounds. Stepping off campus, you're in a working Midwestern city with a modest downtown, chain restaurants along the main corridors, and access to Lake Winnebago for fishing, boating, and ice fishing in winter. It's a genuine small-city setting: safe, quiet, and unassuming. Students who need urban energy will feel the distance from Milwaukee, but those who appreciate a slower pace and easy access to outdoor recreation on the lake will find it comfortable.

Where Students Live & How They Get Around

Marian is a residential campus, though its small size means a meaningful number of upperclassmen move to apartments in town where rent is cheap. Freshmen are required to live on campus, and the residence halls are small enough that you know most people in your building quickly. A car is genuinely useful here — not strictly necessary for daily campus life, which is walkable, but important for weekend trips, grocery runs, and getting to Milwaukee or Appleton for anything the immediate area doesn't offer. Wisconsin winters are real: expect snow from November through March, wind off Lake Winnebago, and temperatures that regularly dip below zero. Students adapt — you layer up, you own good boots, and the cold becomes part of the shared experience rather than a deterrent.

Campus Culture & Community

There is no Greek life at Marian, and the social scene is shaped entirely by that absence. Friday and Saturday nights are lower-key: small gatherings in dorm rooms or apartments, campus events organized by student life, trips to local restaurants, or heading to Appleton or Oshkosh for more options. Athletics and campus organizations provide the primary social structure. With only about a thousand undergraduates, the community is intimate to the point where anonymity is basically impossible — you'll see the same faces in class, the dining hall, and the gym. That closeness is either the best thing about Marian or the hardest, depending on your personality. Students generally describe the culture as warm and welcoming, if sometimes a little insular. Campus events like Homecoming and spring activities generate genuine participation, though "school spirit" here means showing up for friends on the field rather than stadium-sized energy.

Mission & Values

Marian's Catholic identity is present but not heavy-handed. The Congregation of Sisters of St. Agnes founded the school, and that heritage shows up in a genuine emphasis on service, community, and developing the whole person. There are theology course requirements in the core curriculum, and campus ministry is active, but students who aren't Catholic or aren't religious generally report feeling comfortable rather than pressured. Mass is available but not expected. The campus is not dry. The service ethic is probably the most tangible expression of the mission — community service is woven into many courses and campus organizations, and students tend to take it seriously rather than treating it as a checkbox. Faculty and staff invest in knowing students individually, and the "whole person" language that many schools use as marketing actually describes the day-to-day experience here. Students frequently cite feeling supported and personally encouraged by advisors, professors, and coaches.

Student Body

Marian draws primarily from Wisconsin and the upper Midwest. Many students come from small towns and mid-sized cities across the state, and the school has a meaningful population of first-generation college students. The vibe leans practical and grounded rather than preppy or activist — students are here to get a degree that leads to a career, and nursing and education students set much of the campus tone. Diversity is limited; the student body is predominantly white, reflecting both the region and the school's size. International students are present but few. Politically and culturally, the campus skews moderate to conservative, consistent with its location and Catholic identity, though it's not politically charged in either direction.

Academics

Nursing is Marian's flagship program and the reason many students choose the school. The BSN program has strong regional placement rates, and nursing students form a visible and cohesive cohort on campus. Education is the other standout — Marian has a long history of producing teachers for Wisconsin schools, and the program benefits from strong local partnerships for student teaching placements. Beyond those anchors, Marian offers programs in business, criminal justice, biology, social work, and the liberal arts. Class sizes are small, often 15-20 students, and the student-to-faculty ratio hovers around 12:1. Professors are teaching-focused and genuinely accessible — office hours aren't performative, and faculty regularly reach out to students who are struggling. The academic culture is collaborative rather than cutthroat; students study together and help each other. Research opportunities exist but are modest compared to larger institutions. For students who thrive with personal attention and structured support, the academic environment is a real strength. For those who want a huge menu of majors, extensive research labs, or a large study abroad infrastructure, Marian's size is a constraint.

Athletics & Campus Sports Culture

Marian competes in Division III and fields around 20 varsity sports, with field hockey competing in the Collegiate Field Hockey Conference. At a school this size, a significant percentage of undergraduates are varsity athletes, which means athletics are woven into the social fabric rather than existing as a separate culture. Athletes aren't set apart — they're your classmates and hallmates. There's no tension between athletes and non-athletes because the categories overlap so heavily. Game attendance is modest but personal: you're cheering for people you know. The D3 philosophy of balancing athletics and academics is lived out genuinely here, and the coaching staff tends to be invested in athletes' development beyond sport.

What Else Should You Know

Marian's tuition sticker price is high for what it is, but the school is generous with institutional aid — most students pay significantly less than the published rate, so look carefully at your net price rather than reacting to the sticker. The school's small size means that if your specific academic interest is niche, course offerings may be limited or run on alternate-year rotations. Career services and alumni networks are strongest in nursing and education within Wisconsin; students pursuing other paths may need to be more self-directed in building professional connections. Fond du Lac itself is a fine place to spend four years but won't be confused with a destination — students who need cultural amenities, nightlife, or diversity of experience off campus will want to be honest with themselves about that tradeoff. The upside is real, though: at Marian, you won't fall through the cracks, your professors will know your name and your goals, and you'll graduate with a close network of people who genuinely cared about your development.

Field Hockey

  • 2025 CFHC Semifinals appearance; ranked #83 of 163 D3 programs with 94.0 ACR rating.
  • Roster of 23 players competing in Collegiate Field Hockey Conference at D3 level.

About the School

  • Catholic university founded 1936 by Congregation of Sisters of St. Agnes; 1,050 undergrads.
  • Health Professions dominates: 30% of majors; strong in nursing, education, health sciences.

Field Hockey (2025)

Level
D3 Mid
FHC Rank
#83 of 163 (D3)
Massey Score
29.8 *
Conference
Collegiate Field Hockey Conference
Season Results
'25: L 0-2 vs Rhodes (CFHC Semifinals)
'24: L 1-4 vs Sewanee
'23: L 1-2 vs Rhodes (SAA Semifinals)

Programs

Popular Majors

Health Professions (30%)
Registered Nursing, Nursing Administration, Nursing Research and Clinical Nursing (64%)
• Allied Health Diagnostic, Intervention, and Treatment Professions (25%)
• Rehabilitation and Therapeutic Professions (6%)
• Health and Medical Administrative Services (5%)
Business (15%)
Business Administration, Management and Operations (46%)
Marketing (28%)
• Accounting and Related Services (11%)
• Finance and Financial Management Services (9%)
• Management Information Systems and Services (4%)
• Human Resources Management and Services (2%)
Homeland Security (12%)
Education (9%)
Teacher Education and Professional Development, Specific Levels and Methods (87%)
• Teacher Education and Professional Development, Specific Subject Areas (13%)
Psychology (8%)

My Programs

Environmental Science
Psychology (8.4%)
Biology (3.5%)
Sports Med / Kinesiology (37.3%)
French
Popular (top 25%) Available Not found

School Profile

Type
Private (Roman Catholic)
Classification
Master's: Medium Programs

Student Body

Total
1,295
Undergrad
81%
Demographics
64% women
Student:Faculty
12:1

Academics

Admission Rate
67%
Retention
62%
Graduation
41%

Events & Clinics

No recruiting events listed

Costs

Total Cost
$40,733
Tuition
$33,000
Room & Board
$8,953

Avg Net Price
$23,341
Net Price ($110k+)
$24,866

Financial Aid

Avg Aid ($110k+)
~$15,867
Pell Recipients
32%
Take Loans
78%
Median Debt at Grad
$25,000
Source: Scorecard

Location & Weather

Setting
City (City: Small)
Nearest City
Milwaukee, WI (57 mi)
Major Metro
Chicago, IL (137 mi)

HighLow
January25°
April53°34°
July80°61°
October57°39°

Admissions

No admissions data available

Season History

Season Record GF/G GA/G GD SO OT Last Game
2025 11-6 2.3 1.2 +18 5 4 L 0-2 vs Rhodes (CFHC Semifinals at Marian)
2024 7-11 1.9 2.4 -9 1 1 L 1-4 vs Sewanee (Collegiate FHC Quarters at Sewanee)
2023 8-7 2.6 1.7 +14 4 1 L 1-2 vs Rhodes (SAA Semifinals at Rhodes)
2022 7-8 2.8 2.8 0 2 0 L 3-4 vs Centre (SAA Semifinals at Centre)
Click any season to view full schedule

Coaching Staff

Name Position Contact Bio
Ellie Sharma Interim Head Field Hockey Coach View Bio
Nicole Stachon Assistant Field Hockey Coach View Bio

Roster Breakdown

23 players

Geographic Recruiting

US Out-of-State: 61% (14 players)
International: 39% (9 players)
Netherlands: 22% (5 players)
California: 17% (4 players)

Position Breakdown

Forward: 4 (17.4%)
Midfielder: 7 (30.4%)
Defender: 10 (43.5%)
Goalkeeper: 2 (8.7%)

Roster Composition

Graduating '27: 2 players (9%)
Midfielder: 1
Goalkeeper: 1
Class of 2026: 5 (22%)
Class of 2028: 5 (22%)
Class of 2029: 11 (48%)

Full Roster (23 players)

# Name Position Year Height Hometown High School
00 Emilee Clarey GK Jr. 6-0 New Hartford, N.Y. New Hartford
1 Tamar Molenaar GK Fr. 5-4 Gorinchem, Netherlands Fortes Lyceum
2 Allyson Nichols F Sr. 5-4 Little Falls, N.Y. Little Falls
3 Maggie Volkmar D Sr. 5-4 Antioch, Ill. Antioch Community
5 Ella Woolridge D So. 5-6 Manly West, Australia Cavendish Road State
7 Merel Nagelkerke D Sr. 5-4 Oudenbosch, Netherlands Markland Oudenbosch
8 Charlotte Touw M Fr. 5-6 Utrecht, Netherlands UNIC European University
9 Macenzie Rosenberger D Sr. 5-7 Frederick, Md. Walkersville
10 Riley Mattson M Fr. 5-5 Mansfield, Mass. Mansfield
11 Clara Guivernau Ragghianti M So. 5-2 Barcelona, Spain Salesians Sant Vicenç dels Horts
12 Chloe Yanez M So. 5-4 Fair Oaks, Calif. Bella Vista
13 Emma Nadeau M So. 5-4 Bridgton, Maine Lake Region
14 Allison Hauptmann D So. 5-3 Afton, N.Y. Afton Central
15 Angelene Castro M Jr. 5-4 Morgan Hill, Calif. Gilroy
16 Addelyn Gross F Fr. 5-2 Granville, Ohio Granville
18 Roos van Kerkhoven D Fr. 5-7 Maarheeze, Netherlands Augustinianum Eindhoven
19 Jikke Biemans F Sr. 5-11 Rijen, Netherlands Newmancollege
21 Bernardita Antunez F Fr. 5-6 Buenos Aires, Argentina Colegio Santa Teresa de Jesús
22 Haylie Ochoa D Fr. 5-4 La Verne, Calif. Bonita
23 Jordan Lim D Fr. 5-4 Chico, Calif. Pleasant Valley
27 Shaelyn Klassen M Fr. 5-4 Calgary, Alta. Joanne Cardinal-Schubert
29 Nora McDowell D Fr. 5-0 Burlington, Mass. Burlington
51 Teresa Rubio D Fr. 5-4 Nazareth, Penn. Nazareth Area