Campus Overview

McDaniel College is a small liberal arts school of about 1,652 undergraduates that punches above its weight academically while keeping a down-to-earth, unpretentious feel. Formerly Western Maryland College until 2002, McDaniel competes in the Centennial Conference — a D3 league stacked with academic heavyweights like Johns Hopkins, Haverford, and Dickinson — which tells you something about the company it keeps. What sets McDaniel apart is its combination of genuine affordability (it's one of the more accessible schools in that conference), a flexible curriculum built around a mentored undergraduate experience, and a campus culture where athletes, artists, and activists overlap rather than silo. This is a school for students who want a real liberal arts education without the elitism that sometimes comes with it.


Location & Setting

Westminster is a small city of about 18,000 in Carroll County, Maryland — roughly 30 miles northwest of Baltimore and about an hour from D.C. It's not a college town in the classic sense; it's a working community that happens to have a college on its hill. Main Street has some restaurants, coffee shops, and a few local bars, but this isn't a place with a thriving off-campus scene. The campus itself sits on a ridge above town, giving it an elevated, self-contained feel — you walk downhill to get to Westminster proper. The surrounding area is rural Maryland: horse farms, rolling hills, and small-town life. Baltimore is close enough for concerts, restaurants, and internships, but you'll need a car or a friend with one to take advantage of it regularly.

Where Students Live & How They Get Around

McDaniel is a residential campus — roughly 75-80% of students live on campus, and there's a housing requirement for the first two years. Upperclassmen can move to college-owned apartments or houses near campus, but most stay in the residence halls or the campus garden apartments. The campus is compact and entirely walkable; you can cross it in about ten minutes. A car is helpful for grocery runs, getting to Baltimore, or weekend trips, but it's not essential for daily life. Winters in the Maryland piedmont are real — expect cold, grey stretches from November through March with occasional snow — but nothing extreme. Fall is gorgeous, with the surrounding hills putting on a show.

Campus Culture & Community

McDaniel has a friendly, low-key campus culture where most people know each other by face if not by name at 1,652 students. Greek life exists — there are a handful of fraternities and sororities — and it's visible on weekends, but it doesn't dominate the social scene the way it might at a larger school. Maybe 15-20% of students go Greek. Weekend social life tends to revolve around house parties, campus events, and hanging out in dorms; there's no real bar scene for undergrads in Westminster. The college programs a decent amount of campus entertainment — comedians, movie nights, themed events — and organizations like the Campus Activities Board work hard to fill the gap. Students tend to be involved in multiple things: the soccer player who's also in student government and works in the writing center is a common archetype here. There's a genuine sense of community, though some students will tell you the small size can feel limiting socially, especially by junior or senior year. The Green Terror — yes, that's the actual mascot, a fuzzy green creature of indeterminate species — is a beloved bit of campus weirdness. Homecoming draws alumni back, and there's real affection for the place among graduates.

Mission & Values

McDaniel was founded by the Methodist Protestant Church in 1867, but today the religious connection is essentially historical. There are no required religion courses, no chapel expectations, and the campus doesn't feel religiously oriented in daily life. The school's actual operating mission centers on developing the "whole person" through liberal arts — critical thinking, ethical reasoning, community engagement. This shows up concretely through the McDaniel Plan, a flexible general education approach that asks students to explore across disciplines rather than just check boxes. Professors here genuinely know their students; with a student-faculty ratio around 11:1, you're not anonymous. Faculty advisors often become mentors, and the culture of individual attention is one of the things students and alumni cite most often as McDaniel's real value.

Student Body

McDaniel draws heavily from the mid-Atlantic corridor — Maryland, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and the D.C. suburbs supply the bulk of the student body, with a modest but growing contingent from further afield. The school has made meaningful strides in diversifying its student body over the past decade, and the campus is more racially and socioeconomically diverse than many peer liberal arts colleges, partly because of its price point and strong financial aid. The vibe skews friendly and unpretentious — less preppy than some Centennial Conference peers, more casual and approachable. Students tend to be practical-minded about their education; many are first-generation college students or come from families where a liberal arts degree was not the assumed path. Politically, the campus leans moderate-to-liberal, though Carroll County itself is conservative, which creates an interesting dynamic.

Academics

McDaniel's standout programs include psychology (consistently one of the most popular majors), exercise science and kinesiology, education, and biology. The graduate education program is well-regarded regionally and feeds teachers into Maryland schools. For pre-health students, the biology and biochemistry programs are solid, and the small size means you'll actually get lab time and research opportunities as an undergrad — not compete with graduate students for them. The college has a notably strong study abroad program anchored by its own campus in Budapest, Hungary (McDaniel Europe), which offers a full semester experience that's more integrated than a third-party program. About 40-50% of students study abroad in some form, which is high for a school of this size. The McDaniel Plan gives students flexibility to design their general education path around themes rather than rigid course lists, which rewards curious students who want to explore. Class sizes are small — most courses have 15-20 students, and you won't find lecture halls. The academic culture is collaborative rather than cutthroat; students study together, and professors hold genuine office hours, not perfunctory ones. Faculty are here to teach first; research happens and undergrads participate in it, but the priority is the classroom.

Athletics & Campus Sports Culture

As a D3 school in the Centennial Conference, McDaniel fields about 24 varsity sports, and roughly 25-30% of undergrads are varsity athletes — so athletes are a significant and visible part of campus. Football and lacrosse games draw the most attention, and Centennial Conference rivalries (particularly with Ursinus, Dickinson, and Franklin & Marshall) generate genuine energy. The athletic facilities have seen investment in recent years, including field turf and updated training spaces. Student-athletes are fully integrated into campus life — they're in the same classes, clubs, and social circles as everyone else, which is one of the real benefits of D3. The coaching staffs generally understand academic priorities, and the conference culture reinforces that balance. For a field hockey recruit specifically, the Centennial Conference is competitive and well-run, and you'll be traveling to campuses across Pennsylvania and Maryland for away games.

What Else Should You Know

McDaniel's tuition sticker price looks high, but the school discounts aggressively — the average student pays significantly less than the listed price, and merit aid packages are common. Don't let the sticker shock scare you off before seeing your actual aid offer. The 2002 name change from Western Maryland College to McDaniel (after a major donor) remains a sore spot for some older alumni, but current students have no memory of the old name and it's a non-issue on campus. The college's golf course, which borders campus, is a genuine perk and a surprisingly lovely space for walks and runs. Westminster itself is quiet — students who want constant urban stimulation will find it limiting, but students who appreciate a close-knit campus where they can focus will thrive. McDaniel is one of those schools that consistently over-delivers relative to its national name recognition; students who choose it tend to become fierce advocates for it after graduation.

Field Hockey

  • Head Coach Kristin Ramey compiled 56-22 record as a player (2001–04); now leads program after 11 years in lacrosse.
  • 25 out-of-state recruits on 16-person roster; program attended Disney Showcase.
  • Stable #82 ranking (ACR 94.0) in D3; compete in Centennial Conference with Johns Hopkins, Haverford, Dickinson.

About the School

  • Small 1,652-student liberal arts school competes academically in elite D3 conference without the price tag.
  • 75–80% live on campus; housing required first two years; rural Maryland setting 30 miles from Baltimore.

Field Hockey (2025)

Level
D3 Mid
FHC Rank
#82 of 163 (D3)
Massey Score
30.1 *
Conference
Centennial Conference
Coach
Kristin Ramey
Trajectory
→ Stable
Season Results
'25: L 0-2 vs Ursinus
'24: L 1-3 vs Bryn Mawr
'23: L 0-3 vs Bryn Mawr
Program Activity:
Active (6 posts/mo)
Team Culture Competition Focused
3 commits announced publicly

Programs

Popular Majors

Business (15%)
Business Administration, Management and Operations (75%)
• Accounting and Related Services (25%)
Psychology (12%)
Recreation (10%)
Social Sciences (8%) (D3 avg: 17%)
Political Science and Government (59%)
• Sociology (34%)
• Economics (7%)
Biology (7%)

My Programs

Environmental Science (5.9%)
Psychology (12.3%)
Biology (7.0%)
Sports Med / Kinesiology (12.3%)
French (0.8%)
Popular (top 25%) Available Not found

School Profile

Type
Private
Classification
Master's: Larger Programs

Student Body

Total
2,869
Undergrad
58%
Demographics
58% women
Student:Faculty
13:1

Academics

Admission Rate
84%
Retention
79%
Graduation
64%

Events & Clinics

Recruiting Events:
Disney Showcase 2026
Upcoming Clinics:
May 3 Green Terror Field Hockey Spring ID Clinic ($105) Register →

Costs

Total Cost
$62,974
Tuition
$49,647
Room & Board
$12,594

Avg Net Price
$20,923
Net Price ($110k+)
$27,501

Financial Aid

Avg Aid ($110k+)
~$35,473
Pell Recipients
34%
Take Loans
61%
Median Debt at Grad
$25,000
Source: Scorecard

Location & Weather

Setting
Town (Town: Fringe)
Nearest City
Baltimore, MD (29 mi)
Major Metro
Washington, DC (47 mi)

HighLow
January39°21°
April63°40°
July85°64°
October66°43°

Admissions

No admissions data available

Season History

Season Record GF/G GA/G GD SO OT Last Game
2025 5-13 0.9 2.9 -37 3 3 L 0-2 vs Ursinus
2024 3-14 0.9 3.6 -47 2 0 L 1-3 vs Bryn Mawr
2023 2-15 0.6 2.8 -37 1 2 L 0-3 vs Bryn Mawr
2022 5-11 1.1 2.6 -24 3 3 L 1-5 vs Franklin & Marshall
2021 3-14 1.1 2.3 -20 3 2 L 0-1 vs Franklin & Marshall
2019 2-13 0.6 3.7 -47 0 0 L 0-6 vs Dickinson
2018 4-13 1.4 3.1 -29 1 5 L 0-1 (OT) vs Albright
2017 2-15 0.8 3.5 -46 2 1 L 0-5 vs Albright
2016 5-12 1.9 3.6 -29 2 1 L 0-6 vs Washington
2015 8-9 3.1 2.9 +4 4 3 W 2-1 (OT) vs Washington
Click any season to view full schedule

Coaching Staff

Name Position Contact Bio
Kristin Ramey Interim Head Coach kramey@mcdaniel.edu View Bio
Hannah Scheibach Graduate Assistant View Bio
Catharine Behrenshausen Head Athletic Trainer

Roster Breakdown

16 players

Geographic Recruiting

In-State: 75% (12 players)
US Out-of-State: 25% (4 players)
Maryland: 75% (12 players)
Delaware: 19% (3 players)

Position Breakdown

Forward: 4 (25.0%)
Midfielder: 6 (37.5%)
Defender: 4 (25.0%)
Goalkeeper: 2 (12.5%)

Roster Composition

Graduating '27: 2 players (12%)
Forward: 1
Goalkeeper: 1
Class of 2026: 4 (25%)
Class of 2028: 7 (44%)
Class of 2029: 3 (19%)

Full Roster (16 players)

# Name Position Year Height Hometown High School
2 Kelsey Jennings F Jr. 5-6 Elkton, Md. North East
3 Grace Ackermann M Fy. 5-2 Crofton, Md. Crofton
4 Summer Gregory F So. 5-5 Fulton, Md. Good Counsel
5 Cassidy Cashman M Sr. 5-9 Salisbury, Md. Parkside
7 Charley Noah F So. 5-8 Gaithersburg, Md. Good Counsel
10 Justice Washburn D Gr. 5-2 Harwood, Md. Southern
11 Caydence Stone F Fy. 5-3 Lusby, Md. Patuxtent
12 Julia Dean M Sr. 5-5 Eldersburg, Md. Century
13 Kathryn Morin M So. 5-4 Bethesda, Md. St. John's College
17 Emma Fresconi D So. 5-7 Newark, Del. Appoquinimink
18 Samira Morgan M So. 5-7 Newark, Del. Newark Charter
22 Anna Buyse M So. 5-9 Bel Air, Md. C. Milton Wright
23 Jayda Washburn D Sr. 5-4 Harwood, Md. Southern
28 Grace Legacy D Fy. 5-7 Deale, Md. Southern
44 Teaghen Rieder GK So. 5-7 Seven Valleys, Pa. Dallastown
89 Lora Scarangello GK Jr. 5-3 Newark, Del. Newark