Campus Overview

Misericordia University is a small Catholic university of about 1,632 undergraduates in northeastern Pennsylvania's Back Mountain region, founded by the Sisters of Mercy in 1924. What sets it apart is an unusually strong health sciences pipeline — occupational therapy, physical therapy, speech-language pathology, and nursing programs that punch well above the school's weight class — wrapped in a genuine culture of service and personal attention. This is a school for students who want to be known by name, who are drawn to careers in helping professions, and who value a tight-knit community over a big-campus experience.


Location & Setting

Dallas, PA is not the Texas one. It's a small borough in the Back Mountain area of Luzerne County, about eight miles northwest of Wilkes-Barre and roughly two hours from Philadelphia. The campus sits on about 124 acres in what feels distinctly rural-suburban — rolling hills, wooded areas, and residential neighborhoods rather than a downtown strip. Stepping off campus means quiet streets and local shops, not a bustling college town. Wilkes-Barre offers more options for dining, shopping, and entertainment, and Scranton is about 20 miles further. The Pocono Mountains are close enough for hiking and skiing. This is not a location you choose for nightlife — you choose it because the campus itself becomes your world, and the surrounding landscape is genuinely beautiful in a low-key, northeastern Pennsylvania way.

Where Students Live & How They Get Around

Misericordia is primarily residential for its size, with most traditional-age undergraduates living on campus, especially in the first two years. Housing includes traditional residence halls and apartment-style options for upperclassmen. Some juniors and seniors move to nearby rentals, but the surrounding area isn't dense with off-campus housing the way a college town would be. A car is genuinely helpful here — Dallas doesn't have the walkable infrastructure of a town built around its college, and getting to Wilkes-Barre or anywhere beyond campus without a car means relying on friends. Winters are real northeastern Pennsylvania winters: cold, snowy, and gray from November through March. Students layer up and the campus is compact enough to navigate on foot, but the weather shapes the rhythm of the year — indoor gathering spaces matter, and spring feels like a genuine reward.

Campus Culture & Community

The social scene at Misericordia is intimate by necessity and by design. With fewer than 2,000 undergrads, everyone recognizes each other. There is no Greek life — it simply doesn't exist here, which means the social fabric is built around residence life, athletics, clubs, and the kind of organic friendships that form when the community is small. Weekend social life tends toward campus events, house gatherings among upperclassmen, and trips to Wilkes-Barre or Scranton. Students describe the atmosphere as welcoming and low-drama — the kind of place where you can sit alone in the dining hall on day one and someone will pull up a chair. The Sisters of Mercy founding isn't just historical footnote; it shows up in a genuine service culture. Community service events draw real participation, not just resume-padding. The campus has that small-school quality where the president knows students by name and faculty show up to athletic events.

Mission & Values

The Sisters of Mercy charism — mercy, service, justice, hospitality — is more than wall art. Students encounter it through required service-learning components, a campus culture that emphasizes caring for others, and an institutional identity genuinely oriented around the helping professions. There are theology and philosophy requirements in the core curriculum, as is typical of Catholic universities, but the religious atmosphere is moderate. Mass is available and campus ministry is active, but students who aren't Catholic or aren't religious generally report feeling comfortable rather than pressured. It's not a dry campus. The faith tradition shows up more as a values orientation — treat people with dignity, serve your community, think about the common good — than as a prescriptive religious environment. Students consistently say they feel individually supported, and that's not just marketing; with this enrollment size and a student-faculty ratio around 11:1, it's structurally true.

Student Body

Misericordia draws heavily from northeastern and central Pennsylvania, with a secondary pull from New Jersey and New York. This is a regional school — most students come from within a few hours' drive. The vibe leans practical and grounded: many students are first-generation college-goers, many come from working-class and middle-class families, and a large proportion are laser-focused on health sciences careers. The campus is not particularly diverse racially, reflecting both its location and its regional draw. Politically and culturally, the student body tends moderate to conservative, though it's not a politically charged environment. Students here tend to be earnest, career-oriented, and community-minded rather than activist or countercultural. Misericordia also has a notably strong commitment to students with learning disabilities through its Alternative Learners Project (ALP), one of the more established programs of its kind in the region.

Academics

The headline programs are in health sciences, and they deserve the attention. Misericordia offers direct-entry and combined-degree programs in occupational therapy, physical therapy, speech-language pathology, and nursing that allow students to move efficiently from undergraduate work into graduate-level clinical training. The OT and PT programs in particular have strong reputations and solid licensure pass rates. For a student who knows they want to work in rehabilitation or healthcare, the pathway here is remarkably streamlined compared to applying separately for graduate programs elsewhere. Beyond health sciences, education and business programs are solid, and the university offers majors across the liberal arts and sciences — biology, psychology, communications, history, mathematics. Class sizes are small, typically 15-20 students, and professors are teaching-focused. Students regularly cite the accessibility of faculty as one of Misericordia's defining strengths — office hours aren't performative, and undergraduate research opportunities exist, particularly in the sciences. The academic culture is collaborative rather than cutthroat; students study together and share notes without the competitive edge you'd find at more selective institutions.

Athletics & Campus Sports Culture

As a D3 program in the MAC Freedom conference, Misericordia fields around 20 varsity sports. Athletics matter here in the way they do at most small D3 schools — athletes make up a significant percentage of the student body (often 30% or more at schools this size), which means sports are woven into the social fabric even if they don't generate stadium-filling crowds. Student-athletes are students first, and the D3 model means no athletic scholarships — everyone is there because they want to compete and get their degree. The field hockey program competes in the MAC Freedom, which includes regional rivalites with schools like King's, Wilkes, and Eastern. Facilities are appropriate for D3 — functional and improving, if not flashy. The Anderson Sports and Health Center anchors athletic life on campus.

What Else Should You Know

Financial aid is worth investigating carefully. Misericordia's sticker price is mid-range for private universities, but the school tends to offer meaningful institutional aid, and for students pursuing health sciences, the return on investment through direct-entry graduate programs can be genuinely strong — you're saving a year or more compared to traditional post-baccalaureate paths. The Alternative Learners Project (ALP) is a distinctive asset that few peer schools match; if learning support services matter to you, ask about it specifically. The campus has invested in facilities in recent years, including health sciences labs and athletic spaces. One honest flag: if you're someone who needs urban energy, cultural diversity, or a big social scene to thrive, Misericordia will feel limiting. But if you want a place where people genuinely look out for each other, where your professors will write you recommendation letters that actually know who you are, and where you can build a clear professional pathway — especially in health sciences — it delivers on that promise with unusual consistency.

Field Hockey

  • Head Coach Robyn Fedor Stahovic in 24th season with 210 career D-III victories, ranked 27th nationally.
  • Made MAC Freedom Championship game four times (2013, 2014, 2021, 2022); eight postseason appearances total.
  • 12-2 record heading into 2025 MAC Freedom Final; roster draws 28 out-of-state recruits, Disney Showcase attendee.

About the School

  • Health professions dominate: 58% of students in occupational therapy, physical therapy, speech pathology, nursing.
  • Catholic university founded 1924 by Sisters of Mercy; 124-acre campus in Back Mountain region near Pocono Mountains.

Field Hockey (2025)

Level
D3 High
FHC Rank
#50 of 163 (D3)
Massey Score
37.8 *
2025 Record
In-Division: 12-2
Conference
Middle Atlantic Conference Freedom
Trajectory
↓ Declining
Season Results
'25: L 0-3 vs Stevens (MAC Freedom Final)
'24: L 4-5 vs Desales
'23: W 2-0 vs Fdu

Programs

Popular Majors

Health Professions (58%) (D3 avg: 27%)
Health Services/Allied Health/Health Sciences, General (42%)
Registered Nursing, Nursing Administration, Nursing Research and Clinical Nursing (32%)
• Allied Health Diagnostic, Intervention, and Treatment Professions (14%)
• Health and Medical Administrative Services (9%)
• Bioethics/Medical Ethics (3%)
• Clinical/Medical Laboratory Science/Research and Allied Professions (0%)
Business (14%)
Business Administration, Management and Operations (77%)
• Accounting and Related Services (23%)
Education (5%) (D3 avg: 11%)
Teacher Education and Professional Development, Specific Levels and Methods (75%)
• Teacher Education and Professional Development, Specific Subject Areas (25%)
Biology (5%) (D3 avg: 13%)
Psychology (5%)

My Programs

Environmental Science
Psychology (4.9%)
Biology (4.9%)
Sports Med / Kinesiology (60.3%)
French
Popular (top 25%) Available Not found

School Profile

Type
Private (Roman Catholic)
Classification
Doctoral/Professional

Student Body

Total
2,069
Undergrad
79%
Demographics
64% women
Freshmen
72% in-state
Student:Faculty
10:1

Academics

Admission Rate
85%
Retention
80%
Graduation
69%

Events & Clinics

Recruiting Events:
Disney Showcase 2026

Costs

Total Cost
$51,023
Tuition
$38,370
Room & Board
$15,426

Avg Net Price
$24,829
Net Price ($110k+)
$29,029

Financial Aid

Avg Aid ($110k+)
~$21,994
Pell Recipients
19%
Take Loans
74%
Median Debt at Grad
$26,973
Source: Scorecard

Location & Weather

Setting
Suburban (Suburb: Large)
Nearest City
Harrisburg, PA (88 mi)
Major Metro
New York, NY (111 mi)

HighLow
January36°20°
April61°39°
July85°63°
October63°43°

Admissions

What Matters in Admissions

Talent/AbilityNot Considered
Demonstrated InterestConsidered
Course RigorVery Important
GPAVery Important
Test ScoresNot Considered
EssayConsidered
RecommendationsConsidered
ExtracurricularsImportant
InterviewConsidered
CharacterImportant

Early Application
Not offered

Class Size

Under 20
58%
20–29
31%
30–39
11%
Source: CDS 2024

Season History

Season Record GF/G GA/G GD SO OT Last Game
2025 16-4 2.5 1.1 +29 10 1 L 0-3 vs Stevens (MAC Freedom Final)
2024 6-12 1.5 2.1 -10 2 3 L 4-5 vs Desales
2023 5-11 1.4 2.8 -21 3 2 W 2-0 vs Fdu
2022 7-11 1.7 2.1 -6 3 5 L 2-3 (OT) vs DeSales (Freedom Semifinals)
2021 14-8 2.1 1.4 +17 10 4 L 1-2 (OT) vs FDU (ECAC Semifinals at Ramapo)
2019 9-11 1.5 1.1 +7 6 1 L 0-1 vs FDU (Freedom Semifinals)
2018 5-12 1.4 2.1 -12 1 1 W 3-1 vs Marywood
2017 12-9 2.0 2.0 0 5 0 L 0-2 vs Franklin & Marshall (NCAA First round)
2016 5-13 1.3 2.4 -20 3 0 L 2-3 vs Marywood
2015 10-12 2.2 2.0 +5 3 3 L 1-2 vs Rochester (NCAA First round)
Click any season to view full schedule

Coaching Staff

Name Position Contact Bio
Robyn Fedor Stahovic Field Hockey rstahovic@misericordia.edu View Bio
Taylor Alba Assistant Coach View Bio
Lynea Gregory Assistant Coach lgregory@misericordia.edu View Bio

Roster Breakdown

18 players

Geographic Recruiting

In-State: 72% (13 players)
US Out-of-State: 28% (5 players)
Pennsylvania: 72% (13 players)
New York: 17% (3 players)

Position Breakdown

Forward: 6 (33.3%)
Midfielder: 11 (61.1%)

Roster Composition

Graduating '27: 1 player (6%)
Midfielder: 1
Class of 2026: 7 (39%)
Class of 2028: 6 (33%)
Class of 2029: 4 (22%)

Full Roster (18 players)

# Name Position Year Height Hometown High School
- Ava Cirigliano Forward/Midfield So. 6-0 Unadilla, NY Sidney
- Ashley Pitz Midfield Sr. 5-5 Elma, NY Iroquois Central
- Riley Dwyer Forward Fy 5-1 Pringle, PA Wyoming Valley West
- Madison Lasinski Midfielder Jr. 5-5 Shavertown, PA Lake-Lehman
- Celeste Hoffman Forward So. 5-7 Palmerton, PA Palmerton Area
- Abigail O'Donnell Forward/Midfielder Sr. 5-4 Macungie, PA Emmaus
- Emily Ervin Defender Sr. 5-10 Breinigsville, PA Parkland
- Skylar Kohler Midfield/Forward So. 5-8 Lehighton, PA Palmerton Area
- Samantha Kwiatkowski Midfield/Forward So. 5-0 Downingtown, PA Downington West
- Delaney Miller Midfield So. 5-11 Pasadena, MD Chesapeake
- Sydney Taylor Defender Sr. 5-5 Bethlehem, PA Liberty
- McKenna Ferris Forward/Midfielder Fy 5-6 Collegeville, PA Perkiomen Valley
- Maggie Woolslayer Midfielder/Defender Fy 5-5 Northampton, PA Northampton Area
- Madison Blauch Midfield/Forward So. 5-6 Palmyra, PA Palmyra Area
- Julia Warren Defender Sr. 5-4 Plains, PA Wilkes-Barre Area
- Ashleigh Steele Forward/Midfielder Fy 5-7 Owego, NY Owego Free Academy
- Madi Rowe Defender Sr. 5-5 Lewistown, PA Mifflin County
- Sarah Bogina Goalkeeper Sr. 5-5 Haddonfield, NJ Haddon Heights