Campus Overview

The University of New England is a small, health-sciences-driven school of about 2,189 undergraduates sitting on a stunning stretch of southern Maine coastline where the Saco River meets the Atlantic. What makes UNE distinctive is the combination: a campus that literally ends at the ocean, an undergraduate culture deeply shaped by the graduate health programs (osteopathic medicine, pharmacy, dental medicine) housed on the same grounds, and a marine sciences program that uses the rocky shore outside the classroom door as its primary lab. This is a school for students who know they want to work in health, science, or environmental fields and want to start getting hands-on clinical and research experience from day one — not sophomore year, not "if you qualify," but as a baseline expectation.


Location & Setting

UNE's Biddeford campus sits on roughly 540 acres along the southern Maine coast, about 20 minutes south of Portland. "Coastal" doesn't do it justice — the campus extends to a rocky shoreline with ocean views from academic buildings, residence halls, and walking paths. Biddeford itself is a former mill town that's been slowly revitalizing, with a growing restaurant scene along Main Street and the Saco River. It's not a college town in the classic sense — there's no strip of bars and coffee shops catering to students — but Portland is close enough to fill that gap. Portland is legitimately one of the best small food cities in the country, and students take advantage of it on weekends. The immediate area around campus is quiet and residential, with Fortunes Rocks Beach and Biddeford Pool nearby. The ocean is not a backdrop here; it's the front yard.

Where Students Live & How They Get Around

UNE is a residential campus for the first two years — freshmen and sophomores are required to live on campus, and most do. Upperclassmen often move to apartments or rental houses in Biddeford, Saco, or Old Orchard Beach, where rents are reasonable by New England standards. A car becomes genuinely useful junior and senior year if you're living off campus, and helpful even on campus for grocery runs and Portland trips. There's no real public transit to speak of. Campus itself is walkable — everything is within a 10-15 minute walk — but getting anywhere off campus without a car means relying on friends or rideshares. Maine winters are real: cold, snowy, and dark early. Students who embrace that (skiing, snowshoeing, winter beach walks) thrive; students expecting mild New England weather will adjust or struggle. The trade-off is spectacular fall foliage and long summer-like days in May and September.

Campus Culture & Community

UNE's social scene is quiet compared to larger schools — there's no Greek life, no big party culture, and Friday nights are more likely to involve a group heading to Portland, a movie night in the dorms, or a bonfire on the beach than a rager. The student body is small enough that you'll recognize most faces within your first semester. The health sciences focus creates a culture that's more studious and goal-oriented than party-driven, but it's collaborative rather than cutthroat — students in pre-health tracks study together, share notes, and form tight study groups because they're all heading toward the same challenging pipeline. The Nor'easter mascot doesn't generate the kind of school spirit you'd see at a big state school, but there's genuine community pride in being part of a place that feels like a well-kept secret. Outdoor activities — kayaking, hiking, beach bonfires, surfing (yes, people surf in Maine) — are probably the closest thing to a unifying social culture.

Mission & Values

UNE has roots in both Catholic higher education (via St. Francis College, one of its predecessor institutions) and the osteopathic medical tradition, and both legacies shape the culture in subtle ways. The Catholic heritage is historical rather than active — this isn't a school where religion shapes daily life, there are no required theology courses, and secular students won't feel out of place. What did carry forward is an emphasis on service and whole-person care that dovetails naturally with the osteopathic philosophy of treating the whole patient. Community service and clinical volunteering aren't just resume builders here; they're woven into the curriculum and taken seriously by students and faculty. Undergraduates regularly interact with graduate students in medicine, pharmacy, and dental programs, which creates a mentorship pipeline that's unusual for a school this size. Students generally report feeling known by their professors and advisors — at 2,189 undergrads, you're not a number.

Student Body

UNE draws heavily from New England — Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Connecticut dominate — with a smattering of students from the mid-Atlantic. It's not a nationally recruiting institution at the undergraduate level. The typical UNE student is science-minded, pragmatic, and here with a plan: pre-med, pre-vet, marine biology, nursing, athletic training. The vibe leans outdoorsy and low-key rather than preppy or artsy. Diversity is limited — this is a predominantly white student body in a predominantly white state, and the school acknowledges this is an area for growth. Students who thrive here tend to be self-directed, comfortable in a smaller community, and motivated by the proximity to graduate health programs rather than traditional college social life.

Academics

The headline programs are marine sciences, animal behavior, environmental science, nursing, athletic training, and the various pre-health tracks that feed into UNE's own graduate schools. The Marine Science Education and Research Center gives undergraduates access to equipment and field sites that rival what you'd find at much larger research universities — tide pools, estuaries, and open ocean are all within walking distance of the lab. Animal behavior is a standout program that's hard to find elsewhere, combining biology, psychology, and fieldwork. The health sciences pipeline is the school's biggest academic asset: undergraduates can get early clinical exposure, research mentorship from medical and pharmacy faculty, and a genuine leg up in applying to UNE's own graduate programs. Class sizes are small (the student-faculty ratio is around 13:1), and professors are accessible and teaching-focused. The academic culture rewards effort and engagement rather than brilliance — this is a place where showing up to office hours and doing the work gets noticed and rewarded. Study abroad exists, including a unique option at UNE's own campus in Tangier, Morocco, but the participation rate is lower than at liberal arts colleges because many students are locked into sequential science curricula that don't leave room for a semester away.

Athletics & Campus Sports Culture

UNE competes in Division III in the Conference of New England, fielding around 20 varsity sports. Athletics are a meaningful part of campus life for the students who participate — roughly a quarter of undergrads play a varsity sport — but games don't draw big crowds and there's no "gameday culture" to speak of. This is classic D3: student-athletes who genuinely balance academics and sport, with no athletic scholarships creating a two-tier system. For a field hockey recruit, the appeal is playing competitive college hockey while pursuing a demanding science curriculum without having to choose between them. The athletic training and exercise science programs on campus also create a natural connection between athletes and the school's academic strengths.

What Else Should You Know

The biggest thing a well-informed friend would tell you: UNE punches well above its weight in health sciences for its size, but it's not a traditional liberal arts experience. If you want a broad intellectual exploration with robust humanities, arts, and social science offerings, this isn't the best fit. If you know you want health sciences, marine biology, or environmental work and you want small classes, ocean access, and a direct pipeline to graduate programs, UNE is genuinely hard to beat at this price point. Financial aid is worth investigating — UNE isn't cheap (private New England tuition), but they meet a reasonable portion of demonstrated need and the return on investment for students who continue into UNE's graduate programs is strong. Also worth knowing: the Biddeford campus can feel isolated in winter, and the small size means limited social options. Students who love it *really* love it; students who leave usually cite wanting more social energy or academic breadth.

Field Hockey

  • Head Coach Danielle Collins: 152 wins in 11 seasons, five conference titles, .896 conference record since 2013.
  • Made conference final in 10 of 12 tournament appearances; beat ranked Tufts (No. 7) in 2023 overtime shutout.
  • Assistant Coach Elaine Bachelder: NFHCA All-America Second Team at Stonehill, started 39 of 40 games there.

About the School

  • Campus extends to rocky Atlantic shoreline; marine sciences program uses ocean as primary lab.
  • 41% of undergrads study Health Professions; osteopathic medicine, pharmacy, dental medicine schools on same grounds.
  • Portland, Maine (20 minutes away) ranks among best small food cities in the country.

Field Hockey (2025)

Level
D3 High
FHC Rank
#51 of 163 (D3)
Massey Score
37.6 *
2025 Record
In-Division: 10-6
Conference
Conference of New England
Coach
Danielle Collins
Trajectory
↓ Declining
Season Results
'25: L 1-6 vs Roger Williams (CNE Semifinals)
'24: L 1-2 vs Roger Williams (CNE Final)
'23: L 1-3 vs Endicott (CCC Semifinals)

Programs

Popular Majors

Health Professions (41%) (D3 avg: 27%)
Registered Nursing, Nursing Administration, Nursing Research and Clinical Nursing (38%)
Health Services/Allied Health/Health Sciences, General (34%)
• Dental Support Services and Allied Professions (16%)
• Allied Health Diagnostic, Intervention, and Treatment Professions (8%)
• Public Health (3%)
• Health/Medical Preparatory Programs (1%)
• Medical Illustration and Informatics (0%)
Biology (23%) (D3 avg: 13%)
Recreation (8%)
Natural Resources (6%)
Psychology (5%)

My Programs

Environmental Science (5.7%)
Psychology (5.3%)
Biology (22.6%)
Sports Med / Kinesiology (49.0%)
French
Popular (top 25%) Available Not found

School Profile

Type
Private
Classification
Doctoral: High Research

Student Body

Total
4,799
Undergrad
46%
Demographics
68% women
Student:Faculty
12:1

Academics

Admission Rate
89%
Retention
75%
Graduation
61%

Events & Clinics

No recruiting events listed

Costs

Total Cost
$60,706
Tuition
$42,550
Room & Board
$16,740

Avg Net Price
$37,109
Net Price ($110k+)
$40,310

Financial Aid

Avg Aid ($110k+)
~$20,396
Pell Recipients
12%
Take Loans
53%
Median Debt at Grad
$25,250
Source: Scorecard

Location & Weather

Setting
Suburban (Suburb: Midsize)
Nearest City
Portland, ME (15 mi)
Major Metro
Boston, MA (83 mi)

HighLow
January33°13°
April52°32°
July77°58°
October59°38°

Admissions

No admissions data available

Season History

Season Record GF/G GA/G GD SO OT Last Game
2025 12-9 2.5 2.5 0 5 3 L 1-6 vs Roger Williams (CNE Semifinals)
2024 9-12 2.1 2.3 -4 4 3 L 1-2 vs Roger Williams (CNE Final)
2023 8-11 1.6 2.5 -16 3 2 L 1-3 vs Endicott (CCC Semifinals)
2022 11-10 1.9 1.7 +3 6 3 L 0-2 vs Rochester (NCAA First Round)
2021 11-7 2.2 1.7 +9 5 1 L 0-1 (2 OT) vs Endicott (CCC Final)
2019 12-10 2.7 1.7 +21 4 4 L 2-3 vs Endicott (CCC Final)
2018 12-10 2.6 1.8 +17 4 2 L 0-1 vs Endicott (CCC Final)
2017 18-5 3.2 1.3 +45 8 7 L 0-5 vs Middlebury (NCAA Second round at Middlebury)
2016 20-4 4.2 0.9 +80 13 1 L 0-2 vs Tufts (NCAA Second round at Tufts)
2015 17-7 2.6 1.3 +31 7 6 L 0-3 vs Wellesley (NCAA Second round at Bowdoin)
Click any season to view full schedule

Coaching Staff

Name Position Contact Bio
Danielle Collins Head Coach dcollins3@une.edu View Bio
Elaine Bachelder Assistant Coach View Bio
Audrey Domovich Assistant Coach View Bio
Dawn Deweese Moss 25 Assistant Coach View Bio
Morgan DaSilva '20 '25M Athletic Trainer

Roster Breakdown

22 players

Geographic Recruiting

In-State: 50% (11 players)
US Out-of-State: 50% (11 players)
Maine: 50% (11 players)
Massachusetts: 23% (5 players)

Position Breakdown

Forward: 6 (27.3%)
Forward/Midfielder: 1 (4.5%)
Midfielder: 6 (27.3%)
Defender: 7 (31.8%)
Goalkeeper: 2 (9.1%)

Roster Composition

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

Full Roster (22 players)

# Name Position Year Height Hometown High School
1 Francesca Caccamo M Sr. 5-3 Oakland, Maine Messalonskee
2 Ann Young D Sr. 5-1 Nashua, N.H. Derryfield School
3 Makena Valentine D Sr. 5-6 Hatfield, Mass. Smith Academy
4 Micaela Jacobs M Sr. 5-8 Waterboro, Maine Massabesic
5 Ava Wolverton F Fy. 5-2 Brunswick, Maine Brunswick
7 Chloe Michaud M Fy. 5-7 Oakland, Maine Messalonskee
8 Norah Slattery D Sr. 5-5 Old Orchard Beach, Maine Cheverus
9 Gianna Korisianos D Jr. 5-4 Peabody, Mass. St. Mary's-Lynn
10 Olivia Dwyer F Jr. 5-6 Newton, N.H. Sanborn Regional
11 Riley Zielinski F So. 4-11 Orange, Conn. Amity Regional
12 Avia Russo F/M Fy. 5-6 Lisbon, Maine Lisbon
13 Isabel Culver F Jr. 5-6 Oakland, Maine Messalonskee
15 McKenzie Berry F Jr. 5-6 Nashua, N.H. Souhegan
18 Shelly Tremblay D Sr. 5-6 Barre, Mass. Quabbin Regional
19 Emma Shuman M Jr. 5-3 Winthrop, Maine Winthrop
22 Kate Kelso F Jr. 5-5 Skowhegan, Maine Skowhegan
23 Elizabeth Hoadley D Jr. 5-5 Pleasantville, N.Y. Pleasantville
24 Halle Powers M So. 5-2 Topsfield, Mass. Pingree School
25 Abby Stevens M So. 5-3 Oakland, Maine Messalonskee
26 Ella Reeves D Fy. 5-11 Harwich, Mass. Monomoy
41 Savanna Harvey GK Sr. 5-4 Cumberland, Maine Greely
55 Greta Jennison GK So. 5-2 Bristol, Vt. Mount Abraham Union