Campus Overview

Providence College is a small, tight-knit Catholic school of about 4,170 undergrads run by Dominican Friars in the heart of Rhode Island's capital city. What sets PC apart is the genuine intensity of its community — anchored by a distinctive two-year Western Civilization core sequence that gives every student a shared intellectual experience, a basketball culture that turns Friars games into the social event of the week, and a campus small enough that you'll recognize faces everywhere by October. This is a school for someone who wants a close community with real school spirit, doesn't mind (or actively wants) a Catholic identity that's more than nominal, and values being known by name by professors and peers alike.


Location & Setting

PC sits on a 105-acre campus on the west side of Providence, about a mile from the state capitol building. It's urban but doesn't feel downtown — the campus is its own green pocket with a clear boundary between campus and the surrounding residential neighborhoods. The immediate area is working-class Providence, not a quaint college town, so the off-campus walkable scene is limited. But downtown Providence is a quick Uber or bus ride away, and it punches well above its weight for a mid-size city: Federal Hill has some of the best Italian food in the Northeast, Thayer Street near Brown has shops and restaurants, and the arts scene (RISD Museum, Trinity Rep) is legitimately good. Boston is about an hour north by train or car, which matters for internships, weekends, and getting to Logan Airport.

Where Students Live & How They Get Around

PC is a residential campus — around 80% of students live on campus, and housing is guaranteed for all four years. Most students stay in dorms or on-campus apartments, though some juniors and seniors move to nearby off-campus houses on Eaton Street or in the surrounding blocks. Freshmen live together, and the housing setup reinforces the tight community. You don't need a car day-to-day — campus is walkable and compact — but having one is helpful for grocery runs, off-campus restaurants, and weekend trips. Providence winters are real New England winters: cold, snowy, and gray from December through March. Spring is short but sweet, and fall is gorgeous. The weather drives social life indoors for a good chunk of the year, which makes the on-campus community even more central to the experience.

Campus Culture & Community

There is no Greek life at Providence College — none. Social life revolves around dorm culture, athletic events, clubs, and off-campus house parties, especially for upperclassmen. Friday and Saturday nights often start at someone's apartment or house on Eaton Street before heading to a campus event or downtown. Men's basketball games at the Amica Mutual Pavilion (formerly the Dunkin' Donuts Center) downtown are the signature social event — student attendance is passionate and consistent, and the energy during BIG EAST play is electric. PC students genuinely love their school with an intensity that surprises people. The Friar Faithful student section is a real thing, not a marketing slogan. Late Night Madness, Friar Friday traditions, and the annual Special Olympics events bring campus together. The community is warm and welcoming but can feel socially homogeneous — more on that below. The small size means friend groups overlap constantly, which most students love but some find claustrophobic.

Mission & Values

The Dominican identity is not decorative at PC — it meaningfully shapes the experience. Students take theology and philosophy courses as part of the core, and the Friars (actual Dominican priests and brothers) live on campus, teach classes, and eat in the dining hall. Campus Ministry is active and well-attended; Mass is a real part of many students' weekly routines. It is not a dry campus, but the Catholic ethos is visible in programming, service expectations, and institutional values. There's a strong service culture — community service hours, immersion trips, and organizations like Campus Ministry and the Feinstein Institute for Public Service are popular. For students who aren't Catholic or aren't religious, the experience varies: the theology and philosophy requirements are academic rather than devotional, and non-Catholic students generally report feeling welcome, but the cultural Catholicism is ambient and constant. If that's a dealbreaker, you'll feel it. If you're open to it, many non-Catholic students find the values-driven culture enriching.

Student Body

PC draws heavily from the Northeast — Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Jersey, New York, and Rhode Island dominate. The student body skews white, middle-to-upper-middle-class, and Catholic, and PC has been candid about working to improve diversity (the school has made recent investments in recruiting and support for underrepresented students, but the demographic reality is still fairly homogeneous). The vibe is preppy-casual — Vineyard Vines and Patagonia are well-represented. Students tend to be friendly, social, and career-oriented without being cutthroat. Politically, the campus leans moderate to conservative by Northeast college standards, though you'll find a range of views. About 50 clubs and organizations offer outlets beyond athletics and parties.

Academics

The defining academic experience at PC is the Development of Western Civilization program — universally called "Civ" or "DWC." It's a two-year, team-taught interdisciplinary seminar covering history, literature, philosophy, theology, and art from the ancient world to the present. Every freshman and sophomore takes it together, reading the same texts at the same time. Students either love it or endure it, but everyone has an opinion, and it gives the entire student body a shared intellectual vocabulary that's genuinely unusual. Beyond Civ, PC's strongest programs include biology (with strong pre-med advising and med school placement rates), finance and accounting through the School of Business, education, and political science. The student-faculty ratio is about 11:1, and classes are small — average class size hovers around 20. Professors are accessible and teaching-focused; students regularly cite office hours and mentorship as highlights. About 50% of students study abroad, which is high for a school this size. The academic culture is hardworking but collaborative — students help each other, and the shared Civ experience builds study groups early.

Athletics & Campus Sports Culture

Athletics are central to PC's identity, and the BIG EAST affiliation raises the profile. Men's basketball is the flagship — the Friars have NCAA Tournament history and the arena atmosphere is a genuine campus highlight. Men's ice hockey also draws strong support and competes in Hockey East, one of the top conferences in college hockey. Women's sports have grown in visibility, with field hockey, soccer, and cross country performing well. PC fields 19 varsity sports. Student-athletes are visible and integrated into campus life — the small school size means athletes aren't siloed, and the culture respects the commitment without creating a separate social tier. The fitness center and athletic facilities have seen recent upgrades.

What Else Should You Know

PC's financial aid is worth investigating carefully — the sticker price is high (over $55,000 in tuition alone), but the school meets a significant portion of demonstrated need for most admitted students. Ask specific questions about merit aid versus need-based packages. The alumni network is fiercely loyal, especially in New England, and particularly strong in finance, education, and insurance/financial services — the "PC Mafia" in the Northeast business world is a real networking asset. One honest flag: the social scene can feel repetitive by junior year given the small size and lack of Greek life, and the surrounding neighborhood doesn't offer much of a buffer. Students who thrive here genuinely love the intimacy; students who want more variety or anonymity sometimes feel constrained. If you visit, go to a basketball game and sit in the student section — that energy tells you more about PC than any tour.

Field Hockey

  • Head Coach Diane Madl in her 25th season: 7 All-Americans, 66 All-BIG EAST selections, 185 National Academic Squad honors.
  • 95% out-of-state roster with 29 international players; BIG EAST conference competition in D1.

About the School

  • Two-year Western Civilization core sequence shared by every student creates unified intellectual foundation.
  • 105-acre campus one mile from Rhode Island's state capitol; Boston accessible by hour-long train.

Field Hockey (2025)

Level
D1 Mid
FHC Rank
#49 of 83 (D1)
Massey Score
75.0 *
2025 Record
Overall: 8-9
Conference
BIG EAST Conference
Coach
Diane Madl
Trajectory
↓ Declining
Season Results
'25: L 2-3 (OT) vs Temple
'24: L 2-3 vs Villanova
'23: L 1-2 (3 OT) vs La Salle

Programs

Popular Majors

Business (43%) (D1 avg: 21%)
Finance and Financial Management Services (39%)
Marketing (27%)
• Business Administration, Management and Operations (17%)
• Accounting and Related Services (16%)
• Human Resources Management and Services (1%)
Biology (14%)
Social Sciences (11%)
Political Science and Government (43%)
• Economics (35%)
• Sociology (17%)
• Social Sciences, General (6%)
Psychology (9%)
Health Professions (5%) (D1 avg: 18%)

My Programs

Environmental Science
Psychology (8.6%)
Biology (13.9%)
Sports Med / Kinesiology (5.3%)
French (0.2%)
Popular (top 25%) Available Not found

Study Abroad
43%

School Profile

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

Student Body

Total
4,614
Undergrad
90%
Demographics
54% women
Student:Faculty
11:1

Academics

Admission Rate
49%
SAT Median
1,325
SAT Range
1,250-1,400
ACT Median
30
Retention
91%
Graduation
88%

Events & Clinics

No recruiting events listed
Upcoming Clinics:
Apr 19 Prospect Clinic - April 19th ($75) Register →
Jun 11 Skills & Drills Clinic ($90) Register →
Jul 24 D1 Experience Clinic ($175) Register →
Aug 3 Pre-Season Prep Clinic ($125) Register →

Costs

Total Cost
$76,667
Tuition
$60,848
Room & Board
$17,150

Avg Net Price
$45,538
Net Price ($110k+)
$53,195

Financial Aid

Avg Aid ($110k+)
~$23,472
Pell Recipients
13%
Take Loans
55%
Median Debt at Grad
$27,000
Source: Scorecard

Location & Weather

Setting
City (City: Midsize)
Nearest City
Providence, RI (2 mi)
Major Metro
Boston, MA (41 mi)

HighLow
January38°22°
April59°40°
July84°65°
October64°45°

Admissions

No admissions data available

Season History

Season Record GF/G GA/G GD SO OT Last Game
2025 8-9 2.2 1.9 +4 3 4 L 2-3 (OT) vs Temple
2024 7-10 1.8 2.8 -16 2 2 L 2-3 vs Villanova
2023 10-8 2.4 1.7 +13 6 2 L 1-2 (3 OT) vs La Salle
2022 5-12 1.4 2.8 -23 2 3 L 2-4 vs Quinnipiac
2021 8-10 1.9 2.2 -4 2 0 W 6-1 vs Dartmouth
2020 * 2-8 0.6 2.1 -15 1 1 L 1-2 vs Old Dominion (at Villanova)
2019 12-7 2.1 1.4 +13 6 4 L 0-2 vs Connecticut (BIG EAST Semifinals at Quinnipiac)
2018 11-8 1.9 1.9 +1 5 3 L 0-4 vs Liberty (BIG EAST Tournament at Liberty)
2017 11-8 1.7 1.8 -3 3 1 L 0-3 vs Connecticut (Big East Semis at Providence)
2016 13-6 2.1 1.5 +11 3 7 L 0-1 vs Liberty (Big East Semifinals at Temple)
2015 4-14 1.6 2.9 -25 1 2 L 0-5 vs Old Dominion
* Shortened COVID season
Click any season to view full schedule

Coaching Staff

Name Position Contact Bio
Diane Madl Head Coach dmadl@providence.edu View Bio
Kourtney Kennedy Assistant Coach View Bio
Kellie Stigas Assistant Coach View Bio
Fr. Dominic Verner, O.P. View Bio

Roster Breakdown

21 players

Geographic Recruiting

In-State: 5% (1 player)
US Out-of-State: 67% (14 players)
International: 29% (6 players)
Massachusetts: 24% (5 players)
Netherlands: 10% (2 players)

Position Breakdown

Forward: 5 (23.8%)
Forward/Midfielder: 3 (14.3%)
Midfielder: 6 (28.6%)
Midfielder/Defender: 3 (14.3%)
Defender: 1 (4.8%)
Goalkeeper: 3 (14.3%)

Roster Composition

Graduating '27: 7 players (33%)
Forward: 2
Midfielder: 4
Goalkeeper: 1
Class of 2026: 2 (10%)
Class of 2028: 4 (19%)
Class of 2029: 8 (38%)

Full Roster (21 players)

# Name Position Year Height Hometown High School
1 Zoe Onken GK Sr. 5' 4'' Acton, Mass. Acton Boxborough Regional
2 Adrianna Williams D Fr. 5' 3'' Watertown, Mass. Watertown
4 Caelie Patrick M/F So. 5' 1'' Manchester by the Sea, Mass. Manchester Essex Regional
5 Saar Koper D/M Fr. 5' 11'' Amsterdam, The Netherlands Gerrit van der Veen College
6 Lilia Payne M/F Fr. 5' 3'' Suffolk, England Culford School
7 Lily Procaccianti F Jr. 5' 1'' Cranston, R.I. Moses Brown
8 Ari Ftorek F Fr. 5' 8'' Wolfeboro, N.H. The Taft School
9 Aly Iwasyk D/M Fr. 5' 3'' Kennett Square, Pa. Unionville
10 Florencia Talarico M Jr. 5' 2'' Buenos Aires, Argentina Instituto San Roman
11 Macie Pennisi M Jr. 5' 6'' Raleigh, N.C. Cardinal Gibbons
12 Carly van Benten F Jr. 5' 2'' Ashburn, Va. Independence
14 Bo Martina M Jr. 5' 8'' Nieuw Vennep, Netherlands Haarlemmermeer Lyceum / Vavo
16 Piper Cline F So. 5' 3'' West Chester, Pa. Downingtown West
17 Molly DiGiulio F Fr. 5' 7'' East Amherst, N.Y. Nichols School
18 Martu Torre Festa M So. 5' 4'' Buenos Aires, Argentina La Salle Florida
19 Morgan Mastrobattisto F/M Fr. 5' 2'' Madison, Conn. Daniel Hand
20 Johanna Mahner M So. 5' 6'' Nuremberg, Germany Grimm School
21 Charlotte Lorden M Jr. 5' 3'' Cockeysville, Md. St. Paul's School for Girls
28 Caroline Krebs M/D Sr. 5' 3'' Louisville, Ky. Assumption
77 Ava Porter GK Fr. 5' 4'' Somerset, Mass. Moses Brown
93 Avery Callison GK Jr. 5' 8'' Acton, Mass. New Hampton School