Campus Overview

Shenandoah University is a small private university (2,127 undergraduates) in Winchester, Virginia, where the performing arts and health sciences carry outsized weight for a school this size. The Shenandoah Conservatory — one of the better-regarded undergraduate music, theatre, and dance programs on the East Coast — gives the campus an artistic pulse you don't expect in a small-town Virginia setting, while direct-entry pharmacy and nursing programs draw pre-health students who know exactly what they want to do. If you're looking for a place where a 200-person graduating class means everyone knows your name, and where the institutional identity runs on creativity and care rather than prestige, Shenandoah is worth a serious look.


Location & Setting

Winchester sits at the top of the Shenandoah Valley, about 75 miles west of Washington, D.C. — close enough to make a day trip but far enough that the campus feels like its own world. The town (population ~28,000) has a walkable historic downtown with locally owned restaurants, a few coffee shops, and the kind of charm that comes from being one of the oldest cities in Virginia. The surrounding area is defined by the Blue Ridge and Allegheny mountains — hiking, skiing at Bryce or Massanutten, and apple orchards are all within easy reach. It's not a college town in the buzzing-with-students sense; Winchester has its own identity, and Shenandoah is part of it rather than the center of it. The campus itself is on the south side of town, with newer facilities that reflect steady investment over the past two decades.

Where Students Live & How They Get Around

Shenandoah is primarily residential for the first two years — freshmen and sophomores are expected to live on campus, and dorms range from traditional halls to suite-style buildings. Upperclassmen frequently move into apartments or rental houses in Winchester, which are affordable by mid-Atlantic standards. A car becomes genuinely useful by junior year if you want to explore the valley, get to D.C., or handle internship commutes, though campus itself is compact enough to walk across in ten minutes. The weather tracks with the northern Virginia/West Virginia pattern: four distinct seasons, with warm humid summers and winters that bring real cold and occasional snow. Fall in the valley is genuinely beautiful — the kind of place where the leaves turning is an actual event.

Campus Culture & Community

The social scene at Shenandoah is shaped by its small size and its two dominant populations: performing arts students and health sciences students. Conservatory kids are rehearsing, performing, and collaborating constantly — there's a show or recital happening almost every week, and attending performances is a genuine part of campus social life, not an obligation. Health sciences students tend to be focused and cohort-based, studying together and building tight professional networks early. There is no Greek life at Shenandoah, which means the social fabric runs through student organizations, residence life, athletics, and the arts. Weekend social life is quieter than at larger schools — small gatherings, trips to downtown Winchester, outdoor adventures in the valley. School spirit exists but isn't the rah-rah variety; it's more of a familial pride in the community. The smallness is the defining feature — you will be recognized, you will be known, and anonymity isn't really an option.

Mission & Values

Shenandoah is affiliated with the United Methodist Church, but in practice this is one of the lighter religious affiliations you'll encounter. There's a chapel on campus and occasional faith-based programming, but no required theology courses and no dry-campus policy. Students who aren't religious report feeling comfortable; the Methodist connection shows up more as a general ethos of service and compassion than as a visible religious culture. The school genuinely invests in the "whole person" idea — there's a noticeable emphasis on character development, community engagement, and treating students as individuals rather than ID numbers. Faculty and staff tend to know students by name, and the advising relationships are often described as genuinely caring rather than transactional.

Student Body

Shenandoah draws primarily from Virginia, the mid-Atlantic corridor (Maryland, Pennsylvania, New Jersey), and the D.C. suburbs, though the conservatory pulls students from farther afield who are chasing a specific program. The vibe is more earnest than preppy — students here tend to be passionate about their thing, whether that's music education, nursing, or athletic training. The campus is less politically charged than many schools; conversations lean practical rather than ideological. Diversity is a work in progress — the student body is more homogeneous than the region's demographics would suggest, though the university has been making visible efforts to broaden its reach. International enrollment is modest. The conservatory students bring a creative, expressive energy that keeps the campus from feeling exclusively pre-professional.

Academics

The headline programs are the Shenandoah Conservatory (music, theatre, dance) and the health professions — nursing, pharmacy (one of relatively few direct-entry Pharm.D. programs), physician assistant studies, occupational therapy, physical therapy, and athletic training. These aren't just "offered"; they're genuinely where the university's reputation and resources are concentrated. The conservatory's music therapy program is particularly well-regarded. For students outside these tracks, business, education, criminal justice, and the liberal arts are available but don't carry the same institutional heft. Class sizes are small — many upper-division courses have 15 students or fewer, and a student-faculty ratio around 10:1 means professors are accessible and accountable. The academic culture is collaborative rather than cutthroat; students in health sciences study together because the programs demand it, and conservatory students are inherently collaborative by nature. Faculty are teaching-focused — this is not a place where your professor disappears into a research lab. Study abroad exists but isn't a defining feature of the Shenandoah experience the way it is at some liberal arts colleges.

Athletics & Campus Sports Culture

Shenandoah competes in Division III as a member of the Old Dominion Athletic Conference, fielding around 24 varsity sports. Athletics matter here — not in the packed-stadium sense, but in the way that a significant chunk of the small student body being athletes makes sport a visible part of daily life. Multi-sport athletes aren't unusual, and the line between "athlete" and "non-athlete" is blurrier than at bigger schools. The ODAC is a competitive D3 conference with strong academic reputations across its member schools, and Shenandoah holds its own without athletics dominating the institutional identity. Student-athletes are well-integrated into campus life; you're as likely to see them in a theatre production as on the field. The athletic training and exercise science programs create natural bridges between the academic and athletic sides of campus.

What Else Should You Know

The Wilkins Athletics and Events Center and other newer facilities reflect a university that's been building aggressively — Shenandoah has invested heavily in its physical campus over the past 15-20 years, so the facilities often feel newer than the institution's 1875 founding date would suggest. Financial aid is worth a direct conversation with admissions; the sticker price is typical for a private university, but the discount rate is substantial, and most students receive institutional aid that brings the net cost closer to Virginia public-school territory. Winchester's cost of living is notably lower than nearby Northern Virginia or D.C., which helps with off-campus expenses. One thing to be realistic about: if your academic interests are in traditional liberal arts — political science, English, history, pure sciences — Shenandoah can serve you, but you won't be surrounded by peers in those disciplines the way you would at a traditional liberal arts college. The school's identity and energy flow through its signature programs. For the right student — someone drawn to performing arts, health professions, or a close-knit community in a beautiful valley setting — Shenandoah delivers an experience that's hard to replicate at a larger institution.

Field Hockey

  • Head coach Ashley Smeltzer-Kraft won 2016 ODAC Championship and 2019 ECAC Championship in 12 seasons.
  • Current team ranked #28 nationally (11-3 record), reached 2025 ODAC Final with 58% out-of-state roster.
  • Assistant Richard Hayden grew up playing field hockey in Ireland and represented Munster province.

About the School

  • Shenandoah Conservatory is one of top East Coast undergraduate music, theatre, and dance programs.
  • Direct-entry pharmacy and nursing programs let pre-health students lock in their path day one.

Field Hockey (2025)

Level
D3 High
FHC Rank
#28 of 163 (D3)
Massey Score
44.6 *
2025 Record
In-Division: 11-3
Conference
Old Dominion Athletic Conf.
Coach
Ashley Smeltzer-Kraft
Trajectory
→ Stable
Season Results
'25: L 1-5 vs Lynchburg (ODAC Final)
'24: L 1-2 vs Messiah (NCAA Second Round)
'23: L 1-2 vs Lynchburg (ODAC Final)

Programs

Popular Majors

Health Professions (27%)
Registered Nursing, Nursing Administration, Nursing Research and Clinical Nursing (74%)
• Public Health (13%)
• Rehabilitation and Therapeutic Professions (8%)
• Allied Health Diagnostic, Intervention, and Treatment Professions (5%)
Visual Arts (17%)
Drama/Theatre Arts and Stagecraft (54%)
• Music (35%)
• Dance (11%)
Biology (13%)
Business (12%)
Business Administration, Management and Operations (78%)
• Business/Managerial Economics (18%)
• Entrepreneurial and Small Business Operations (4%)
Psychology (6%)

My Programs

Environmental Science (1.0%)
Psychology (6.3%)
Biology (13.0%)
Sports Med / Kinesiology (30.6%)
French (0.8%)
Popular (top 25%) Available Not found

School Profile

Type
Private (United Methodist)
Classification
Doctoral/Professional

Student Body

Total
3,880
Undergrad
55%
Demographics
57% women
Student:Faculty
11:1

Academics

Admission Rate
78%
Retention
82%
Graduation
70%

Events & Clinics

No recruiting events listed

Costs

Total Cost
$50,500
Tuition
$36,028
Room & Board
$11,800

Avg Net Price
$30,055
Net Price ($110k+)
$34,304

Financial Aid

Freshmen Getting Aid
99%

Merit Aid

Avg Merit Grant
$12,583
Freshmen Merit Only
27%

Need-Based Aid

Freshmen w/ Need
72%
Avg % Need Met
1%
% Need Fully Met
35%
Avg Aid Package
$30,873
Grants / Loans
$7,808 / $3,183

Debt at Graduation

Avg Debt
$47,027
Source: CDS 2024

Location & Weather

Setting
City (City: Small)
Nearest City
Washington, DC (63 mi)

HighLow
January41°24°
April65°42°
July86°66°
October66°45°

Admissions


Early Application
Not offered
Source: CDS 2024

Season History

Season Record GF/G GA/G GD SO OT Last Game
2025 15-4 3.4 1.6 +35 6 2 L 1-5 vs Lynchburg (ODAC Final)
2024 19-3 4.0 0.9 +68 9 5 L 1-2 vs Messiah (NCAA Second Round at Williams)
2023 16-3 3.9 0.8 +59 11 0 L 1-2 vs Lynchburg (ODAC Final)
2022 17-3 5.3 1.1 +84 8 0 L 1-3 vs Lynchburg (ODAC Semifinals)
2021 14-3 5.0 1.2 +64 7 0 L 1-3 vs Lynchburg (ODAC Semifinals)
2020 * 7-4 5.5 1.7 +41 5 1 L 4-5 (OT) vs Lynchburg (ODAC Semifinals)
2019 17-4 3.3 1.0 +48 7 5 W 3-2 (OT) vs Lebanon Valley (ECAC Final)
2018 15-5 2.9 1.8 +23 5 4 L 2-7 vs Lynchburg (ODAC Final)
2017 10-9 2.3 1.8 +9 5 3 L 1-3 vs Washington & Lee (ODAC Semifinals at W&L)
2016 13-9 3.1 1.7 +30 7 3 L 0-2 vs Rochester (NCAA First round)
2015 12-7 2.3 1.3 +18 7 4 L 2-3 vs Washington & Lee (ODAC Semifinals at W&L)
* Shortened COVID season
Click any season to view full schedule

Coaching Staff

Name Position Contact Bio
Ashley Smeltzer Kraft Associate Athletic Director/Head Coach asmeltze@su.edu View Bio
Meredith Bloomfield Assistant Coach mbloomfi@su.edu View Bio
Wendy Ware 08 Assistant Coach wtaylor@alumni.su.edu View Bio
Richard Hayden Assistant Coach View Bio

Roster Breakdown

26 players

Geographic Recruiting

In-State: 42% (11 players)
US Out-of-State: 58% (15 players)
Virginia: 42% (11 players)
Maryland: 35% (9 players)

Position Breakdown

Forward: 9 (34.6%)
Midfielder: 13 (50.0%)

Roster Composition

Graduating '27: 6 players (23%)
Forward: 3
Midfielder: 2
Class of 2026: 6 (23%)
Class of 2028: 3 (12%)
Class of 2029: 11 (42%)

Full Roster (26 players)

# Name Position Year Height Hometown High School
1 Kaitlyn Mogar Forward/Midfielder So. 5-6 Frederick, MD Urbana
2 Claudia Lenahan Forward/Midfield Sr. 5-3 Bristow, VA Patriot
3 Mary Weaver Forward Fy. 5-5 Perry Hall, MD Eastern Technical
4 Sidney Tucci Midfield Jr. 5-3 Frederick, MD Frederick
5 Regan Fields Defense Sr. 5-4 Fredericksburg, VA Colonial Forge
7 Natalie Opatovsky Defender Fy. 5-7 Sykesville, MD Century
8 Ava Fields Midfielder/Defender Fy. 5-7 Centreville, MD Queen Anne’s County
9 Madison Short Midfield/Defense Sr. 5-2 Bridgeville, Del. Sussex Tech
10 Camryn DeLeva Defense Jr. 5-4 Fredericksburg, VA Stafford
11 Kaitlyn Nakamura Midfield/Defense Jr. 5-5 Warrenton, VA Kettle Run
13 Reagan Flory Forward Fy. 5-4 Elizabethtown, PA Elizabethtown Area
14 Lily Kyvelos Forward Jr. 5-1 Allentown, PA Parkland
15 Catherine Groszkowski Midfield/Defender Fy. 5-3 Annapolis, MD Archbishop Spalding
16 Mallory Holup Defense Sr. 5-1 Yorktown, VA York
17 Ellie Quinn Forward Fy. 5-7 Skowhegan ME, VA Skowhegan Area
18 Mackenzie Watkins Foward/Midfield Sr. 5-4 Fredericksburg, VA Courtland
19 Kierney Weigle Foward/Midfielder Fy. 5-10 Biglerville, PA Biglerville
20 Maia Fissel Midfield/Defender Fy. 5-2 Fredericksburg, VA Chancellor
22 Brinley Tozer Forward/Midfield So. 5-2 Westminster, MD Westminster
23 Kayleigh Vodvarka Midfielder/Defender Fy. 5-6 Bridgeville, DE Woodbridge
24 Emily Swartzbaugh Forward Jr. 5-4 Poquoson, VA Poquoson
27 Emily Schorr Midfield/Defender Fy. 5-7 Jefferson, NJ Jefferson Township
31 Cassidy Alexander Goalkeeper Fy. 5-3 Millington, MD Queen Anne’s County
32 Jordan Ivey Goalkeeper So. 5-3 Poquoson, VA Poquoson
52 Autumn Goldsberry Goalkeeper Jr. 5-2 Nokesville, VA Battlefield
98 Emma Meissner Goalkeeper Sr. 5-6 Eldersburg, MD Liberty