Campus Overview

Virginia Commonwealth University is a large, public research university in the heart of Richmond, Virginia, enrolling roughly 20,797 undergraduates across 11 schools and three colleges. What makes VCU distinctive is the collision of a top-tier arts school, a powerhouse health sciences campus, and the gritty creative energy of an urban setting that doesn't feel like a typical state university — it feels more like an art school merged with a medical center, dropped into one of the South's most underrated cities. VCU is for the student-athlete who wants a real city experience, thrives around creative and diverse people, doesn't need a manicured quad to feel at home, and wants D1 competition in the Atlantic 10 Conference without the campus being defined solely by football culture (there is no football team, which shapes everything).


Location & Setting

VCU sits in downtown Richmond, and "sits in" is underselling it — the campus essentially *is* a chunk of the city. There are two main campuses about a mile apart: the Monroe Park Campus (the academic and student life hub) and the MCV Campus (the medical/health sciences center along the James River). Stepping off campus means stepping onto city sidewalks lined with independent coffee shops, muraled buildings, taco joints, and galleries in the arts district of Carytown and the fan-shaped neighborhood called "The Fan." Richmond itself is a mid-sized Southern city with a surprisingly deep cultural identity — it has a real food scene, a growing craft beer culture, the James River running through it with Class III and IV rapids (yes, whitewater rapids in a state capital), and neighborhoods that range from historic cobblestone to industrial-chic. The city's complicated history, including its role as the Confederate capital, is visible and actively reckoned with, which creates a more textured environment than you'd find at a suburban campus. For outdoor athletes, the James River Park System is essentially VCU's backyard — students kayak, boulder, run trails, and swim in the river regularly.

Where Students Live & How They Get Around

VCU is not a residential bubble. Freshmen are required to live on campus, and the university has expanded residence halls in recent years, but only about 25% of students live in university housing. After freshman year, most students move into apartments in The Fan District or nearby neighborhoods like Oregon Hill and Jackson Ward — affordable (by East Coast standards), walkable, and full of character. A car is not necessary and often more hassle than it's worth; the campus is walkable, the GRTC bus system (with a free student pass) covers the city, and many students bike. Richmond's climate is four-season Mid-Atlantic — hot, humid summers, mild-to-cold winters with occasional snow but nothing brutal, and genuinely pleasant springs and falls that keep people outside.

Campus Culture & Community

VCU's culture is unlike most large public universities. Greek life exists but is a minor presence — maybe 5-7% of students participate — so it doesn't set the social tone. Instead, the social fabric is shaped by the arts community, city nightlife, student organizations (there are over 500 registered clubs), and the DIY ethos that Richmond breeds. Friday and Saturday nights might mean a house show in The Fan, a gallery opening on Broad Street, a night out in Shockoe Bottom, or, during basketball season, packing the Siegel Center. The lack of a football program means basketball *is* the sport, and when the Rams are rolling, the energy is real — more on that below. VCU's student body skews independent and creative; people are generally welcoming but not in a "rah-rah, we're all best friends" way. It's more of a "live and let live, find your people" environment. The annual VCU RamJam concert, the Rows Arts Festival, and various cultural events tied to Richmond's identity give the campus touchstones, but this isn't a school defined by tradition — it's defined by its current energy.

Mission & Values

VCU's institutional identity centers on access, diversity, and community engagement. As a public university with an urban mission, it takes seriously its role in serving Richmond — through the VCU Health System, community partnerships, and service-learning. The health sciences campus isn't just academic; it's a functioning medical center integrated into the city. Students in many programs engage with real communities, not hypothetical case studies. The university has invested heavily in supporting first-generation students and has one of the more economically diverse student bodies among Virginia's public universities. That said, VCU is big — with over 28,000 total students including graduate and professional — so feeling "known" depends on your program and your effort. Student-athletes, because of their built-in team structure and advising support, often find community more immediately than the average freshman.

Student Body

VCU is one of the most diverse universities in Virginia, and it's not just a brochure claim — you see it walking through campus. The undergraduate population is roughly 35-40% students of color, with significant Black, Asian, and Latino representation. Most students come from Virginia, particularly the Richmond metro, Hampton Roads, and Northern Virginia, but there's a growing out-of-state and international population. Politically, the campus leans progressive, consistent with its urban setting and arts identity. Students tend to be creative, pragmatic, socially aware, and less conventionally "collegiate" than what you'd find at, say, UVA or Virginia Tech. There's a strong contingent of first-generation college students, which gives the culture a less entitled, more hustling feel.

Academics

VCU's crown jewel is VCU Arts (the School of the Arts), which U.S. News consistently ranks as a top-3 public university art and design program nationally — sculpture, painting, graphic design, photography, and kinetic imaging are especially strong. But VCU is far more than an art school. The health sciences are elite: the School of Medicine, School of Pharmacy, and School of Nursing are nationally ranked, and the pre-health pipeline is serious and well-supported, with direct access to the VCU Medical Center for clinical exposure. The College of Engineering offers solid programs that benefit from research funding (VCU pulled in $506 million in sponsored research in FY2024, a staggering number). Business (the School of Business) has grown in reputation, particularly in real estate and finance. The College of Humanities and Sciences is the largest school and covers the breadth — biology, psychology, and criminal justice are among the most popular majors. The student-to-faculty ratio is about 17:1, and class sizes vary widely: big introductory lectures exist, but upper-division classes shrink considerably. The academic culture is more collaborative than cutthroat, and professors in smaller programs are genuinely accessible. VCU has a general education curriculum (not an open curriculum), and study abroad participation is modest compared to peer institutions — maybe 5-8% of students go abroad, though the university is working to grow this.

Athletics & Campus Sports Culture

This is where the story gets interesting for a prospective student-athlete. VCU competes in NCAA Division I in the Atlantic 10 Conference and fields 15 varsity sports — but there is no football program, which fundamentally reshapes the athletic culture. Men's basketball is the flagship, and it is *the* rallying point for school spirit. The 2011 Final Four run — when VCU went from the First Four to the Final Four as an 11-seed — is a defining moment in the school's modern identity. The Siegel Center (7,500 seats) gets loud and packed for big games, and "Havoc," the full-court press style of play, became a national brand. Student attendance at basketball games is strong, and the Ram Band adds energy. Beyond basketball, men's and women's soccer, baseball, track and field, and tennis compete seriously in the A-10, and women's basketball has grown. Student-athletes are integrated into campus life — VCU isn't so big or sports-obsessed that athletes are isolated celebrities, nor are they invisible. The athletic academic support system provides tutoring, advising, and priority registration, which matters at a university this size. If you're coming as a student-athlete, know that you'll be respected and supported, but outside of basketball season, the broader student body's engagement with athletics is moderate. You won't get SEC-level fanfare, but you'll play D1 ball in a conference that competes hard, in a city that gives you a real life outside the gym.

What Else Should You Know

Richmond is a city on the rise, and VCU is a big reason why. The university has been a catalyst for neighborhood revitalization (and, honestly, gentrification — students should be aware of those dynamics). The cost of living is very reasonable compared to D.C. or the Northeast, which matters when you're living off campus. In-state tuition is a genuine value for Virginia residents; out-of-state costs are higher but VCU offers merit scholarships that can close the gap. The VCU campus doesn't look like a postcard — it's urban, with some beautiful historic buildings (like the Egyptian Building, a stunning 1845 structure) mixed with modern facilities and, yes, some unremarkable institutional architecture. Safety is a real conversation: Richmond is a city, and students learn urban awareness. VCU has its own police department and a robust alert system, but this isn't a gated campus. One more thing a well-informed friend would say: VCU is a place where you get out what you put in. It won't hold your hand, but if you engage — with your team, your professors, the city — you'll have an experience that's hard to replicate at a more insular school. For the student-athlete who wants both competitive Division I sport and a genuine, diverse, urban college experience, VCU is a seriously compelling option.

Field Hockey

  • 13-5 record, #32 ranking nationally, rising trajectory with 2025 A10 Semifinal appearance.
  • 74% out-of-state, 43% international roster: heavily recruited program drawing global talent.

About the School

  • Urban campus merged into downtown Richmond—no quad, no football culture, real city living.
  • Dual-campus structure: arts powerhouse on Monroe Park, health sciences along James River rapids.

Field Hockey (2025)

Level
D1 High
FHC Rank
#32 of 83 (D1)
Massey Score
79.0 *
2025 Record
Overall: 13-5
Conference
Atlantic 10 Conference
Trajectory
↑ Rising
Season Results
'25: L 2-3 (2 OT) vs Saint Joseph's (A10 Semifinal)
'24: L 0-4 vs Massachusetts (A10 Semifinals)
'23: L 2-3 (OT) vs Massachusetts (A-10 Semifinals)

Programs

Popular Majors

Visual Arts (12%)
Design and Applied Arts (50%)
Fine and Studio Arts (14%)
• Film/Video and Photographic Arts (12%)
• Music (9%)
• Drama/Theatre Arts and Stagecraft (6%)
• Crafts/Craft Design, Folk Art and Artisanry (6%)
• Dance (3%)
Business (12%)
Business/Commerce, General (58%)
Marketing (18%)
• Accounting and Related Services (12%)
• Business/Managerial Economics (8%)
• Real Estate (2%)
• Finance and Financial Management Services (1%)
Psychology (10%)
Biology (8%)
Education (8%)

My Programs

Environmental Science (1.3%)
Psychology (9.6%)
Biology (7.9%)
Sports Med / Kinesiology (6.9%)
French (0.2%)
Popular (top 25%) Available Not found

School Profile

Type
Public
Classification
Doctoral: Very High Research

Student Body

Total
27,830
Undergrad
75%
Demographics
64% women
Freshmen
92% in-state
Student:Faculty
17:1

Academics

Admission Rate
93%
SAT Median
1,150
SAT Range
1,030-1,270
ACT Median
26
Retention
86%
Graduation
65%

Events & Clinics

No recruiting events listed
Upcoming Clinics:
Apr 27 Rams Field Hockey Academy Clinic Register →

Costs

Total Cost
$34,346
In-State
$16,458
Out-of-State
$39,042
Room & Board
$16,119

Avg Net Price
$19,452
Net Price ($110k+, IS)
$28,474
Est. Net Cost (OOS)
$51,058

Financial Aid

Freshmen Getting Aid
68%

Need-Based Aid

Freshmen w/ Need
68%
Avg % Need Met
29%
% Need Fully Met
8%
Avg Aid Package
$19,344

Debt at Graduation

Avg Debt
$29,417
Source: CDS 2024

Location & Weather

Setting
City (City: Midsize)
Nearest City
Richmond, VA (1 mi)
Major Metro
Washington, DC (96 mi)

HighLow
January48°29°
April70°46°
July90°69°
October71°49°

Admissions


Early Application
Not offered

Class Size

Under 20
33%
20–29
32%
30–39
14%
40+
21%
Source: CDS 2024

Season History

Season Record GF/G GA/G GD SO OT Last Game
2025 13-5 2.2 1.1 +20 8 4 L 2-3 (2 OT) vs Saint Joseph's (A10 Semifinal at Richmond)
2024 11-7 2.6 1.7 +16 6 4 L 0-4 vs Massachusetts (A10 Semifinals at SJU)
2023 13-6 2.4 1.3 +21 6 3 L 2-3 (OT) vs Massachusetts (A-10 Semifinals at VCU)
2022 10-9 2.2 1.5 +14 4 2 L 1-2 vs Saint Joseph's (A-10 Semifinals at UMass)
2021 12-6 2.2 0.9 +24 8 2 L 0-1 vs Saint Joseph's (A10 Final)
2020 * 9-1 2.4 0.7 +17 5 3 L 1-2 (2 OT) vs Bucknell (NCAA Quarterfinals at PSU)
2019 8-9 1.6 1.6 0 2 3 W 2-1 vs Maine (at UMass)
2018 12-7 2.9 1.6 +25 4 6 L 0-1 vs Saint Joseph's (A10 Final)
2017 14-6 2.7 1.4 +25 6 3 L 0-2 vs Massachusetts (A10 Semifinals at UMass)
2016 7-11 2.2 2.8 -11 1 2 W 3-0 vs Missouri State
2015 6-12 1.5 2.6 -20 3 4 W 1-0 vs Lock Haven
* Shortened COVID season
Click any season to view full schedule

Roster Breakdown

23 players

Geographic Recruiting

In-State: 26% (6 players)
US Out-of-State: 30% (7 players)
International: 43% (10 players)
Virginia: 26% (6 players)
Argentina: 17% (4 players)

Roster Composition

Graduating '27: 4 players (17%)
Class of 2026: 3 (13%)
Class of 2028: 9 (39%)
Class of 2029: 7 (30%)

Full Roster (23 players)

# Name Position Year Height Hometown High School
1 Claire Bieber - Fr. - Easton, Md. Saints Peter and Paul
2 Callie Dieffenbacher - So. - Lehman, Pa. Lake Lehman
3 Maddie Cornwell - Fr. - Hallwood, Va. Pocomoke
4 Genevieve Webb - So. - Easton, Md. Saints Peter and Paul
5 Cameron Butler - So. - Virginia Beach, Va. Kempsville
6 Mackenzie White - Jr. - Virginia Beach, Va. Cape Henry
7 Zoe Cabrera - Fr. - Bueno Aires, Argentina Instituto La Salle Florida
8 Manuela Secondo - Jr. - Santiago, Chile Grange
9 Amelia Wagner - So. - Waxhaw, N.C. Marvin Ridge
10 Lina Behrmann - Fr. - Hamburg, Germany Gymnasium Hochrad
11 Angelina Gandos - Fr. - Montevideo, Uruguay Saint Brendan’s School
12 Josefina Ventimiglia - Jr. - San Nicolas de los Arroyos, Argentina Escuela de la Paz
13 Lotje Aalderink - So. - Oosterbeek, Netherlands Thomas à Kempis
14 Emily Föerster - Fr. - Munich, Germany Gymnasium München Nord
15 Ashley Doyle - So. - Etters, Pa. Red Land
17 Carley Deaver - Jr. - Yorktown, Va. Tabb
19 Hannah Zimmerman - Fr. - Milford, Del. Milford Senior
21 Josephine Jense - Sr. - Amsterdam, Netherlands Fons Vitae Lyceum
22 Ana Afonso Osorio - So. - Cordoba, Argentina Intituto Jose Peña
23 Morena Macera - Sr. - Buenos Aires, Argentina Colegio Winter Garden
55 Lynnsi Joyce Goalkeeper Sr. - Pennsburg, Pa. Upper Perkiomen
70 Emma Clements Goalkeeper R-So. - Fredericksburg, Va. Fredericksburg Academy
80 Tatum Anderson Goalkeeper So. - Fairfax, Va. Fairfax