Widener University is a small private university in Chester, Pennsylvania, with roughly 2,765 undergraduates — a school where you won't disappear into a crowd and your professors will know your name, not just your student ID number. What makes Widener distinctive is its unusual combination: it offers genuinely strong professional and pre-professional programs (engineering, nursing, physical therapy, social work) inside a school small enough to feel like a liberal arts college, all while competing in Division III athletics in the Middle Atlantic Conference Commonwealth. The school traces its roots to 1821 and a former military college identity it shed in 1972, but today it's a place built for students who want hands-on learning, clinical placements, and career-oriented education without sacrificing the close community and playing time that come with a smaller institution. If you're a student-athlete who wants to be taken seriously both in your sport and in a demanding academic program, Widener deserves a hard look.
Location & Setting
Let's be straightforward: Chester, Pennsylvania is not a charming college town. It's a small, economically struggling city about 15 miles south of Philadelphia along the Delaware River, and the surrounding blocks off campus can feel rough. The university has invested heavily in its campus boundaries and security — you'll notice a clear perimeter, good lighting, and a visible public safety presence. That said, the campus itself is green, walkable, and self-contained, creating a kind of bubble effect. You're close enough to Philadelphia that a SEPTA regional rail ride gets you into Center City in about 30 minutes, and Wilmington, Delaware, is a similar distance south. The area immediately around campus has limited walkable dining or nightlife, which pushes social life inward — onto campus and into Philly on weekends. PPL Park (now Subaru Park), home of the Philadelphia Union MLS team, is literally adjacent to the area, and the Harrah's Philadelphia casino and racetrack are nearby, though neither defines student life.
Where Students Live & How They Get Around
Widener is primarily a residential campus for underclassmen. Freshmen and sophomores generally live on campus in residence halls, while juniors and seniors often move into nearby apartments or university-affiliated housing. The residential experience is decent but not luxurious — traditional doubles and suite-style options, with the newer halls being noticeably nicer. Having a car becomes increasingly useful as you get older, both for off-campus living logistics and for getting to Philly, the King of Prussia shopping area, or the Delaware beaches. Campus itself is compact and easy to walk — you can cross it in about ten minutes. Winters in the Delaware Valley are real but manageable: cold, sometimes snowy, with enough gray days in January and February that having indoor social options matters.
Campus Culture & Community
Social life at Widener revolves around a mix of Greek life, athletics, and campus programming. Greek organizations are present and visible — probably five to seven active chapters — and they play a meaningful role in weekend social life, especially for underclassmen. But they're not the only game in town. Student organizations (around 80+), intramural sports, and campus events fill the calendar. Homecoming weekend generates real energy, and the school does a solid job with programming like Late Night events, comedians, and themed weeks. The culture leans friendly and accessible rather than exclusive — people tend to know each other across friend groups because the school is small. Friday and Saturday nights often mean Greek events, house gatherings in off-campus apartments, or trips into Philly. There's an intimacy to the social scene that can feel either comforting or claustrophobic depending on your personality. School spirit exists in bursts — it peaks around Homecoming and big rivalry games — but this isn't a campus where athletics dominate daily conversation.
Mission & Values
Widener talks a lot about civic engagement and leadership, and to its credit, that mission actually shows up in the curriculum and student experience. Many programs require service-learning components, internships, or clinical placements, and the school's Center for Civic Engagement is active rather than decorative. The university's location in Chester — a community with real needs — creates genuine opportunities for community-based work that feels substantive rather than performative. Students regularly tutor in local schools, work in community health settings, and contribute to local nonprofits. The school is not religiously affiliated, so there's no chapel requirement or theological curriculum to navigate. The ethos is more "develop practical skills and give back" than "intellectual exploration for its own sake." Students consistently report feeling known and supported by faculty and staff, which is one of Widener's clearest strengths.
Student Body
Widener draws heavily from the mid-Atlantic corridor — Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware, and Maryland supply the majority of the student body. You'll find some New England and New York representation, especially among athletes, but this is a regional school. The student body is more diverse than many comparable small universities, reflecting both the Philadelphia metro area's demographics and deliberate institutional effort. Politically, the campus skews moderate with pockets of progressive and conservative voices; it's not an activist campus in any organized sense. The typical Widener student is practical-minded, often first-generation or from working- and middle-class families, and focused on getting a degree that leads directly to a career. The vibe is more "down-to-earth and pre-professional" than "preppy" or "intellectual for sport."
Academics
Widener's standout programs are in areas where classroom learning meets professional practice. Nursing and health sciences are flagship strengths — the nursing program is well-regarded regionally and benefits from clinical placement networks across the Philadelphia area. Engineering is a legacy strength from the Pennsylvania Military College era, and the school still produces solid mechanical, civil, chemical, and electrical engineers, with small class sizes that let students get real lab and project time. The physical therapy doctoral program (DPT) is a genuine draw, and students in the pre-PT track benefit from an integrated pathway. Social work, education, business administration, and hospitality management round out the strong professional programs. The liberal arts offerings are adequate but not why most students choose Widener — psychology and criminal justice are popular majors within that space.
Class sizes are small, typically 15–20 students, and the student-faculty ratio hovers around 12:1. Professors are teaching-focused and overwhelmingly accessible — office hours aren't a formality here; students actually use them. The academic culture is collaborative rather than cutthroat, and faculty tend to invest personally in student success, often helping with internship placements and graduate school applications. Study abroad exists but doesn't define the culture; participation rates are modest compared to liberal arts colleges. The curriculum includes general education requirements, but they're not especially distinctive — standard distribution across writing, math, sciences, and humanities.
Athletics & Campus Sports Culture
As a Division III school in the Middle Atlantic Conference Commonwealth, Widener fields around 23 varsity sports. D3 athletics here means what it should: student-athletes who compete seriously but chose their school for academic and personal reasons, not scholarship money. Football has historical significance — a nod to the military college era — and football games draw the most consistent crowds, particularly Homecoming. Men's and women's lacrosse, soccer, swimming, and track and field are competitive within the conference. Athletes are well-integrated into campus life rather than existing in a separate social tier; on a campus of under 3,000, the student-athlete population represents a meaningful percentage of the student body, so athletes are everywhere — in your classes, in Greek life, in leadership roles. The facilities are functional and have seen periodic updates, though they're not flashy. Coaching staffs tend to be engaged and genuinely invested in player development both on and off the field, which is one of the real benefits of D3 athletics at a school this size.
What Else Should You Know
The elephant in the room is Chester itself. Every honest conversation about Widener includes it. The city has high poverty and crime rates, and while campus safety measures are strong and incidents on campus are relatively rare, the contrast between campus and the surrounding blocks is stark. This bothers some students and is a non-issue for others — but you should visit and see it for yourself before committing.
Financial aid is another important factor. Widener's sticker price is high, but the school discounts aggressively; most students receive significant institutional aid, and the net price for many families is substantially lower than the published cost. Ask specifically about merit and athletic-adjacent aid (D3 schools can't offer athletic scholarships, but coaches often help connect recruits with academic and leadership awards).
A note on data: Widener's own materials sometimes cite total undergraduate enrollment around 3,500, which may include part-time and non-traditional students. The figure of 2,765 likely reflects full-time traditional undergraduates more accurately, and that's the number that shapes your day-to-day experience.
Finally, Widener's alumni network in the Philadelphia region is quietly strong, particularly in engineering, nursing, education, and law. Graduates tend to stay in the area and hire from their alma mater. If you plan to build a career in the greater Philadelphia corridor, that network has real value.

| High | Low | |
|---|---|---|
| January | 43° | 27° |
| April | 66° | 45° |
| July | 89° | 70° |
| October | 68° | 50° |
| Talent/Ability | Considered |
| Demonstrated Interest | Considered |
| Course Rigor | Very Important |
| GPA | Very Important |
| Test Scores | Considered |
| Essay | Considered |
| Recommendations | Considered |
| Extracurriculars | Considered |
| Interview | Considered |
| Character | Considered |
| Season | Record | GF/G | GA/G | GD | SO | OT | Last Game |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 10-7 | 2.9 | 2.0 | +15 | 4 | 2 | L 0-1 vs Messiah |
| 2024 | 7-10 | 2.2 | 1.8 | +6 | 4 | 2 | W 3-1 vs Eastern |
| 2023 | 8-10 | 1.3 | 1.4 | -3 | 6 | 0 | L 0-3 vs York (MAC Commonwealth Semifinals) |
| 2022 | 10-7 | 2.1 | 1.4 | +11 | 6 | 1 | L 0-2 vs Alvernia |
| 2021 | 15-6 | 3.5 | 1.2 | +48 | 10 | 2 | L 1-2 vs Ramapo (ECAC Semifinals at Ramapo) |
| 2019 | 15-4 | 2.9 | 0.6 | +44 | 11 | 2 | L 0-1 (OT) vs Lebanon Valley (Commonwealth Semifinals) |
| 2018 | 8-8 | 2.2 | 1.6 | +10 | 5 | 3 | L 0-2 vs Juniata (ECAC First round) |
| 2017 | 12-7 | 2.4 | 1.5 | +18 | 7 | 2 | L 0-1 (3 OT) vs FDU (ECAC Semifinal at Alvernia) |
| 2016 | 8-8 | 1.6 | 1.9 | -5 | 2 | 2 | W 2-1 vs Arcadia |
| 2015 | 6-9 | 2.1 | 2.1 | 0 | 4 | 2 | L 2-5 vs Arcadia |
| Name | Position | Contact | Bio |
|---|---|---|---|
| Melissa Mccarthy | Head Field Hockey Coach | mlmccarthy@widener.edu | View Bio |
| Katie Redding | Assistant Field Hockey Coach | — | View Bio |
| Stefania Swider | Assistant Field Hockey Coach | — | View Bio |
| Margaret Howe Consiglio | Assistant Field Hockey Coach | — | View Bio |
| Kristin Davies | Field Hockey Faculty Advisor | — | |
| Karie McGuire | Field Hockey Faculty Advisor | — |
| # | Name | Position | Year | Height | Hometown | High School |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Briana Rocha | F | So. | 5-1 | Huntington Valley, Pa. | Lower Moreland |
| 3 | Krista Bervinchak | D | Jr. | 5-1 | Lancaster, Pa. | Hempfield |
| 4 | Alex Quartapella | M/D | Sr. | 5-2 | Havertown, Pa. | Cardinal O'Hara |
| 7 | Allyson Hakes | F | So. | 5-6 | Pottstown, Pa. | Pootsgrove |
| 9 | Skylar Bayard | F | Sr. | 5-7 | Newtown, Pa. | Council Rock North |
| 11 | Kendall Blankenship | D/M | Fy. | 5-8 | Springfield, Pa. | Springfield |
| 12 | Kayden Geiter | D/M | Fy. | 5-2 | Millersville, Pa. | Penn Manor |
| 14 | Megan Bryk | M/D | Jr. | 5-6 | Dallas, Pa. | Dallas |
| 16 | Katie Haye | F | Sr. | 5-1 | Mays Landing, N.J. | Oakcrest |
| 19 | Eleanor Gieser | M | Sr. | 5-5 | Falls Church, Va. | Meridian |
| 20 | Anabella Cenci | F | Jr. | 4-11 | Ronkonkoma, N.Y. | Connetquot |
| 21 | Brie Mallozzi | F/M | Sr. | 5-4 | Exton, Pa. | Bishop Shanahan |
| 22 | Kayleigh Armstrong | D/M | Sr. | 5-7 | Haddon Township, N.J. | Haddon Township |
| 23 | Karly Bervinchak | F/M | So. | 5-0 | Lancaster, Pa. | Hempfield |
| 25 | Paula Thompson | D/F | So. | 5-5 | Franklinville, N.J. | Delsea Regional |
| 40 | Gwen Yeager | G | Fy. | 5-0 | Sykesville, Md. | Liberty |
| 42 | Arwen Fithian | G | Sr. | 5-11 | Pennsville, N.J. | Pennsville Memorial |
| 43 | Lilly Rejrat | G | Sr. | 5-7 | Nicholson, Pa. | Lackawanna Trail |
| 55 | Addison McManis | G | Fy. | 5-6 | Blackwood, N.J. | Triton Regional |