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The Jackson County Conference (originally Jackson County Athletic Association) was formed in 1921, containing all eleven schools in the county. [13] The conference had fallen to three schools by 1965, and folded in 1967, as the only school that didn't hold membership in the Dixie-Monon Conference joined that league.
The Indiana High School Athletic Association includes 427 member schools with 47 conferences. The largest conference is the Pocket Athletic with 13 schools. [1] Note 1: Boone Grove and South Central (Union Mills) compete in the Greater South Shore Conference as football-only members. They compete in all other sports in the Porter County Conference.
Indiana High School Athletics Conferences: Allen County – Metropolitan List of high school athletic conferences in Indiana Indiana High School Athletics Conferences: Mid-Eastern – Northwestern
The Indiana High School Athletic Association (IHSAA) is the arbiter of interscholastic competition among public and private high schools in the U.S. state of Indiana.. Member schools are classified into four classes based on enrollment, ranging from the smallest, 1A, to the largest, 4A.
The Allen County Athletic Conference (ACAC) is a seven-member Indiana High School Athletic Association (IHSAA) conference.While all of its charter schools are and were located in Allen County, it also has member schools from Adams, Jay, and Wells counties.
The Summit Athletic Conference, or SAC, is a high school athletic conference consisting of ten high schools located in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Three of the schools are private; one being a Lutheran academy, and the other two being Catholic preparatories. The rest are public schools, being part of Fort Wayne Community Schools.
The Hoosier Hills Conference is a seven-member, IHSAA-sanctioned athletic conference comprising large 4A and 5A (football)-sized schools in Bartholomew, Clark, Floyd, Jackson, Jennings, and Lawrence in South Central and Southeast Indiana. Madison departed the conference in 2021, thereby reducing its size to seven member schools.
Indiana's classes are determined by student enrollment, broken into classes of roughly equal size depending on sport. The 2011-12 school year marks a change in the classification period, as schools are reclassified in all class sports biennially instead of quadrennially.