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Disbanded as an all-sports conference after steady losses of membership, both by schools closing and moves to other conferences. Remains in operation for men's volleyball and the non-NCAA esports. New England Conference * 1938: 1947: Disbanded; the final four members joined two other schools to form the Yankee Conference under a new
NCAA: New England Conference, [d] Yankee Conference, [e] Atlantic 10 Conference: Coastal Athletic Association [30] CAA 1979 NCAA: ECAC: New England Conference [31] 1923 1947 NCAA: New England College Conference of Intercollegiate Athletics Yankee Conference: Interstate Intercollegiate Athletic Conference [32] IIAC 1908 1970 NCAA
List of NCAA Division III institutions This page was last edited on 14 February 2024, at 13:07 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ...
In the 1996 NCAA conference realignment, the Southwest Conference dissolved, and four Texas teams from that conference joined with the Big 8 schools to form the Big 12 Conference. The Western Athletic Conference expanded to sixteen members, but half of the schools left in 1999 to form the Mountain West Conference.
This is a list of colleges and universities that are members of Division I, the highest level of competition sponsored by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). Currently, there are 364 institutions classified as Division I (including those in the process of transitioning from other divisions), making it the second largest ...
There are currently 431 American colleges and universities classified as Division III for NCAA competition, making it the largest division in the NCAA by school count. Schools from 34 of the 50 states and the District of Columbia are represented. All schools do not provide athletic scholarships to students.
United Athletic Conference ^ In addition to the sports that have confirmed conference homes for 2023–24, Lindenwood sponsors one other NCAA championship sport, plus one sport included in the NCAA Emerging Sports for Women program, that are not sponsored by the Ohio Valley Conference and have no currently announced conference home.
The NCAA classifies FBS football as a "head-count" sport, meaning that each player receiving any athletically-related aid from the school counts fully against the 85-player limit. By contrast, FCS football is classified as an "equivalency" sport, which means that scholarship aid is limited to the equivalent of a specified number of full ...