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The Northwest Athletic Conference (NWAC), formerly the Northwest Athletic Association of Community Colleges (NWAACC), is a sports association for community colleges in the U.S. states of Oregon, Washington, and along with the Canadian province of British Columbia.
M State was created in 2003 with the merger of Fergus Falls Community College and three campuses of Northwest Technical College.The goal of the merger was to create a comprehensive community college to provide technical education and coursework for students interested in pursuing a bachelor's degree.
Northwest Technical College is a public technical college in Bemidji, Minnesota. It is part of the Minnesota State Colleges and Universities System. It was founded in 1965 as Bemidji Area Vocational Institute. [1] Northwest Technical College and Bemidji State University share overlapping administration, including the same President. [1]
1925 – The NWC was founded as the Pacific Northwest Conference (PNWC). Charter members include the College of Idaho, Linfield College (now Linfield University), Pacific University, the College of Puget Sound (now the University of Puget Sound), Whitman College and Willamette University, beginning the 1926–27 academic year.
College City State Northwest Technical College: Bemidji: Minnesota: Hocking Technical College: Nelsonville: Ohio: Pittsburgh Technical Institute [150] Pittsburgh: Pennsylvania: Denmark Technical College: Denmark: South Carolina: Southeast Technical Institute [151] Sioux Falls: South Dakota: Western Technical College: La Crosse: Wisconsin
A 2015 college baseball game between Northwestern Ohio and Grace College at Racer Field The UNOH athletic teams are known as the Racers. The university is a member of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), primarily competing in the Wolverine–Hoosier Athletic Conference (WHAC) since the 2010–2011 academic year.
The Northwest Athletic Conference (NWAC) and the United States Collegiate Athletic Association (USCAA) also feature community colleges with softball programs as members. In the NJCAA, 357 schools compete across three divisions of play, divided up into 24 different regions.
This list includes institutions that sponsored athletic programs that competed at the highest level in the NCAA (Division I 1973-present, University Division 1957-1973). Schools that were deemed major schools in athletics before 1957 are not included in this list.