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Milwaukee School of Engineering was founded in 1903 by Oscar Werwath and initially called the School of Engineering. Werwath's goal was to meet the needs of the workforce for the growing engineering field. [5] Werwath was the first person to plan an American educational institution based on an applications-oriented curriculum. [6]
Milwaukee School of Engineering: Raiders Milwaukee, Wisconsin: 1903 Private (Nonsectarian) 2,500 2010 Northern: Mount St. Joseph University: Lions Delhi Township, Ohio: 1920 Private (Catholic) 2012 2015 Ohio River: North Central University: Rams: Minneapolis, Minnesota: 1930 Private (Assemblies of God) 1,200 2019 Upper Midwest: Trine University ...
Milwaukee: C2C: MSOE Raiders: Milwaukee School of Engineering: Milwaukee: NACC [a] Northland LumberJacks and LumberJills: Northland College: Ashland: UMAC [a] [a] Ripon Red Hawks: Ripon College: Ripon: Midwest: St. Norbert Green Knights: St. Norbert College: De Pere: NACC [a] [a] Wisconsin-Eau Claire Blugolds: University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire ...
In the first WIAA-sanctioned girls lacrosse state title game, Kettle Moraine won an instant classic over University School of Milwaukee on Saturday.
2007 - The Milwaukee School of Engineering (MSoE) (also a former member from the defunct Lake Michigan Conference) joined the NAC after spending a season as an NCAA D-III Independent school, effective in the 2007-08 academic year. [citation needed]
Toggle Lacrosse subsection. 6.1 Men. 7 Rowing. 8 Swimming & diving. ... Milwaukee School of Engineering: Milwaukee, Wisconsin: 1903 Nonsectarian 2,122 Raiders: 2006 ...
In 2015, men's and women's lacrosse were added as sanctioned sports by the CCIW. The CCIW announced the inclusion of men's volleyball for the 2020 season (2019–20 school year), with bowling (an NCAA sport for women only) added in 2020–21. Women's wrestling became the newest conference sport in 2022–23.
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.