When pursuing a degree in today's world, student athletes have many different options to choose from. College Factual was founded, in part, to help students make the decision as to what would be the best school for them. Our Best Colleges for Division III Women's Basketball in Nebraska ranking is part of that endeavor.
Since one ranking on its own is not enough to give you a complete understanding of your educational options, you can refine this list by location. We've also developed a number of other tools and rankings based on other factors. These other rankings highlight colleges that excel in other factors such as value or diversity as well as schools that excel in serving different groups of students such as online students or returnings adults.
We've created a tool called College Combat that lets you create your own customized comparisons based on the factors that matter the most to you. We encourage you to try it out and pit your favorite colleges and universities head to head! If you don't have time right now, you can bookmark it for later.
Get Recruited to Play Sports in College
Gain Exposure & Get Discovered by College Coaches
Top College in Nebraska for D3 Women's Basketball athletes in Nebraska
Our analysis found Nebraska Wesleyan University to be the best school for D3 Women’s Basketball athletes in Nebraska in this year’s ranking. Located in Lincoln, Nebraska, the small private not-for-profit school awarded 467 diplomas to qualified bachelor’s degree students in .
NWU brought in $107,857 while tallying up $100,989 in expenses for its D3 Women’s Basketball team. That boils down to a yearly profit of $6,868 for the sports team.
NWU did well in our overall quality rankings, too. It placed #5 on our overall quality list.
Read full sports report on Nebraska Wesleyan University
Best Colleges for D3 Women's Basketball in the Plains States Region
Get your FREE recruiting profile, assessment & game plan!
Notes and References
Footnotes
*Avg Tuition and Fees and Avg 4-Year Grad Rate are for the top 1 schools only.
References
The Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS) from the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), a branch of the U.S. Department of Education (DOE) serves as the core of our data about colleges.
The academic progress rate (APR) of each team was made available by the NCAA.
Some other college data, including much of the graduate earnings data, comes from the U.S. Department of Education’s (College Scorecard).
Information about the national average student loan default rate is from the U.S. Department of Education and refers to data about the 2016 borrower cohort tracking period for which the cohort default rate (CDR) was 10.1%.