Student athletes have lots of options to chooose from today when trying to decide which college to attend. Our mission at College Factual is to arm you with as much information as we can to help you make that decision. Our Best Colleges for Division I Women's Golf in Colorado ranking is one tool we have developed to help in this regard.
We've developed a number of other tools and rankings to help you make your college decision. Start by filtering this list by location and then explore our other rankings that feature schools great for different groups of students such as online students or returnings adults.
One of our other unique offerings is College Combat. This tool lets you build your own customized comparisons utilizing the factors that are most important to you. Test it out by comparing your favorite schools against others you are considering, or bookmark the tool so you can experiment with it later.
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Top College in Colorado for D1 Women's Golf athletes in Colorado
Our analysis found University of Colorado Boulder to be the best school for D1 Women’s Golf athletes in Colorado in this year’s ranking. Boulder, Colorado is the setting for this large institution of higher learning. The public school handed out bachelor’s degrees to 7,273 students in .
The D1 Women’s Golf team at CU - Boulder brought home $281,610 in revenue in a single year. Sports aren’t the only thing that the team excels at - they had a perfect academic progress rate of 1000.
The school has an excellent freshman retention rate of 87%, which means students like the school well enough to return for a second year. CU - Boulder did well in our overall quality rankings, too. It placed #4 on our overall quality list.
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Best Colleges for D1 Women's Golf in the Rocky Mountains Region
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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%.