Southwest Junior College Conference
Association | NJCAA |
---|---|
Founded | 1947 |
Sports fielded |
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No. of teams | 22 |
Headquarters | Austin, Texas |
Region | Eastern Texas and Southwestern Louisiana – NJCAA Region 14 |
Southwest Junior College Conference (SJCC), also known as Region XIV (or Region 14) is a junior college athletic conference governed by the National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA).
The Southwest Junior College Conference formed in 1947.[1]
Member schools
Current members
The SWJCC currently has 19 full members, all but one are public schools:
Institution | Location | Founded | Affiliation | Enrollment | Nickname | Joined |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Alvin Community College | Alvin, Texas | 1948 | Public | 5,293 | Dolphins | ? |
Angelina College | Lufkin, Texas | 1966 | Public | 5,000 | Roadrunners | ? |
Blinn College | Brenham, Texas | 1884 | Public | 18,977 | Buccaneers | ? |
Bossier Parish Community College | Bossier City, Louisiana | 1966 | Public[a] | 5,727 | Cavaliers | ? |
Coastal Bend College | Beeville, Texas | 1965 | Public | 4,992 | Cougars | ? |
Galveston College | Galveston, Texas | 1967 | Public | 2,400 | Whitecaps | ? |
Jacksonville College | Jacksonville, Texas | 1899 | Baptist | ? | Jaguars | ? |
Kilgore College | Kilgore, Texas | 1935 | Public | 5,000 | Rangers | ? |
Lamar State College–Port Arthur | Port Arthur, Texas | 1909 | Public[b] | 2,740 | Seahawks | ? |
Laredo College | Laredo, Texas | 1947 | Public | 8,749 | Palominos | ? |
Lee College | Baytown, Texas | 1934 | Public | 7,790 | Navigators | ? |
Navarro College | Corsicana, Texas | 1946 | Public | 10,000 | Bulldogs | ? |
Northeast Texas Community College | Mount Pleasant, Texas | 1984 | Public | ? | Eagles | ? |
Panola College | Carthage, Texas | 1947 | Public | ? | Ponies | ? |
Paris Junior College | Paris, Texas | 1924 | Public | 5,000 | Dragons | ? |
Trinity Valley Community College | Athens, Texas | 1946 | Public | 7,743 | Cardinals | ? |
Tyler Junior College | Tyler, Texas | 1926 | Public | 12,500 | Apaches | ? |
Victoria College | Victoria, Texas | 1925 | Public | 6,200 | Pirates | ? |
Wharton County Junior College | Wharton, Texas | 1946 | Public | 5,892 | Pioneers | ? |
- Notes
- ^ Part of the Louisiana Community and Technical College System.
- ^ Part of the Texas State University System.
Associate members
The SWJCC currently has the three campuses of San Jacinto College as members, all are public schools. As of 2022, San Jacinto merged its three mascots and teams (San Jacinto College–Central Ravens, San Jacinto College–North Gators, San Jacinto College–South Coyotes) into one mascot, the Ravens.[2][3]
Institution | Location | Founded | Affiliation | Enrollment | Nickname | Joined | SWJCC sport(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
San Jacinto College | Pasadena, Texas | 1961 | Public | 30,000 | Ravens | ? | men's basketball, women's volleyball (central campus) baseball, women's basketball (north campus) men's soccer, softball (south campus) |
Yearly football standings
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References
- ^ "Junior College Group Will Meet Here in June". Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Fort Worth, Texas. May 7, 1947. p. 21. Retrieved July 10, 2024 – via Newspapers.com .
- ^ "San Jacinto College debuts new College mascot | San Jacinto College". www.sanjac.edu. Retrieved 2023-05-22.
- ^ "WE ARE RAVENS: MASCOT HISTORY AND SELECTION". Retrieved 6 June 2024.
External links
- NJCAA Region 14 website
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