The University of Toledo

11/25/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 11/26/2024 07:46

Toledo Student-Athletes Post 93% Graduation Success Rate

Toledo Student-Athletes Post 93% Graduation Success Rate

November 25, 2024 | Athletics, News, UToday, Alumni
By Paul Helgren


The University of Toledo received a Graduation Success Rate (GSR) of 93% for its athletic department - a figure ranking second among the 12 schools in the Mid-American Conference - in the latest figures released by the NCAA. This is the second consecutive year that the Rockets have achieved a 93 percent GSR and the sixth straight year at 92 percent or higher.

Five Rocket teams scored a perfect 100 GSR: men's basketball, women's basketball, men's tennis, women's tennis and women's volleyball. Football recorded a 94 GSR, tying last year's mark as the highest total in school history and second only to Miami in the MAC this year.

"Our graduation success rate numbers are a clear indicator that our student-athletes are graduating at a very high rate," said University of Toledo Vice President and Director of Athletics Bryan B. Blair. "Before they leave here, we want our student-athletes to win a championship and earn a meaningful degree, and in many cases that includes receiving a master's degree as well. We are proud of the academic achievements of our student-athletes and look forward to their continued success in the classroom."

GSR is a gauge of every team's graduation rate within a six-year period of a student-athlete's enrollment. The latest GSR figures examined the student-athlete cohort that originally enrolled in 2017 and would need to have graduated by August of 2023 to count as a graduate. The GSR formula, intended to be a more complete and accurate look at student-athlete success, removes from the rate student-athletes who leave school while academically eligible and includes student-athletes who transfer to a school after initially enrolling elsewhere. The GSR also allows for a deeper understanding of graduation success in individual sports than the federal metric, which has broader groupings.