1 / 19

What You Need to Know

College Athletics. What You Need to Know . Tonight’s Agenda: Provide information about college athletics Help advise potential athletes and their families about their role in this process Introduce Eligibility requirements Dispel myths Answer any questions.

libra
Download Presentation

What You Need to Know

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. College Athletics What You Need to Know

  2. Tonight’s Agenda: • Provide information about college athletics • Help advise potential athletes and their families about their role in this process • Introduce Eligibility requirements • Dispel myths • Answer any questions

  3. Do I Want to Participate in • College Athletics? • At What Level of Intensity? • Time Commitment will vary across Divisions and Programs • Level of Play will vary across Divisions and Programs • What is the coach’s background, success, and goals • One year commitment (4 year retention is 25 – 30 %) • The Experience will vary for every Student-Athlete

  4. The Building Blocks of Prospective Student Athletes: Recommendations for student-athletes: • Make the grades – do the work! • Play often with and against highest level possible • Overachieve – the next grade builds on the previous year (GPA) • Begin the process (look at colleges on the internet) • Fill out online prospective student surveys • Review NCAA Guide for the College Bound Athlete • Register with the Clearing house Junior/Senior Year

  5. Recommendations for your student-ATHLETES • Develop a player resume and write to the schools of interest • Produce a video if possible (keep it short, 10 minutes) • Play at as many high profile events as possible AND PLAY WELL!!! • Update important information – Playing schedule, Awards, Honors • Prepare applications for admission • Have your coach call with a recommendation

  6. Call the coach at the schools of interest. They want to hear from the student. • Keep parents involved and in contact with the coach (at the end) • Apply early to the schools of interest • Be realistic in choosing the school • How important is the sport to you? Are you committed to spending the time and energy necessary to be a successful student-athlete? • Visit the campus if possible before senior year • See the team play, meet the coaches and the players Recommendations for your student-ATHLETES

  7. What do coaches look for: • Can the candidate play at their school’s level? • What success has the student had in high school athletics? • Do they have the ability: physical, tactical and mental attitude to be successful? • Can they meet the institution’s academic standards? • NCAA v. individual college’s standards • Eligibility Center: “qualifier” status • Does the candidate have character? • Leadership ability? • Goals for life and for sports? • What is their behavior before, during and after a game?

  8. How Do You Express an Interest to Play? • Meet with your HS Coach to see Contacts and Recommendations • Write a letter & athletic resume to coaches or programs • Fill out on-line questionnaires or mass mailings • Visit the School and meet with the Coach • Call or email the Coach • 2-way street of communication • Team sports v. individual sports • High school v. club teams • Highlight Videos Hudle

  9. Various Divisions in Intercollegiate Athletics • NCAA Division I: Can hold tryouts (but not likely), Athletic Aid • NCAA Division II: One tryout, Athletic Aid • NCAA Division III: No tryouts, No Athletic Aid • NAIA: Tryouts, Athletic Aid • NJCAA Division I: Athletic Aid, tryouts • NJCAA Division II: Athletic Aid, tryouts • NJCAA Division III: No Athletic Aid • Athletic Aid will vary with the sport and the school • Aid will be based on Coach’s interest and the students need • Programs without athletic aid work with Financial Aid

  10. The NCAA Clearinghouse & The Eligibility Center www.eligibilitycenter.org • Division I & II Only • Determines athletic eligibility for college • 16 Core Courses (Division I and II) • Class of 2016, requires 10 core classes to be completed before senior year. • Sliding Scale – Core GPA / Test Score Index • Register by the end of the Junior Year • Meet w/ your Counselor for Scheduling Approved Classes • Fee $65 or waiver. • Division III – eligibility determined by school not NCAA.

  11. www.CorecourseGPA.com Core classes

  12. A student-athlete must be a graduate of a high school with an academic diploma or a General Education diploma. Once enrolled they have to maintain a 2.0 GPA NJCAA www.njcaa.org

  13. Division I and II • Register on www.playnaia.org by the end of the Junior Year • Meet 2 out of 3 requirements • Achieve a minimum of 18 on the ACT or 860 on the SAT (reading and math only) • Achieve a minimum overall high school un-weighted GPA of 2.0 • Graduate in the top half of your High School class. • Fee $65 or waiver. NAIA www.playnaia.org

  14. The time line for prospective student athletes: • Grade 11 • Register with the eligibility center. • Make sure you are still on course to meet core-course requirements (verify you have the correct number of core courses and that the core courses are on your high school's accepted classes). • After your junior year, have your high school guidance counselor send a copy of your transcript. If you have attended any other high schools, make sure a transcript is sent to the eligibility center from each high school. • When taking the ACT or SAT, request test scores to be sent to the eligibility center (the code is "9999"). • Begin your amateurism questionnaire.

  15. The time line for prospective student athletes: • Grade 12 • When taking the ACT or SAT, request test scores to be sent to the eligibility center • Complete amateurism questionnaire and sign the final authorization signature online on or after April 1 if you are expecting to enroll in college in the fall semester. • Have your high school guidance counselor send a final transcript with proof of graduation to the eligibility center (After July 1st ).

  16. Questions for the prospective student athlete: • What type of college experience are you looking for? • Location… Close to home v opposite coast (3-5hrs) Academic, Athletic, Social, City/Country… Size…Team/Sport Specifics… • How many players are graduating and what positions will be available? • What are the time commitments of a student athlete? • What is the training like in and out of season? • What are the graduation rates of the school? (All athletes and the team) • What is it like to be a student athlete? • What are the academic benefits and special services for athletes?

  17. Recruiting terms: NCAA Guide for the College-Bound Student Athlete (Answers on Page 20 in the NCAA Guide for the College-Bound student Athlete) Contact Contact period Dead period Evaluation Evaluation period Official visit Prospective student-athlete Quiet period Unofficial visit Verbal commitment Qualifiers Red shirting

  18. Know the process and the myths: • Match student’s academic skills, athletic skills and desire to play with the appropriate college. • Understand the Different levels of Athletic Scholarship (What is a Full Scholarship?) • If a student athlete meets NCAA requirements it does NOT guarantee admission into a college. The student must still meet the college’s admission requirements. • Make the Choice on the School not the coach!! • Coaches leave programs • Student’s interest change in the sport • Injuries may occur that end a career • Playing Time & Success of program may vary

  19. Questions? Thank you for your participation. Coach Natalie Davis

More Related