1 / 26

NCAA INITIAL ELIGIBILITY SEMINAR

Join Dr. Tonya Sawyer, NCAA Compliance Coordinator at Indiana State University Athletics, as she explains the differences between NCAA Divisions and other types of colleges, and guides high school students on how to register with the NCAA Initial Eligibility Center.

Télécharger la présentation

NCAA INITIAL ELIGIBILITY SEMINAR

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. NCAA INITIAL ELIGIBILITY SEMINAR Dr. Tonya SawyerNCAA Compliance Coordinator Indiana State University Athletics

  2. NCAA Divisions & Other Types of Colleges…Differences • NCAA Divisions 1, 2 and 3 • Division 1- offers athletic scholarships (Indiana State, Kansas, Georgetown, etc) • Two subdivisions for football only: • FBS (Oklahoma, Notre Dame, Oregon) – bowl games • FCS (Indiana State, Northern Iowa, Eastern Illinois, Montana) – championship tournament • Division 2 – (University of Indianapolis, University of Southern Indiana)-fewer athletic scholarships; generally smaller enrollment • Division 3 – (Rose Hulman, DePauw) - NO “athletic” scholarships • NAIA – (Indiana Wesleyan, IU South Bend)smaller colleges; DO offer athletic scholarships • Junior Colleges (Community Colleges) – (Lakeland, Vincennes, Rend Lake) NJCAA; DO offer athletic scholarships; 2 year schools offering Associate’s Degrees.

  3. Your Journey Begins By……….

  4. Registering with the NCAA Initial Eligibility Center Who? High school students who plan on playing intercollegiate sports at an NCAA Division 1 or 2 institution or after transferring from a 2-year community college.

  5. Registering with the NCAA Initial Eligibility Center • How? • Online- www.eligibilitycenter.org • The only method to register is online. • Recruits can login and update information any time. • Registration Fee of $75 (Unless you qualify for a fee waiver). • All sections must be completed, including payment, before technically “registered.”

  6. Registering with the NCAA Initial Eligibility Center • When? • NO LATER THAN YOUR JUNIOR YEAR - After your junior year (6 semesters of high school), have your high school send an OFFICIAL copy of your transcript(s). If you have attended any other high schools, make sure a transcript is sent to the Eligibility Center from each high school. • During your Senior year, have your high school guidance counselor send a final transcript with proof of graduation to the Eligibility Center.

  7. Why Should You Register? • First question coach will ask a recruit! • Official Visits! • NLI/Scholarship! • To practice & compete!

  8. Registering with the NCAA Initial Eligibility Center • KEY POINTS TO REMEMBER!! • Send SAT and/or ACT scores to the Eligibility Center directly from the testing agency • The NCAA Eligibility Center has a specific code for reporting the SAT/ACT – “9999” • Official transcripts from ALL HIGH SCHOOLS you attend • The Eligibility Center will not start a review of your file unless you have transcripts and test scores on file • CREATE ONLY ONE ACCOUNT WITH THE EC!!!

  9. KEY POINTS TO REMEMBER, CONT’D • Make sure you write down your username and password information. • If you went to a college to make up work, or took classes at a 4 year or 2 year college while in high school, those classes and grades must be shown on your high school transcript. You also need to have that college send an official transcript directly to the Eligibility Center. (Dual Credit Courses) • If your guidance counselor asks for a transcript release form, you can find this in the “Forms” section on the “Resource” page of the new website. • Check your email account that you gave the NCAA on a REGULAR basis! This is how the NCAA communicates with you! • If the NCAA contacts you, usually by e-mail, DO NOT IGNORE THEM!! • ALWAYS BE HONEST, FORTHRIGHT AND COOPERATIVE WITH THE NCAA!!

  10. Important Tips Students with Education-Impacting Disabilities • A student with a disability is required to meet the same initial eligibility requirements as any other student. • NCAA does make some accommodations available to those students to assist them in meeting requirements. • Contact your counselor or NCAA Disability Services (319-917-6222) for more information.

  11. Now that you’re registered, what’s the NEXT step?

  12. NCAA Initial Eligibility NCAA Division I Full Qualifier:Requirements for Athletics Aid, Practice and Competition • Students will need to meet the following requirements to receive athletics aid, practice and compete their first year: • 16 core courses in the following areas: • 4 years English; • 3 years math at Algebra I level or higher; • 2 years natural or physical science (one lab if offered at any high school attended); • 1 year additional English, math or natural/physical science; • 2 years social science; and • 4 years additional from areas above or foreign language, philosophy or comparativereligion. • Minimum required GPA: • Minimum GPA of 2.300 in those 16 core courses to COMPETE.

  13. Summary of Changes forCurrent HS Freshmen Only NCAA Division I Full Qualifier:Requirements for Athletics Aid, Practice and Competition • Core-course progression. • Must complete 10 core courses before senior year. • Of the 10 core courses completed,seven (7) must be in the area of English, math, or science. • The grades for these 10 courses must be used in calculating GPA and cannot be replaced by classes completed at a later date • Deficient? “Academic Redshirt” status

  14. Academic Redshirt Requirements for Scholarship & Practice Only • 16 core courses in the following areas (Same as Qualifier): • 4 years English, • 3 yearsmath at Algebra I level or higher, • 2 years natural or physical science(one lab if offered by any school attended); • 1 year additional English, math or natural/physical science; • 2 years social science; and • 4 years additional from areas above or foreign language, philosophy or comparative religion. • Minimum required GPA. • Minimum GPA of 2.000 in 16 core courses. (versus 2.30) • Academic redshirt sliding scale. • Minimum sum ACT or SAT score (critical reading/math only) that matches the 16 core-course GPA. • Example: GPA of 2.50 requires SAT of 820 or ACT sum of 68.

  15. ACT: Super Score Best English, Math, Reading, and Science SAT: Do not Combine Critical Reading and Math Only Sliding Scale for Sliding Scale for Academic Redshirt (Abbrev.)Athletics Aid and Practice Only The full sliding scale can be found at www.eligibilitycenter.org under Resources.

  16. Academic Redshirt: Requirements for Scholarship and Practice • If a college-bound student-athlete meets these requirements, he/she can receive an athletics scholarship during his/her first year at an NCAA Division I university. • If requirements are met, he/she can practice during his/her first term (e.g., semester) at a Division I school, but…. • In order to continue to practicein the spring semester, the student must be academically successful in the fall semester at the collegiate level.

  17. What happens if you are a Non-Qualifier? Practice Team Travel Competition

  18. Courses Prior to the 9th Grade • Only 8th grade counts. • Many students now take Algebra I and Foreign Language prior to the ninth grade. • For the NCAA Eligibility Center to count this class as a “core course,” the class, grade and credits must appear on the official high school transcript.

  19. How NCAA Computes Test Scores for Initial Eligibility Purposes Super score ACT No Super Score

  20. Whether a walk-on or on scholarship, once you are given the privilege of being an NCAA student athlete, academics come FIRST!

  21. Remember These Helpful Hints!

  22. Start early! 9th grade as important as 12th! • Take the ACT/SAT as many times as necessary. • The Official ACT/SAT score must be sent directly from the Testing Agency to the NCAA Eligibility Center -“9999” • On transcript = not valid • Evaluate HST each semester by your guidance counselor, athletic director, coach or compliance administrator .

  23. RESOURCES NCAA Eligibility Customer Service 877-262-1492 www.ncaastudent.org NCAA Guide for the College-Bound Student-Athlete www.ncaa.org www.eligibilitycenter.org www.gosycamores.com – Compliance Section Sycamore Compliance Office – 812-237-4040

  24. SOCIAL MEDIA ADVISORY…the whole world is watching! • Be careful what you Tweet, re-Tweet, and post online! • Media, fans, admissions offices, alumni, and coaches!

  25. Questions?

  26. Thanks for Attending! @SycamoreRules

More Related