Athletic Participation and Academic Performance in Female College Athletes

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21322239646_bestbasketball.jpgAthletic participation and academic performance in female college athletesAccording to the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) the news is not good for the female college players’ future sports careers. Most of these young women have dreamt of being a pro-ball player since they were kids.The NCAA begins their eligibility requirements by saying, “The overwhelming majority of student-athletes will never earn a dime as a professional athlete.” Yet if you were to interview a Division I team in its freshman year at a college or university, nearly all the players will tell you that’s their goal and there is no other.This is part of the reason it is imperative that female college athletes meet academic requirements-not just to remain eligible to play, but to eventually wind up with a successful career in something that sustains and nurtures them. Is it any wonder that they get sidetracked, though, by the commercial university’s desire to win, win, win and their own passionate love of the game?Graduation rates for college athletes are improving of late. Division 1 student-athletes continue to perform well in the classroom and more are graduating, according to the latest NCAA Graduation Success Rate figures. The latest figures show that 77 percent of student-athletes who began college from 1997-2000 graduated within six years. The four-year rate is up from 76 percent two years ago. NCAA believes the goal of 80 percent is reachable.As recently as 2004 the graduation rate for white basketball players was 53 percent, and 35 percent for black.Today the student-athlete is learning that being a successful student and a successful athlete requires the same set of skills and abilities: discipline, focus, setting and meeting goals, being able to face adversity, and meeting challenges aggressively and with integrity.There are a lot of discouraging factors in the life of the struggling female student-athlete.  Most of these women are high school recruits. To later become NCAA eligible to play for a Division 1 school they had only to maintain a high school grade point average of only 2.0 until this August 1st when this finally changes.Most often these young girls are looking at a sports as their ticket out: out of the ghetto, gang life, drugs, dysfunctional families-you name it. Most do not schools which have advanced college prep courses. Yet these same young women have been selected for a full ride scholarship to a university or college where they must compete against students who have been training for college for years, and have had few of the social hardships of the women.Other factors current female student-athletes have going against them are poor social integration and less motivation to succeed in college as compared to non-athlete peers. Their campus life takes place in what might be termed an athletic culture. They are highly concentrated in certain field of study and in specific campus residences. They mostly spend time with each other. When asked if it was easier or harder for them to get dates, 22 percent of female basketball players in one study said it was more difficult, compared with 2 percent for male basketball players, 15 percent for women in nonbasketball sports and 13 percent for women in other extracurricular activities. When asked about getting to know other students, 23 percent of the female basketball players found greater difficulties.Are they set apart as “other” by their fellow students because of their differing socioeconomic status, educational background, cultural experiences, being a “scholarship” student, or is it just something about women in sports? By all rights, their social mobility should be increased by the prestige of being a winning athlete for their college.There are at least three physical problems that female student-athletes must work to overcome . Female student-athletes have a higher incidence of eating disorders than non-athletes. Some women lose their scholarships if there is significant weight gain or loss. They learn to manipulate diet and fluid intake for regular team weigh-ins. The enormous amount of stress they are under to succeed in athletics and in academics takes its toll. Their body images may be distorted after years of training and playing.Another very common physical problem especially with female college basketball players is the high number of knee injuries that keep them out of the game temporarily and sometimes permanently. Tears of the anterior cruciate ligament, the one which stabilizes the knee and controls its pivoting, is a common benching injury. Since the mid-1990′s studies have shown that women are two to eight times more likely to tear the ligament than men in the same sport.One big problem is that there has not been sufficient education transmitted to the athletes about this. Many do not take seriously the preventive conditioning techniques they should be doing in favor of improving their skills for the game. About 1 in 10 hs a season-ending knee injury each year, including approximately 3,000 who tear this ligament.Some schools are adopting preventive techniques as part of a strength and conditioning program, but many are not and the coaches are just resigned to take the injuries.The third big physical problem for female college athletes is the female athlete triad of disordered eating, amenorrhea and osteoporosis. So many reasons that should motivate the women to looking for their future in their studies and succeeding academically.Female college athletes need more schools with programs like that at Texas A&M Career Center which is set up in conjunction with the A&M Athletic Department and the A&M Intercollegiate Athletic Compliance Office. They have initiated a unique program that recognizes and addresses some of these special challenges faced by female athletes. The women are given help to investigate the range of their skills and abilities and to understand how many opportunities are available to them outside of athletics.

Teaching Your Kids to Play Sports with Class

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01322240723_6a848efb.jpgMy grandson was playing soccer recently and I was fortunate to be watching the game because he lives some distance away. He plays well and has a good understanding of the game for his age. He knows enough about the game to be able to tell if he is playing well or not. Unfortunately on this day he missed some goals and was not “on his game” as some refer to it. As he returned to the bench he was obviously upset with himself and everyone could tell it. When we got home I had the opportunity to say to him, “You need to play with class out there.” His dad asked him, “Do you know what class is?” Of course being only six years old, he did not know and Dad had to explain it to him. Just what is “class”? American Heritage dictionary defines “class act” as one of distinctive and superior quality. Years ago our local high school football team was doing well and we followed the team around the state for their “away” games. It did not take long to assess the kind of community we were in just by watching the hometown fans and listening to the public address announcer. If the community has respect for itself it will ensure that it puts its best foot forward when a large group of visitors come to town. Some towns were incredibly rude and disrespectful. You would hope that those same people would not act that way if you were invited into their home. My respect grew for two communities when they would end the night with a 66-0 football score and both sides were very respectful of each other throughout the night. How kids learn about having “class” and not having “class” in today’s society

Kids learn how to act from their parents, teachers, role models and the community. For instance, kids are not born snobbish and arrogant. They learn from people around them. Profanity, prevalent in our society today, is the first sign of lack of respect for others and an ugly display of lack of class. No one should want the family to be exposed to rude and crude language. When he was alive, my father would tell me, “Using profanity is just a sign of the lack of vocabulary.” People fall back on profanity because they lack a way to express themselves. This made a real impact on me when I was growing up. It did not stop me from using profanity but it made me control it. Many kids today are taught that the absence of “class” is fashionable and is the way to act in today’s society. It is lessons like this that our kids carry into their adult life and then pass these lessons on to their children with the many improper attitudes about conduct. What do you do when the standards in society are so low I think my father had the right idea. You just keep setting the standard, keep it out front as an issue but realize that in today’s society there are going to be many factors at work to destroy your best efforts. If there were any way to sum it all up, it would be to teach kids to always respect themselves and to never fail to show respect to others. They need to know that one of the highest compliments you can receive in life is, “You are a real class act.”

Athletic Scholarships: Getting And Keeping Them

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11322239959_swim1.jpgAthletic scholarships are much sought after amongst the students of today. They appear to be some sort of status symbol that marks them as more talented than their peers and can indeed pave the way for the individual to move onto bigger and better things in the future. A good number of individuals receiving an athletic scholarship will probably go on to become professional sports stars one day, whether playing basketball, American football, soccer or another sport such as wrestling or golf. The options are endless but to get and keep an athletic scholarship an individual student must work extremely hard. After all, there can be no bigger heartache than getting there and then losing everything you have technically earned.

Athletic scholarships are like gold dust, especially those that take the individual it was awarded to way on to the next level. It is extremely important that a good athlete maintains a certain academic and personal level in order to maintain the gift that he or she has been given. After all, it can be hard to earn an athletic scholarship in the first place. Not only does the individual have to be good at the sport of his or her choice, he or she also be getting a decent grade point average throughout his or her high school career in order to be considered. It is not that they will not be offered an athletic scholarship if their GPA is not up to scratch, they just will not be able to go to the better colleges unless it is elevated. This also applies when they are there!
Although college sports stars are just that, stars in their own right, they are not exempt from the rules of the university and have a strict code of conduct to adhere to. They need to be able to maintain good grades and keep up with midterms and papers, as well as other assignments because they can actually be suspended from their sports duties if they are not maintaining a high standard. There have been rumours in the past that the GPA of an athletics scholarship is somewhat lower than the GPAs set for other awards, but that is largely not the case at the more prestigious universities.
An athletics scholarship covers just about every expense that the individual athlete would have. It includes housing, tuition, course materials and everything else that you could think of. In truth, it gives them the easiest financial ride out of every single student on every campus across the United States, because they bring glory for their college. It was also a practice some time ago to give them gifts such as cars to lure the star athletes away from other universities. This has since been outlawed because it is considered a bribe.
Although they will miss having a car as a present, this demonstrates how much time has altered the way that athletes on scholarships are supposed to behave. Any scandal and they are out, low grades and they are out, and any hint of drugs in their systems and they are out. It may be tough to get to the top and earn athletics scholarship, but it could be even tougher to stay there if individuals do not stick to the rules!