1 / 22

ROADMAP TO INITIAL ELIGIBILITY

ROADMAP TO INITIAL ELIGIBILITY. NCAA Eligibility Short Session. Steps You Must Take to Participate in NCAA Division 1 or 2 Athletics. Freshman and Sophomores: Start Planning Now! Work hard to get the best grades possible.

masato
Download Presentation

ROADMAP TO INITIAL ELIGIBILITY

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. ROADMAP TO INITIAL ELIGIBILITY NCAA Eligibility Short Session

  2. Steps You Must Take to Participate in NCAA Division 1 or 2 Athletics Freshman and Sophomores: • Start Planning Now! • Work hard to get the best grades possible. • Take classes that match you school’s NCAA List of Approved Core Courses. The NCAA Eligibility Center will only use approved core courses to certify your initial eligibility. • You can access and print the Bothell HS NCAA List of Approved Core Courses and www.eligibilitycenter.org.

  3. Steps You Must Take to Participate in NCAA Division 1 or 2 Athletics Juniors: • Register for eligibility at www.eligibilitycenter.organd complete the amateurism questionnaire at the beginning of junior year. • Register to take the SAT, ACT or both and use Eligibility Center code “9999” as a score recipient • Double check to make sure that you are taking courses that match Bothell’s approved core courses • Request that your school counselor send an official transcript to the Eligibility Center after completion of your junior year.

  4. Steps You Must Take to Participate in NCAA Division 1 or 2 Athletics Seniors: • At the beginning of senior year, check with your school counselor and the Eligibility Center to determine the amount of core courses that need to be completed your senior year. • Take the SAT and/or ACT again. The Eligibility Center will use the best scores from each section of the ACT or SAT to determine your best cumulative score. • Continue to take college prep core courses. • Check to make sure that you are taking courses that match Bothell’s approved core courses.

  5. Steps You Must Take to Participate in NCAA Division 1 or 2 Athletics Seniors: • Review your amateurism questionnaire responses and request final amateurism certification beginning April 1 (for fall enrollees) or October 1 (for spring enrollees). • Don’t slack off and let senioritis set in. Continue toe earn the best grades possible. • Graduate on time (in 8 academic semesters). After graduation, ask your school counselor to send your final transcript with proof of graduation.

  6. Register with the NCAA Eligibility Center Starting at the beginning of your sophomore year: • Ask your counselor if you qualify for a fee waiver. • Log on to: www.eligibilitycenter.org • Select “NCAA College-Bound Student Athlete.” • Register as a U.S., Homeschooled, or International student-athlete by clicking on the cell phone on the screen • Then, click on “Transcript Release Form.”

  7. Core-Course Requirements Division 1 • 4 years English • 3 years math (Algebra 1 or higher) • 2 years natural/physical science (1 year of lab if offered by high school) • 1 year additional English, math or natural/physical science • 2 years social science;and • 4 years additional courses (from any area above, foreign language, comparative religion or philosophy) • Earn a minimum GPA in our core courses and; • Earn a combined SAT or ACT sum score that matches your core course GPA on the sliding scale Division 2 • 3 years English • 2 years math (Algebra 1 or higher) • 2 years natural/physical science (1 year of lab if offered by high school • 3 years additional English, math or natural/physical science • 2 years social science • 4 years additional courses (from any area above, foreign language, comparative religion or philosophy) • Earn a 2.0 GPA in core courses; and • Earn a combined SAT of 800 or ACT of 68

  8. Core-Course Requirement Division 3 & NAIA: • Contact the respective college or university regarding its academic and amateurism policies.

  9. Definition of a Core Course • A course that qualifies for high school graduation in one of more of the following: English, math, natural or physical science, social science, foreign language, comparative religion or philosophy; and • Is considered four-year college preparatory; and • Is taught at or above the high school’s regular academic level (no remedial courses, those taught at a slower pace or cover less content).

  10. Make Sure List of Approved Core Courses Is Up to Date • Help make sure your school counselor has updated your school’s NCAA List of Approved Core Courses. • To obtain Bothell’s list: • Log on to www.eligibilitycenter.org • Select NCAA College-Bound Student Athlete • Select ‘Resources’, ‘U.S., Homeschooled or International student’ and ‘List of NCAA Courses’. • Follow Prompts to select school by name

  11. Take the SAT and/or ACT • Be sure to enter “9999” code when registering for the tests • This requests for your official test scores to be sent directly to the Eligibility Center • Test scores will not be accepted if not sent directly from testing agency

  12. Graduate On Time • Graduation “on time” means that if your high school graduation takes place June 12, you graduated June 12. If you don’t graduate June 1 with the rest of your high school class, you have not graduated “on time.” • If you don’t graduate on time in 8 semesters, no core course taken after the 8th semester will be counted toward your NCAA academic-eligibility requirements.

  13. Recruiting • You become a prospective student athlete when: • You start 9th grade classes; or • Before your 9th grade year, a college gives you, your relatives or your friends any financial aid or other benefits that the college does not provide to students generally.

  14. Recruiting Terms • Contact: Face to face contact by a coach with you or your parents off the college campus that is more than hello. This includes contact at practices and games. • Contact Period: Coaches are allowed to have contact with your off college campus and may also write and call you • Dead Period: No in person contact from coaches allowed on or off college campus. Coaches can call and write you. • Quiet Period: No in person contact from coaches allowed off college campus. You can visit on campus.

  15. Recruiting Terms • Official Visit: Any visit by you and your parents paid by the college. Includes transportation to and from college campus, room and 3 meals and reasonable entertainment expenses. • Unofficial Visit: Any visit by you and your parents to a college campus that is paid for by you and your parents. The only thing you are permitted to receive from the college is 3 complimentary tickets to a home contest.

  16. Recruiting • Before a college may invite on an official visit, you will have to provide the college with a copy of your high school transcript (Division 1 only) and SAT or ACT scores and register with the Eligibility Center. • A prospective student-athlete may take a maximum of 5 official visits, with no more than one permitted to any single institution. This restriction applies, regardless of the number of sports in which the student-athlete is involved and only for official visits to Division 1 or 2 institutions.

  17. Top 10 Recruiting Mistakes • Waiting until your senior year to start getting serious about the recruiting process. Campaign early. • Assuming you will make up poor grades in your senior year—it will be too late and decisions will be made mostly from GPA through junior year. • Expecting college coaches to be knocking on your door with scholarship offers. • Leaving others to do the work for you. If you want it bad enough, go get it.

  18. Top 10 Recruiting Mistakes • Not having a serious approach to training. • Focusing all your efforts on Division 1. • Not having a game plan. Set obtainable goals and be realistic. • Expecting coaches to discover you. You need to recruit the coach/team in many cases • Assuming a form letter means you are being recruited. • Not considering the entire college.

  19. Financial Aid • If you are academically eligible to participate in intercollegiate athletics and are accepted as a full-time student at an NCAA Division 1 or 2 institution, you may receive athletics-based financial aid from the school. Division 1 or 2 financial aid may include tuition and fees, room and board and books. • Division 3 institutions do not award financial aid based on athletics ability.

  20. Financial Aid • All athletic scholarships awarded by the NCAA institutions are limited to one year and are renewable annually. However, institutions are permitted to offer multi-year scholarships. • Athletics scholarships are awarded in a variety or amounts, ranging from full scholarships (including tuition, fees, room and board and books) to very small scholarships (e.g. books only). • The total amount of financial aid a student-athlete may receive and the total amount of athletics aid a team may receive can be limited. These limits can affect whether a student-athlete may accept financial aid from other sources.

  21. Always Ask Before You ActAmateurism Red Flags Ask questions before: • Signing a contract with a professional team. • Receiving money for participating in athletics. • Receiving prize money above actual and necessary expenses. • Playing with professional athletes. • Trying out, practicing or competing with a professional team. • Receiving benefits from an agent or prospective agent. • Agreeing to be represented by an agent. • Participating in organized competition after your first opportunity to enroll in college.

  22. Questions? • Please contact your school counselor or the NCAA Eligibility Center at 877-262-1492.

More Related