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I understand that NCAA Division 1 athletes are allowed to register for classes ahead of the general student population.  I just saw this on a university website, and wondered if early registration at a D3 fits within the definition of "preferential treatment to student athletes".  I would guess the answer is no since it would be difficult to accommodate afternoon practices and games without having a chance to get early classes, but with the NCAA one never knows:

 

"XXX's varsity teams compete within NCAA Division III, whose members do not award athletic scholarships or give preferential treatment to student athletes."

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Schools can be fairly creative about how they avoid "preferential treatment."

 

At the D3 where I played football, we were given free meals in the dorm cafeterias during two-a-days. It wasn't preferential treatment because ALL students enrolled for the fall term were given free meals during those two weeks.

 

ALL students, you say? Well, sort of. Technically, the benefit was available to all students, but it certainly wasn't advertised, and the only students actually on campus to enjoy it when it was offered between the end of summer school and the beginning of the fall term were a few sports teams and maybe some RA's. Once the non-athlete students arrived on campus, the free meals stopped.

 

This may be folklore, but that's how it was explained to us. (Granted, 20-year-old men don't ask too many questions when offered free food, but we believed it.)

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