What does your gpa/sat/act have to be to play at a high academic school like harvard, northwestern, duke, etc...
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quote:Also, considerations could be made for a particular student-athlete who is very talented but may not have the average scores/grades needed to attend such an academic institution. Obviously, an admissions office would not allow for someone who clearly does not belong. By this statement I mean someone who is not able to handle the rigors of an academic institution such as XYZ School. However, they may allow for a student who is just at or slightly below the cutoff, as he could be providing a benefit to the school as a student-athlete.
quote:Originally posted by Fungo:quote:Also, considerations could be made for a particular student-athlete who is very talented but may not have the average scores/grades needed to attend such an academic institution. Obviously, an admissions office would not allow for someone who clearly does not belong. By this statement I mean someone who is not able to handle the rigors of an academic institution such as XYZ School. However, they may allow for a student who is just at or slightly below the cutoff, as he could be providing a benefit to the school as a student-athlete.
I agree.
While I'm not sure of the exact formula for "Athletic SAT/ACT" for a stud baseball player but I feel sure the fastball rate over 90 and home runs over 10 must factor into the cumulative SAT/ACT number used by coaches and admissions ......
Fungo
quote:Originally posted by CPLZ:quote:Originally posted by Fungo:quote:Also, considerations could be made for a particular student-athlete who is very talented but may not have the average scores/grades needed to attend such an academic institution. Obviously, an admissions office would not allow for someone who clearly does not belong. By this statement I mean someone who is not able to handle the rigors of an academic institution such as XYZ School. However, they may allow for a student who is just at or slightly below the cutoff, as he could be providing a benefit to the school as a student-athlete.
I agree.
While I'm not sure of the exact formula for "Athletic SAT/ACT" for a stud baseball player but I feel sure the fastball rate over 90 and home runs over 10 must factor into the cumulative SAT/ACT number used by coaches and admissions ......
Fungo
There was definitely an inverse sliding scale ratio in effect when Junior was being recruited and accepted, something along the lines of ERA vs. GPA with MPH as a divisor.
quote:Originally posted by CPLZ:quote:Originally posted by Fungo:quote:Also, considerations could be made for a particular student-athlete who is very talented but may not have the average scores/grades needed to attend such an academic institution. Obviously, an admissions office would not allow for someone who clearly does not belong. By this statement I mean someone who is not able to handle the rigors of an academic institution such as XYZ School. However, they may allow for a student who is just at or slightly below the cutoff, as he could be providing a benefit to the school as a student-athlete.
I agree.
While I'm not sure of the exact formula for "Athletic SAT/ACT" for a stud baseball player but I feel sure the fastball rate over 90 and home runs over 10 must factor into the cumulative SAT/ACT number used by coaches and admissions ......
Fungo
There was definitely an inverse sliding scale ratio in effect when Junior was being recruited and accepted, something along the lines of ERA vs. GPA with MPH as a divisor.
quote:Pedropere stated......NESCAC is a New England conference of D3 high academic schools that are smaller than the Ivys, but extremely high academic schools. They are all liberal arts and pure sciences, I believe, with no engineering and no business. Williams and Amherst are the top two. Others are Trinity (CT) Bowdoin, Colby, TUfts, etc. You can google it. They are about half the size of the ivys. The best of them have SAT profiles similar to HYP.