quote:
One thing is an absolute certainty. Those students with high GPA's and test scores have a lot more scholarship options than those with lower grades and scores.
Sorry to burst your balloon here but that is not the case, in my experiences. And I'l try to only stand on my soapbox for a short while.
I'll start with my own experience.. many years ago. Perhaps it was the institution I went to, but a person had to be SO OUTRAGEOUSLY over achieveing academically to recieve any amount of sigificance. I was a Natiional Merit Semi-Finalist, with a very HIGH SAT and GPA and only recieved $2000 a year..for two years, then my dad started making too much money and they cut that amount even though it was called an academic scholarship. While there where athletes that had a hard time READING getting full rides... Of course I didn't play football or basketball, nor did my parents or HS coach know how to play the recruiting game. Also I ended up getting more college money from going to work for a local techincal company and getting educational re-imburments funding, than from ant other source.
NO - I learned early on that to get any substantial awards, you were better off relying on athletics skills than scholastic achievements. (especially football and basketball if your are male)
Maybe its because I live in a baseball hotbed but I've found it is still true today... Personally, I know lots of kids that have recieved scholarships. But I've seen MANY more Athletes with 2.5 to 2.9 GPAs get accepted and given significant funding to prestigous schools, than I have seen 4.0 Plus GPA scholars with 1400 SATS (but not as athletically adept).
I've known some kids with 4.5+ GPAs and 1500+ on SAT and they did not even get accepted to some schools, while kids who could barely stay eligible to play HS ball get significant offers from the very same prestigiuos Universities. These kids would not even be close to being accepted without athletic skills and then they get good Scholarship money to boot. Hardly seems fair. Just ask the parents of the academic kids.
My own son whose academic acheivements were very substanstial and who earned many academic awards. Only received a minimal amount of academic funding... Less than 5% the amount of the athletic funding he earned, or the amount we eventually had to also pay ourselves. It was a mere drop in the bucket of the overall cost. However, I must confess, He would not be going to the school he is now without his academic skills, but could be going to some of equal acclaim.
It was a big dissappointment to me... as all the the time I kept telling my son to work hard on his grades... and in the end, it made only a little difference,... because he could do one other thing.... swing a baseball bat.
(his grades allowed him to chose amoug any of the top 25 rated schools in the county) (even though a couple of those same 25 schools are ones I'm discussing above, that relax their standards for athletes, and then reward them )
All this said you still have to be in the upper echelon of athletics to get what I'm talking about. But from my point of view, that seems easier than getting to the level academically required for the same rewards.