A recent piece on Forbes.com written by rising high school senior. I know what we all think of this already but thought I would share:
When Colleges Recruit Athletes, Everyone Loses
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quote:Originally posted by Quincy:
Princeton doesn't offer athletic scholarships so he picked the wrong school as an example.
quote:Originally posted by J H:
I find it odd that a magazine such as Forbes, which prides itself on being the leader in providing information on such diverse topics as finance, investments, marketing and education. The motto of the magazine, as per their website, is "The Capitalist Tool" would allow such a short sighted opinion be publicized under their corporate umbrella. Part of educational quality is diversity (once again, as per their own words), and athletics solicits exactly that.
quote:Originally posted by fenwaysouth:
On the flip side, he does show signs as a future writer. I may disagree with his thoughts but he put them together well.
quote:Originally posted by bostonbulldogbaseball:
My problem is giving full scholarships to athletes who can barely read and write.
There is suppose to be minimum admission standards.
quote:Originally posted by LAball:
Think of the SAT scores if a kid spent an extra 2 hrs every day prepping for it instead of sports.
quote:Originally posted by J H:quote:Originally posted by bostonbulldogbaseball:
My problem is giving full scholarships to athletes who can barely read and write.
There is suppose to be minimum admission standards.
There are supposed to be minimum admission standards...
RR23- I know, its a very tough time financially for many college students as a whole, not just athletes. Hopefully it'll all work out in the end. Good luck with the move, keep me (and everyone else here) updated!
quote:Originally posted by Doughnutman:
I think I willrightwrite an article about how people with 180 and up IQ's are mad because Princeton lets in low level 120- 150 IQ people just because they volunteer at school doing stupid things like being on the student paper, SG and other charities just to get into Princeton.
quote:Originally posted by YesReally:
Not all students/families spend time and money on athletics with an eye towards college. In fact, I would argue that for the majority, college perks are just that - perks. If there are baseball players and parents that are thinking of college schlarships or admissions assistance when the 10 year old will not come in out of the rain because his swing just does not feel right - I have never met them. (I have heard parents of embarassingly young athletes talk about their child being a professional athlete - but not about the child's college prospects.)
IF children do not hae a true passion for the game it is difficult to excell at the college level or beyond.
My children - one a college athlete - one a non-athlete at college - played many sports growing up. We told them and others that the primary reason to spend time on the team sports experience was to develop them as people of character.
- If you learn how to be a leader on the baseball field - how to encourage a teammate that had a bad day - how to motivate players of all levels that you play with - you are head and shoulders ahead of people that do not learn those lessons until they enter the world of work (if at all).
- If my sons learned that you win as a team and you lose as a team and as such there is nothing to be gained by demeaning the worst player or being overly solicitous of the best player - they are learning valuable lessons that do not translate the same way from a book.
- If my sons learn that the coach (boss) may not be their favorite person or the smartest person on the field but they can still figure out a way to show appropriate respect for him, work with him and be successful - that too is a lesson that many will never learn.
At the risk of not being politically correct and possibly offending pc people ... The dropout rate at Ivies for certain minorities is quite high compared to the rest of the student population. We talk about not placing kids in baseball situations they can't handle. But colleges place students in situations they can't handle in the quest for diversity. To avoid argument this does not mean people from these ethnic groups can't handle the load. It means the are letting in many who can't to fulfill quotas in the name of diversity.quote:I don't think the Ivies are letting in many students that can't handle the academic work.
quote:Originally posted by RJM:At the risk of not being politically correct and possibly offending pc people ... The dropout rate at Ivies for certain minorities is quite high compared to the rest of the student population. We talk about not placing kids in baseball situations they can't handle. But colleges place students in situations they can't handle in the quest for diversity. To avoid argument this does not mean people from these ethnic groups can't handle the load. It means the are letting in many who can't to fulfill quotas in the name of diversity.quote:I don't think the Ivies are letting in many students that can't handle the academic work.
quote:Think of the SAT scores if a kid spent an extra 2 hrs every day prepping for it instead of sports.