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Division I Academic Update

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Title: Division I Academic Update


1
Division I Academic Update
  • 2009 Regional Rules Seminar

2
Session Outline
  • NCAA Division I Academic Cabinet Updates
  • Academic reform cycle.
  • Cabinet guiding principles.
  • Data-driven policy development.
  • Cabinet priorities.
  • Sport-by-Sport Review
  • Baseball, Mens Basketball, Football and Womens
    Basketball.
  • Facilitating Learning and Achieving Graduation
    (FLAG)

3
NCAA Division IAcademic Cabinet
4
Academic Cabinet Overview
  • Jurisdiction includes
  • Overseeing academic research and policies
  • Establishing, managing and monitoring eligibility
    standards and
  • Serving as the appellate body for academic
    waivers.
  • Chair
  • Carolyn Callahan,Faculty Athletics
    Representative,University of Virginia.

5
NCAA Academic Reform Cycle
Implementation
6
Academic Cabinet Guiding Principles
  • Eligibility requirements shall assure proper
    emphasis on educational objectives, promote
    competitive equity and prevent exploitation.
  • Intercollegiate athletics shall be a vital
    component of the educational program, and
    student-athletes shall be an integral part of the
    student-body.

7
Academic Cabinet Guiding Principles
  • Support graduation as the primary measure of
    student-athlete success preserve the seamless
    academic eligibility model and promote graduation
    within five years.
  • Emphasize research and data-driven decision
    making in the development of legislative and
    policy recommendations.

8
Academic Cabinet Guiding Principles
  • Increase student-athletes responsibility for
    academic success.
  • Increase institutional responsibility to
    facilitate academic success.
  • Commit to student-athlete well-being issues,
    including minimizing missed class time and
    balancing self-identification as students with
    identity as athletes.

9
Academic Cabinet Guiding Principles
  • Promote student-athletes options to select from
    a wide range of degree programs and to integrate
    fully into the university and student-body.
  • Minimize disparate impact on low-income and
    minority student-athletes and PSAs.

10
Academic Cabinet Guiding Principles
  • Remain cognizant of the impact of proposals on
    institutional resources, academic support
    professionals and other institutional staff
    members.
  • Ensure legislation is written in a simple, clear
    and direct manner.
  • Consider the amount of time legislation has been
    in effect before supporting a legislative change.

11
Academic Cabinet Guiding Principles
  • As appropriate, ensure feedback has been
    solicited from external groups.
  • Consider whether or not sport-specific
    legislation is warranted or whether a proposed
    legislation can/should be expanded to other
    sports.
  • Examine potential unintended consequences when
    reviewing legislation.

12
Data-Driven Policy Development
  • Cabinet emphasized the importance of using
    research and data-driven decision making in the
    development and review of legislative and policy
    recommendations.
  • Supported the NCAA Division I Committee on
    Academic Performance decision to begin collecting
    information on academic performance of two-year
    college transfers while at the two-year
    institution.

13
Data Collection
  • Proposals recently adopted by Division I
    Legislative Council
  • Collect final high school transcripts for early
    academic qualifiers.
  • Proposal No. 2008-75
  • Collect high school academic information
    (courses, grades, test scores) for two-year
    college transfers.
  • Proposal No. 2008-77

14
Academic Cabinet Priorities
  • Academic success of transfers, particularly
    two-year college transfers.
  • Nontraditional courses.
  • Impact of academic reform on academic support
    personnel.
  • Student-athlete time demands.
  • Degree program selection.

15
Overall Transfers Into Division I(Division I APP)
Note Student-athletes may be counted twice if
they participate in more than one sport. These
are instances of transfers, not number of
transfer students.
16
2007-2008 Transfers into Division I(by Sport
Group)
17
Percentages of Transfers Into Division I by Sport
Grouping
  • 2-year Transfers
  • 4-year Transfers

18
Transfer Student-Athletes
  • Research provides better understanding of
    two-year college transfer student-athlete
    behavior and academic performance.
  • About 5 of all student-athletes downward trend.
  • Baseball and mens basketball over 15 womens
    sports other than basketball over 2.
  • Tend to have lower high school academic
    performance.
  • Generally perform less well more likely to
    become 0/2.
  • Transfer extends time to graduation.

19
Transfer Student-Athletes
  • Reviewed final report of Transfer Issues Ad Hoc
    Group.
  • More data needed for 2-4 transfers attempt to
    identify academic profile of successful
    transfers.
  • High school academic record Proposal No.
    2008-77.
  • Performance at two-year college Committee on
    Academic Performance.

20
Transfer Student-Athletes
  • Possible concepts for consideration
  • Modify transfer requirements (e.g., credit hours,
    core curriculum, limit physical education
    activity courses).
  • Residence requirement/year in readiness.
  • Summer coursework at four-year institution.
  • Delay of five-year clock or percentage-of-degree
    requirements to allow time for remediation.
  • Others identified by NCAA Division I Basketball
    Academic Enhancement Group and Football Academic
    Working Group.

21
Nontraditional Courses
  • Post-Enrollment
  • Former NCAA Division I Academics/Eligibility/Comp
    liance Cabinet studied traditional and
    nontraditional courses sponsored proposals
    regarding use of nontraditional courses for
    full-time enrollment and progress-toward-degree
    requirements.
  • Attempt to modernize language and provide
    consistency for all forms of nontraditional
    courses.
  • Student-athletes should have access to same
    courses as all students.

22
Nontraditional Courses
  • Post-Enrollment
  • Topic remains a priority despite defeat of
    proposals in the 2008-09 legislative cycle.
  • Legislation remains outdated and inconsistent
    among various course formats.
  • February 2009 Reviewed document produced by N4A
    to help institutions monitor nontraditional
    course enrollment by student-athletes.
  • Posted on Academic Cabinet Web page on NCAA.org.

23
Nontraditional Courses
  • Pre-Enrollment/Initial Eligibility
  • Enrollment in online courses growing 30 per
    year over one million enrollments in 2008.
  • 57 of public secondary schools in the United
    States provide access to students for online
    learning.
  • Source International Association for K-12
    Online Learning.

24
Nontraditional Courses
  • Pre-Enrollment/Initial Eligibility
  • Increased prevalence with increase of core course
    requirements and plus-one legislation.
  • Bylaw 14.3.1.2.1.1
  • Nontraditional delivery of courses has evolved
    significantly in the past 10 years.
  • Diversity of entities and formats.

25
(No Transcript)
26
Nontraditional Courses
  • Pre-Enrollment/Initial Eligibility
  • Will begin review of nontraditional courses used
    for initial-eligibility purposes at June 2009
    meeting.
  • Former Academics/Eligibility/Compliance Cabinet
    recommended development of policies to establish
    baseline standards of quality for nontraditional
    courses and secondary school programs.

27
Academic Support Personnel
  • Concerned about impact of academic reform on
    academic support personnel.
  • Guiding principle Remain cognizant of the impact
    of proposals on institutional resources, academic
    support professionals and other institutional
    staff members.

28
Academic Support Personnel
  • Working with representatives from N4A and NACADA
    on a comprehensive study of academic support
    services.
  • February 2009 Hosted representatives from N4A
    president and president-elect.
  • Reviewed results of 2006 survey on the workload
    and impact of academic reform on academic support
    staff.
  • Agreed to repeat survey to update findings.

29
Time Demands
  • Guiding principle Commit to student-athlete
    well-being issues, including minimizing missed
    class time and balancing self-identification as
    students with identity as athletes.

30
Time Demands
  • Reviewed findings of GOALS and SCORE studies.
  • Student-athletes report 30-40 hours per week on
    athletics activities.
  • FBS football players report the most hours and
    the highest athletics plus academics time
    commitment.
  • Baseball and basketball report the least time on
    class and study.
  • Five sports report more time on athletics than
    academics baseball, mens basketball, football,
    mens golf and mens ice hockey.

31
Time Demands
  • Competition during final-exam period.
  • Many teams continue to compete during final
    exams.
  • Baseball 71
  • Mens basketball 47
  • Softball 58

32
Time Demands
  • Teams from low-resource institutions more likely
    to compete and travel greater distances during
    finals.
  • No major impact on teams academic performance,
    but impact may be felt more by specific
    student-athletes.

33
Time Demands
  • In-season versus out-of-season academic
    performance.
  • Student-athletes consistently earn fewer credits
    and achieve lower GPA during season, especially
    in sports with high time demands and students who
    entered less academically prepared.

34
Degree Program Selection
  • Interested in the impact of academic reform on
    student-athletes ability to select from the
    institutions array of degree programs.
  • Guiding principle Promote student-athletes
    options to select from a wide range of degree
    programs and to integrate fully into the
    university and student-body.

35
Degree Program Selection
  • Will review current requirements regarding degree
    designation, double majors, dual degrees, minors,
    etc. during June 2009 meeting.
  • Will also review progress-toward-degree waivers
    related to major selection.

36
Sport-by-sport review Baseball, mens
basketballfootball, womens basketball
37
APR Trends in Baseball, Mens Basketball and
Football (Dotted segments show APR using previous
calculation for transfers)
Notes Analyses based on 280 baseball squads,
325 mens basketball squads and 233 football
squads that sponsored the sport within Division I
during all five years. Overall rates include all
mens and womens sports, including the three
sports displayed. The retention calculation
changed in 2007-08.
38
Eligibility Trends in Baseball, Mens Basketball
and Football
Notes Analyses based on 280 baseball squads,
325 mens basketball squads and 233 football
squads that sponsored the sport within Division I
during all five years. Overall rates include all
mens and womens sports, including the three
sports displayed.
39
Retention Trends in Baseball, Mens Basketball
and Football (Dotted segments show APR using
previous calculation for transfers)
Notes Analyses based on 280 baseball squads,
325 mens basketball squads and 233 football
squads that sponsored the sport within Division I
during all five years. Overall rates include all
mens and womens sports, including the three
sports displayed. The retention calculation
changed in 2007-08.
40
Trends in Number of 0/2s-- Student-Athletes
Leaving School While Academically Ineligible
  • Notes
  • Analyses based on 280 baseball squads, 325 mens
    basketball squads and 233 football squads that
    sponsored the sport within Division I during all
    four years and had usable data by 4/11/08.
  • N Number of student-athletes leaving school
    while ineligible (0/2s) during that academic
    year (includes SAs who left ineligible after
    exhausting their eligibility).
  • Percentage of individuals in that sport who
    were 0/2s in that academic year.

41
Yearly 0/2 Rates in Baseball, Mens Basketball
and Football ( of SAs Participating who Became
APR 0/2 in that Year)
Notes Analyses based on 280 baseball squads,
325 mens basketball squads and 233 football
squads that sponsored the sport within Division I
during all five years. Overall rates include all
mens and womens sports, including the three
sports displayed.
42
Trends in 0/2s by Sport for Mens
Teams(Single-Year 0/2 Rates in Sports with 50
or More Teams)
Notes Analyses based on N5,923 squads that
sponsored the sport within Division I during all
five years.
43
Trends in 0/2 Rates by Sport for Womens
Teams(Single-Year 0/2 Rates in Sports with 25
or More Teams)
Notes Analyses based on N5,923 squads that
sponsored the sport within Division I during all
five years.
44
Trends in Proportion of Squads with Single-Year
APRs Below 925 in Selected Sports
Note Analyses based on N5,924 squads that
sponsored the sport within Division I during all
five years (data as of 4/23/09).
45
Trends in Proportion of Squads with Single-Year
APRs Below 900 in Selected Sports
Note Analyses based on N5,924 squads that
sponsored the sport within Division I during all
five years (data as of 4/23/09).
46
Summary Sport Trends
  • Large APR increases seen in baseball due to
    changes in both eligibility rates and retention.
  • Eligibility rates increased substantially in
    mens basketball, although retention rates
    (adjusted to old metric) remained similarly low.
  • Football APRs increased on average but the sport
    now lags far behind baseball and mens basketball
    in eligibility rates.

47
Summary Sport Trends(continued)
  • Most mens sports showing increases in academic
    behaviors, although some sports exhibiting
    issues.
  • Aggregate five-year changes among womens squads
    are much smaller than among mens.
  • Some concerns with 2007-08 numbers in womens
    basketball.

48
Sport-by-sport -- Baseball
49
Trends of Transfers Into Division IBaseball
50
Overall Eligibility Rates in Baseball by Term
(Semester Squads Only)
51
Eligibility Rates in Baseball by Term among SAs
Retained into Next Year (Semester Squads Only)
52
Spring Semester Eligibility Rates in Baseball
among SAs Not Retained into Next Year (Semester
Squads Only)
53
Overall Spring Term Eligibility Rates in Baseball
(Semester Squads Only)
54
Overall Spring Term Eligibility Rates in Baseball
among SAs Retained into Next Year (Semester
Squads Only)
55
Summary
  • The increased eligibility rates in baseball are
    due almost exclusively to increases in spring
    term eligibility rates.
  • Eligibility rate increases in baseball seem to be
    related to SAs who would have once been 0/2s
    now leaving school academically eligible
    (possibly attributable to new transfer policy)
    and general eligibility improvements among
    sophomores, juniors and seniors (possibly
    attributable to new spring-to-spring eligibility
    policy).

56
Sport-by-sport mens basketball
57
Trends of Transfers Into Division IMens
Basketball
58
Overall Eligibility Rates in Mens Basketball by
Term (Semester Squads Only)
59
Eligibility Rates in Mens Basketball by Term
among SAs Retained into Next Year (Semester
Squads Only)
60
Spring Semester Eligibility Rates in Mens
Basketball among SAs Not Retained into Next Year
(Semester Squads Only)
61
Summary
  • Increased eligibility rates in mens basketball
    are due primarily to changes in academic
    behaviors among SAs who will not be retained into
    the next year (possibly attributable to the new
    transfer policy).

62
BAEG Update
  • Membership review of revised recommendations to
    occur in preparation for Board review in August.
  • Key Items
  • Summer Bridge Program
  • Incoming assessment to determine benefit.
  • Enroll in six hours plus learning skills
    instruction.
  • Must pass three hours to be eligible in the fall.
  • Summer Athletic Development
  • Eight weeks identified by institution.
  • Enroll in six hours.
  • Must pass six hours to be eligible in the fall.
  • Maximum of eight hours per week, no more than two
    hours of skill-related instruction.

63
BAEG Update
  • Key Items (continued)
  • Referred examination of 2-4 transfer requirements
    to Academic Cabinet.
  • Asked Academic Cabinet to consider the
    elimination of nontraditional courses to meet
  • 2-4 transfer requirements.
  • Limit physical education activity courses to no
    more than two credits
  • Exception for physical education majors.
  • Best practices recommended by N4A.

64
BAEG Update
  • Key Items (continued)
  • Noncounter status for former players who remain
    enrolled after a coaching change.
  • Remove barriers to receiving financial aid after
    professional career.
  • Examine tryout practices with NBA and FIBA.

65
BAEG Update
  • Key Items (continued)
  • Staggered start to playing season.
  • Reduction of regular season games to 28.
  • Reduction of window for return from competition
    from 36 to 24 hours after competition.
  • Permit parents/legal guardians to receive travel
    expenses to attend official visit.

66
Sport-by-sport Football
67
Trends of Transfers Into Division IFootball
68
Trends in Proportion of Football Teams Below 900
(Multi-Year) FBS vs. FCS
Notes Based on multiyear APRs in each year.
Retention calculation changed in Year 5.
69
Trends in Proportion of Football Teams Below 925
(Multi-Year) FBS vs. FCS
Notes Based on multiyear APR in each year.
Retention calculation changed in Year 5.
70
Trends in Proportion of Squads Receiving
Historical Penalties in Selected Sports
71
FAWG update
  • Working Groups report expected late summer or
    fall.
  • Key Items
  • Fall eligibility requirement for future
    competition (i.e., first two games of next
    season).
  • Freshmen six hours.
  • Continuing students all applicable
    progress-toward-degree requirements.
  • Exhausted eligibility departures no longer exempt
    from contemporaneous penalties.
  • Best practices, including FLAG.

72
Sport-by-sport womens basketball
73
Trends of Transfers Into Division IWomens
Basketball
74
Trends in Proportion of Squads in Selected Sports
Receiving Contemporaneous Penalties
75
Future Research Topics
  • Now that five years of APR data are available,
    can we determine whether trends in increasing APR
    will translate into increases in graduation
    rates?
  • If there are increases in the number of
    graduates, can we statistically determine the
    relative contribution of changes in initial
    eligibility standards, progress-toward-degree
    standards and the APR program to that increase
    and are these findings consistent across sport
    groups?

76
Future Research Topics(continued)
  • Are there specific academic support practices
    that seem to assist institutions with increasing
    APRs and graduation rates?
  • Sport-by-sport examinations should continue, with
    additional emphasis on womens basketball, at
    least until more conclusions can be drawn.

77
Facilitating learning and achieving graduation
(FLAG)
78
Brief History and Process Overview
  • The Presidential Task Force on the Future of
    Division I Intercollegiate Athletics noted the
    need to focus on support for "at-risk"
    student-athletes.
  • In response, a working group was formed to
    examine issues pertaining to the academic risk of
    student-athletes.
  • The working group's report has been approved by
    the NCAA Division I Board of Directors and the
    Academic Cabinet.

79
Working Group Charge
  • Identify factors and characteristics that may
    cause a student-athlete to be at risk of not
    graduating from his or her institution.
  • Establish a data-based definition of at risk
    that allows for local differences among the
    diverse Division I membership.

80
Working Group Charge
  • Develop a tool for campuses to use to examine
    special admissions of scholarship
    student-athletes and to measure whether campus
    systems can adequately support the number of
    student-athletes admitted via special admissions
    review each year.

81
Working Group Charge
  • Identify model practices in academic and
    life-skills programs to support at-risk
    student-athletes in their academic endeavors.
  • Develop mechanisms to assist institutions in
    evaluating the level of academic and life-skills
    support provided to at-risk student-athletes and
    in determining if enhancements or changes are
    necessary.

82
Defining "At Risk"
  • Determined to be at risk of not graduating from a
    four-year institution.
  • The working group was mindful of negative
    connotations of the at-risk label, as well as
    traditional view of at-risk students as those who
    are academically underprepared as they enter
    college.
  • At the urging of the Board of Directors and the
    Oversight and Monitoring Group, a new paradigm
    was developed.

83
Nature of "Risk"
  • Any student-athlete can be at risk of not
    graduating.
  • Risk can take a variety of forms, including
    nonacademic factors (e.g., first-generation
    status, financial hardship, time demands of
    sport).

84
Nature of "Risk"
  • Risk factors can be specific to the
    student-athlete or can be presented by team
    culture or campus environment.
  • A student-athlete's level of risk may fluctuate
    throughout the course of his or her collegiate
    enrollment.

85
Nature of "Risk"
  • As a result, risk assessments should not be
    limited to the point of student-athlete entry.
    Rather, they should continue throughout a
    student-athlete's career.
  • In order to best support student-athlete success,
    institutions need a management system to identify
    and mitigate each student-athletes risk of not
    graduating.

86
FLAG ProgramFacilitating Learning and Achieving
Graduation
  • Program's purposes
  • To optimize each campus environment to leverage
    opportunities for graduation success.
  • To increase the efficiency of current services,
    including academic support and life-skills
    programs.
  • To inform decision making regarding recruiting,
    admissions and program resources (e.g., staffing
    and budget).

87
FLAG ProgramFacilitating Learning and
Achieving Graduation
  • Primary components will
  • Determine an individual student-athletes hurdles
    to graduation.
  • Match support services for an individual
    student-athlete to mitigate hurdles.
  • Evaluate the level and effectiveness of services
    provided.

88
FLAG Modules
GRO
FLAG
Support Services
89
FLAG Modules
Graduation Risk Overview (GRO) Scoring model by
which each student-athlete can be evaluated,
based on data-driven risk factors.
GRO
90
FLAG Modules
Support Services Activities designed to counter
the risk factors presented by each
student-athlete.
Support Services
91
FLAG Modules
Evaluation of Support Services and
Programs Determines the effectiveness of campus
units in mitigating risk factors presented
collectively by student-athletes.
Evaluation
92
FLAG StructureFacilitating Learning and
Achieving Graduation
  • A current NCAA Web-based program (i.e., NCAA
    Division I Academic Performance Program) will be
    expanded to include FLAG.

93
FLAG StructureFacilitating Learning and
Achieving Graduation
  • The FLAG system will be programmed to
  • Compute a GRO score for each student-athlete.
  • Match suggested services to factors identified
    for each student-athlete.
  • Provide summary reports regarding the
    effectiveness of programs and services and the
    potential impact of recruiting and admissions
    decisions on service provision.

94
GRO First Term/Entering

95
GRO First Term/Entering (contd)
96
GRO Second Term and Beyond
97
GRO Second Term and Beyond
98
Next Steps
  • FLAG development is underway at the NCAA national
    office.
  • Advisory and pilot groups are being formed to
    complete module designs and to test new program.
  • If you would like to participate, please contact
    Matt Burgemeister at the NCAA
    national office (mburgemeister_at_ncaa.org).

99
Next Steps
  • Targeted Project Time Line
  • GRO module available to the membership fall 2009.
  • Support Services module available
  • spring 2010.
  • Evaluation module available in 2010.

100
FLAG Summary
  • Student-athletes fall along a continuum of risk
    that is based on multiple factors -- not all of
    which are academic.
  • Institutional units must collaborate to identify
    student-athlete support needs and to provide
    quality services and programs to foster
    student-athlete graduation success.

101
FLAG Summary
  • Informed decision making is essential to
    optimizing campus resources to mitigate
    student-athlete hurdles to graduation.
  • To this end, FLAG is designed to support
    institutional endeavors to ensure graduation for
    every student-athlete.

102
Session Summary
  • Division I Academic Cabinet.
  • Sport-by-Sport Review.
  • Facilitating Learning and Achieving Graduation
    (FLAG).
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