Title: Division I Academic Performance Program Update
1Division IAcademic Performance ProgramUpdate
2Board Directive Regarding Team Academic
Performance
- reward teams that demonstrate commitment
toward academic progress of student-athletes and
penalize those that do not. - Encourage academic performance of all
student-athletes on all sports teams. - Reward institutions/teams that achieve
significant academic success. - Penalize those that have a history of academic
underachievement (i.e., habitual offenders).
3Academic Progress Rate
- NCAA Academic Progress Rate
- --Points awarded for eligibility, retention and
graduation - --Based on term-by-term measurement
- --Totaled over four years
- --Includes student-athletes receiving athletics
aid - OR
- --For nonscholarship programs/teams, a subset of
recruited student-athlete - --Used in analysis for contemporaneous and
historical penalties
4APR Scoring Issues
- Scoring system issues.
- Raw APR scores multiplied by 1000 (e.g., .92
becomes 920).
5- Contemporaneous PenaltyCut Point
- Teams with an APR score below 925 are subject to
contemporaneous penalties. - An APR of 925 represents an expected graduation
rate of 50. - Confidence level of 84 established to account
for small sample sizes. - 7.4 percent of all Division I teams below 925.
6Confidence Intervals for APRs
- Small sample sizes of some teams can lead to
reduced confidence in the APR statistic as an
estimate of performance for those teams.
Particularly true with only one or two years of
data. - Confidence intervals, commonly used in
statistics, roughly represent a range of scores
within which we are confident that the true APR
for that team resides (true APR being the
long-term expectation given static systemic
conditions e.g., academic characteristics of
recruited athletes, institutional support, etc.).
7Confidence Intervals for APRs
- A reasonable way to account for reduced
confidence in small sample APRs would be to
compare the upper confidence boundary to a given
benchmark. If a squad possesses an upper
boundary below a certain APR benchmark, we can
say with strong confidence that the squad is not
achieving at that standard. - Board approved an upper 84 confidence boundary
(this is 1 standard deviation, or a 1-tailed
limit) in conjunction with a 2-year aggregate
estimate of squad size when comparing a squads
APR to various benchmarks. - Data displayed in this presentation all use this
boundary when benchmark comparisons are displayed.
8Using Confidence Intervals in Conjunction with
APR Benchmarks
Team A APR 885
Cutpoint APR 925
Team not subject to penalty because upper
confidence bound is above cutpoint.
Confidence Interval N5
Confidence Interval N80
Team is subject to penalty because upper
confidence bound is below cutpoint.
9Contemporaneous Penalties
- Financial Aid Restriction
- Penalty aid previously awarded to a
student-athlete who did not earn eligibility the
next regular academic term and did not return to
the institution. - Once subject, maximum team financial aid limit is
reduced by value of total countable aid awarded
to student-athlete who did not earn eligibility
and was not retained the following academic year.
- Exception for student-athletes who have exhausted
athletics eligibility. - Headcount sport penalty 1.0 (per
student-athlete). - Equivalency sport penalty total countable aid
awarded to 0/2 student-athletes who do not meet
exception.
10Exception
- CAP interpretation. (January 9, 2005)
- Example
- Football student-athlete 0/2 after fall term,
eligibility exhausted. Does not subject team to
penalty
11Contemporaneous Penalty Reminders
- Example
- Fall 2/2
- Spring 0/2
- 2/4 for academic year
- Student-athlete does subject team to penalty
based on 0/2 spring term. - Note Assumes team APR below 925.
12Contemporaneous Penalty Reminders
- Penalty must be taken at the next available
opportunity - Not later than two-academic years after
student-athletes departure - Penalty must be taken in academic year
immediately following student-athletes
departure, unless a signed prospective
student-athlete will be impacted official
interpretation (reference 01/21/04).
13Capping of Contemporaneous Penalty Scholarship
Losses
- In order to ensure contemporaneous penalties are
attention-getting penalties and not death
penalties, Board approved a limit on the number
of contemporaneous penalties that apply to a team
in any given year. - Teams below 925 APR could earn scholarship
reductions up to the cap amount. - Cap approximately 10 of NCAA max. team limits,
rounded up for headcount sports
14Capping Examples Headcount Sports
15Headcount Sport Example
- Division IA Football
- Team APR is below 925.
- Six student-athletes have not earned eligibility
and do not return. - Penalty with cap (9 GIA) 6 GIA
16Capping Examples Equivalency Sports
17Equivalency Sport Example
- Baseball
- Team APR is below 925 APR.
- Three student-athletes have not earned
eligibility and do not return. Total countable
aid awarded to these student-athletes equals
1.20. - Penalty under cap (1.17 GIA )1.17 (GIA)
18Contemporaneous Penalties
- Apply based on two-year APR score (2003-04 and
2004-05 combined) and on student-athlete
eligibility and retention status in 2004-05
(i.e., 0/2 student-athlete may subject team to
contemporaneous penalties). - Contemporaneous penalty based on two-, three-,
then four-year APR score. Once have four-year
APR, will use four-year score.
19Timeline for Implementation Contemporaneous
Penalty
- 2003-04 - year one APR data.
- January 2005 - APR cut established.
- February 2005 APR reports sent to member
institutions. - 2004-05 - year two APR data/student-athlete
eligibility/retention will determine
contemporaneous penalties. - Early fall 2005 - data submitted/initial
notification. - 2005-06 - penalties taken based on 2004-05 year,
unless interp applies. - December 2005 - institutions officially notified
if subject to contemporaneous penalty based on
two years of APR data.