Title: DIVISION III
1DIVISION III COMPLIANCE FOUNDATIONS
2Overview
- Introduction.
- Compliance 101 Responsibilities.
- Eligibility.
- Break (20 minutes).
- Recruiting.
- Financial Aid.
- Playing and Practices Seasons.
3Compliance 101 Responsibilities
- Azure Davey and Jay Jones
4Overview
- What needs to be done?
- When does it need to be done?
- The theme Ongoing responsibility.
- Resources to get it done.
- How to use those resources.
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6Establish the Checklist
- Establish a master checklist.
- What is done once a year?
- What is done more than once a year?
- Who is involved in accomplishing task?
- What time of year to tackle the task?
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8- Master Checklist Includes
- Student-athlete compliance paperwork.
- Eligibility checks.
- Coaches test administration.
9Look Familiar?
10- Master Checklist Includes
- Annual forms signatures.
- Staff education and training.
- What else?
11When Are The Tasks Completed?
- Confirm SA Eligibility Status
- Monitor Playing and Practice Seasons
12Staff Education.
- August Recruiting activities.
- September Extra benefits and awards.
- October Continuing eligibility.
- November Fiscal practices.
- December Proposed legislation.
- January Adopted legislation.
- February Promotional activities.
- March Transfer regulations.
- April Camps and clinics.
- May Playing and practice seasons.
13Wading Through NCAA Rules Questions
14- Gather all of the facts.
- 2. Start with the NCAA Division III Manual.
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16It is more intuitive than you might think. The
main section headings are chronological.
17Most day-to-day issues "live" in NCAA Division
III Bylaws 11 17. Lets walk through those
18You need a staffand they will have
issues. Bylaw 11 Personnel. I saw a kid at
the park Is that great athlete not a
pro? Bylaw 12 Amateurism.
19I want to recruit him. Bylaw 13
Recruiting. Is he eligible? Bylaw 14
Eligibility.
20Can I give him financial aid? Can his
mom? Bylaw 15 Financial Aid. What can we
give him? Bylaw 16 Awards and Benefits.
21When can we practice and play? Bylaw 17
Playing and Practice Seasons.
22I am still lost
23Seeking Interpretive Assistance
- Has the question been answered?
- Search LSDBi.
- Does your conference have a preferred
interpretations process?
24Seeking Interpretive Assistance
- NCAA Division III conference contact program.
- Who it is intended for.
- How it works.
-
25Seeking Interpretive Assistance
- Interpretations hotline
- Member institutions - 317/9176003.
- Open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Eastern time
- Monday through Friday.
- Available to institution's "top six." Need
institutional code. - Not available to NCAA coaches.
26Seeking Interpretive Assistance
- Tips when calling
- Identify yourself and position.
- Be clear and complete in facts one word can
change administrator's thought process or answer. - Always write down administrator's name and case
number. - Internal tracking system will now help reference
old calls. - Know best times to call.
27Seeking Interpretive Assistance
- Interpretations hotline
- General Public - 317/9176222.
- Open Noon to 4 p.m. Eastern time
- Monday through Friday.
- Available to parents, high schools, students and
others. - Not available to NCAA coaches.
28Seeking Interpretive Assistance
- Who does a coach call?
- Someone on your campus is starting point.
- Institutional involvement is key.
- "Institutional Control. "
29Eligibility
30Overview
- General academic requirements.
- Seasons of participation.
- Transfers.
31General Academic Requirements
- Full-time enrollment.
- Good academic standing.
- Satisfactory progress.
32Required Forms
- Student-athlete statement.
- Drug-testing consent form.
- International student-athlete form.
- Student-Athlete Health Insurance Portability and
Accountability Act (HIPAA) Authorization/Buckley
Amendment.
33Full-Time Enrollment
34The Basics
- Fulltime.
- Defined by certifying institution.
- Exception First five days of class.
- Fulltime.
- Defined by certifying institution AND at least
- 12 semesters or quarter hours.
- Exception Graduate
- student-athlete.
- Fulltime as defined by certifying institution.
35Official Vacation Period
- Practice/competition during official vacation
period - Initial enrollee - accepted for enrollment in a
regular full-time program of studies. - Transfer student - no longer enrolled at previous
institution and accepted for enrollment. - Continuing student - registered full time.
- All - must be otherwise eligible.
36Final Semester/Quarter
- Practice/competition in final semester/quarter.
- Enrolled in the courses necessary to complete the
degree requirements. - Eligible to receive a diploma at next
degree-granting date.
37Case Study
- A student-athlete is enrolled in 11 credits at a
Division III institution that requires students
to be enrolled in at least 10 credits to be a
full-time student. The student-athlete is
permitted to participate in which of the
following activities - Practice.
- Competition.
- Both a and b.
- None of the above.
38- A.
- Bylaws 14.1.8.1 and 14.1.8.2
39Case Study
- A student-athlete is enrolled in less than a
minimum full-time program of studies in his or
her final semester or quarter. - The institution has certified that the student is
carrying the credits necessary to complete the
degree requirements. - Can the student-athlete compete?
40 41Good Academic Standing andSatisfactory Progress
42General Rule
- "Good academic standing" and "satisfactory
progress" are to be interpreted at each
institution by the academic authorities who
determine the meaning of such phrases for all
students.
43Good Academic Standing
- The standard should be at least as demanding as
the minimum standard applied to all students for
participation in extracurricular activities.
44Courses Accepted
- Correspondence, extension, credit-by-examination
and online courses - Institutional discretion.
- Regardless of where courses are taken.
45Courses Accepted
- Summer courses at other institutions
- Prior approval by appropriate academic officials
of the certifying institution is required for the
courses to be used in determining the
student-athlete's academic status.
46Seasons of Participation
47Seasons of Participation
- 10 semesters to get four seasons of
participation. - What constitutes a semester?
- Attends class when registered full time in a
four-year school.
48Seasons of Participation
- What constitutes participation?
- Practices or competes during or after first
contest in traditional segment following
student-athletes initial participation.
49Seasons of Participation
- Nontraditional segment?
- Currently competition triggers.
- NCAA Division III Proposal No. 2009-6.
- Effective 2009-10 academic year.
- Sports that are limited to one date of
competition. - Participation in that one date of competition
would not constitute a season of participation.
50Seasons of Participation
- Student managers.
- If practices and not eligible violation.
- If practices during period in which would trigger
a season a season of participation. - Must be limited to managerial duties.
51Seasons of Participation
- Hardship waivers.
- Processed by conference or NCAA, if independent.
- Season-ending injury.
- First half of traditional segment.
- Three contests or one-third.
52Transfers
53Transfers
- Year in residence unless an exception applies.
- Exceptions for.
- Four-year transfer.
- Never participated or
- Academically and athletically eligible at
previous institution (progress toward degree).
54Transfers
- Two-year transfer.
- Never participated.
- Academically and athletically eligible.
- Four-two-four.
- Academically and athletically eligible at the
four year or - 24 transferable hours and at least two semesters.
55Affect of other rules
- Violations in the following areas carry possible
loss of eligibility for the student-athlete - Bylaw 10
- Bylaw 12
- Bylaw 13
- Bylaw 15 and
- Bylaw 16.
56Recruiting Fundamentals
57Recruiting - Overview
- Contacts.
- Telephone Calls.
- Electronic Transmissions.
- Recruiting Materials.
- Case Studies.
58Recruiting Contacts
- Contact Defined
- Any face-to-face encounter in excess of a
greeting - OR
- Prearranged face-to-face encounter at prospective
student-athlete's educational, competition or
practice site regardless of conversation. - .that occurs between a prospective
student-athlete, relative or guardian AND an
athletics department staff member or athletics
representative.
59Recruiting Contacts
- Permissible High School PSA Contact
- In-person, off-campus contacts after the high
school prospective student-athlete has completed
his or her junior year. - Contact on your institution's campus, regardless
of class year.
60Recruiting Contacts
- Permissible Four-Year College PSA Contact
- Need permission to contact prospective
student-athlete at NCAA or NAIA institution. - Option 1 Release from first institution's
athletics director or designee or - Option 2 Self-release for Division III to
Division III transfers only.
61Recruiting Contacts
- Permission to contact not needed
- Prospective student-athlete attending an
institution that is not NCAA or NAIA. - Four-year prospective student-athlete who has
officially withdrawn from previous NCAA or NAIA
institution. - Two-year college prospective student-athlete.
62Recruiting Contacts
- Permissible Recruiters
- Institutions may not pay for athletics talent
scout or representative of athletics interests to
study and/or recruit prospective
student-athletes.
63Recruiting Contacts
- Contact Restrictions
- No recruiting contact before prospective
student-athlete's athletics competition. - No contact from the time prospective
student-athlete reports on call until released
from dressing/meeting facility. - Competition longer than a day (e.g., tournaments)
equals no contact until after prospective
student-athlete's final contest. - If at educational institution during class day,
need principal's approval.
64Recruiting Telephone Calls
- Telephone Call Definition
- Electronically transmitted human voice exchange.
- Electronically transmitted correspondence is NOT
considered a phone call.
65Recruiting Telephone Calls
- No restrictions on time period.
- No limit on number of calls.
- Recruiting calls by enrolled student-athletes,
staff members and representatives of athletics
interests with knowledge of athletics department. - Reminder Need permission to speak with
prospective student-athletes at NCAA and NAIA
institutions prior to calling.
66Recruiting Electronic Transmissions
- Limited to e-mail and fax.
- All other forms (e.g., instant messenger, text
messaging and social networking sites)
prohibited. Interacting with prospective
student-athletes through recruiting sites also
prohibited. - Applies to those in athletics department or
acting on behalf.
67Recruiting Materials
- May provide to prospective student-athletes,
relatives or guardians, or coaches - Official academic, admissions, athletics and
student-services publications or videotapes. - Published or produced by the institution.
- Other information of a general nature available
to all students. - No limits on size, content, or when may be
provided.
68Case Studies
69Recruiting - Case Study No. 1
- Prospective student-athlete, Karay, has returned
home from his official visit and is excited by
all of the students, faculty, and staff he met. - While surfing his social networking site, Karay
notices several of the people he met have pages,
including the coach and several of the athletes
on the team. - Karay links up to their pages and leaves them a
note. - May the coach and/or the members of the team
respond?
70Recruiting - Case Study No. 1
- Answer
- Athletics department staff are only allowed to
e-mail and fax recruits. - Electronically transmitted correspondence and
interaction through social networking sites is
prohibited. - Nonsocial networking Web pages without
interaction are permissible. - Student-athletes may interact with prospective
student-athletes if not directed in any way by
athletics department staff.
71Recruiting - Case Study No. 2
- Coach Cross is the head women's soccer coach and
is also an admissions representative. - While serving the admissions office, coach Cross
is instructed to send an instant message to all
prospective students (including prospective
student-athletes) by the director of admissions. - May coach Cross send the instant message?
72Recruiting - Case Study No. 2
- Answer
- Yes.
- Coach Cross may send the instant message because
she is acting as an admissions employee and not
on behalf of athletics. -
73Recruiting - Case Study No. 3
- Coach H. Two-Oh has travelled to the BP sectional
championships at the natatorium to watch
prospective student-athlete swimmers and some
record breaking performances using the latest
suit technology. - During the three day event, coach Two-Oh does the
following
74Recruiting - Case Study No. 3
- Has a conversation in the stands with several
parents of the SC swim club relay. All four
relay members are high school juniors. - Receives an update from one of his top senior
recruits and her coach after her preliminary
swim. - Chats with an international prospective
student-athlete just prior to the prospective
student-athlete driving himself home. The
prospective student-athlete is a member of a
Quebec swim club and attends a two-year Canadian
institution with no swim program. - Any or all permissible?
75Recruiting - Case Study No. 3
- Answer
- Coach H. Two-Oh may not talk to the SC swim club
parents. - No in-person, off-campus contact until after
junior year in high school. - Prohibition extends to parents and or guardians
of prospective student-athletes.
76Recruiting Case Study No. 3
- Answer continued
- Coach may not speak with top senior prospect.
- Prospective student-athletes competition has not
concluded and she has not been released by the
coach.
77Recruiting Case Study No. 3
- Answer continued
- Coach H. Two-Oh may speak with the international
prospective student-athlete. - A non-NAIA or NCAA college prospective
student-athlete does not need permission to
contact. - Practice/competition site restriction not
applicable. - Meet concluded and prospective student-athlete
released by the coach.
78Recruiting Case Study No. 4
- The Dialed University coaching staff has
recruiting call blitzes Mondays and Wednesdays
for high school freshmen and sophomores. - Members of the athletics department staff,
student-athletes and members of the athletics
booster clubs are directed to assist in making
recruiting calls on those days. - Is this permissible?
-
79Recruiting Case Study No. 4
- Answer
- Coaches, staff members, student-athletes, and
representatives of athletics interests may make
the recruiting calls to the freshmen and
sophomores.
80Financial Aid
- Eric Hartung and Jeff Myers
81Key Points
- Interaction between the financial aid department
and athletics. - Financial aid reporting program.
- New roles per the financial aid reporting program.
82Athletics Department Interactions with Financial
Aid
- Guiding Principle
- Athletics department personnel should not
influence, directly or indirectly, a
student-athletes financial aid package.
83Athletics Department Interactions with Financial
Aid
- Scholarship committee PROHIBITED.
- Recruiting process - coach as a conduit to the
financial aid office. - Financial aid appeals process coach as an
advocate.
84Athletics Department Interactions with Financial
Aid
- Athletics Department and the Admissions Office
- Individuals with dual roles.
- "Tip Sheets" how is the information used and
the role admissions plays in non-need-based
financial aid packaging.
85Reporting Program Background and Communication
- A process for member institutions to perform a
self-analysis. - A process for the NCAA to assess compliance.
- Each institution receives an annual report.
- All correspondence includes "top six."
86Athletics Department Role in Reporting Program
- Identify student-athletes for the cohort.
- The cohort ALL full-time, first-time students
that entered YOUR institution in the requested
academic year (freshmen, transfers and mid-year
enrollees, and international students). - A student-athlete listed on the institutions
official squad list on or after the first
scheduled contest or date of competition in the
traditional segment.
87Athletics Department Role in Reporting Program
- Which sports to include
- Association conducts a championship or
- Waiver for sports sponsorship or
- Emerging sport for women AND
- Varsity sport AND
- Administered by athletics department.
88Bylaw 17 Playing Seasons
- Azure Davey and Jeff Myers
89Overview
- Organization - Bylaw 17.
- Seasons lengths, starts and stops.
- Year in review.
- Out of season.
- Facilities.
90Bylaw 17 - Organization
- Definitions and general principles.
- Unique sport rules.
- Foreign tours.
91So, how do I figure out seasons for each sport?
92Figuring Out the Season
- How many weeks does the sport get?
- How many contests does the sport get?
- When is the sport allowed to first practice?
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94Figuring Out the Season
- When is the sport allowed to first compete?
- What date must the sport season end?
- Exemptions?
95Establish Your Window
96How Many Contests and When?
- Figure out in conjunction with "window."
- Do they all occur within window?
- Are any exempt?
- Double-check maximum number.
- What about minimum?
97When Does the Team Begin Practice?
- Which sport?
- What is the first permissible date?
- When is the first contest?
- How many weeks used?
98Establishing Seasons - Timeline
- Communication with coaches early academic year.
- Educate coaches early academic year.
- Turn in schedule date and/or deadline
mid-academic year. - Review "first drafts" mid-academic year/second
semester.
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100Establishing Seasons - Timeline
- Point out issues/concerns. Have championships
been reflected on schedule? Early second
semester. - Second draft/final early second semester/second
semester. - Contracts.
- Practice schedule second semester.
101Out of Season
- Education, Education, Education
- Coaches.
- Student-athletes.
- The Division III model.
102Out of Season
- Key points
- Providing workouts.
- Monitoring workouts.
- Facilities.
103Providing workouts
- Proposal No. 2009-2 Specific Workout Programs.
- Individual specific workout programs.
- Athletics staff cannot conduct.
- Must be voluntary.
104Monitoring workouts
- Strength and conditioning coach MAY
- monitor for safety purposes, but
- MAY NOT conduct the workout.
- Bylaw 17.02.1.1(k)
105Monitoring workouts
- Monitoring defined
- observing and watching closely to ensure that
student-athletes are provided a safe and
controlled environment. Such personnel may
demonstrate proper technique and give advice to
ensure that the workout is taking place in a safe
fashion.
106Facilities
- Recreation classes.
- Facilities monitoring.
- Blanket waiver until January 16, 2010.
- Convention vote.