|
The "greatness" of a team can change. The coach can change. The player could become injured and never play. Never choose a Div 3 school because of the team.
Re: time focused on HS sports vs HS academics, I would not allow more than a .5 overall unweighted difference in gpa because of sports participation. If you have an A student, slipping to a B+, ok. Ok by me. But not an A student slipping more. And not a B student becoming a C student because of sports. I'm usually ok if the student feels they need to adjust the level of rigor to their HS schedule. Healthy sleep and convenience/inconvenience to the family as a whole - those are very important to us. |
|
Changing schools is not as big of a deal as non athlete parents make it out to be. |
|
We listed all the schools he was willing to go to academically... Ivy, Patriot League, NESCAC and a few others.
We listed the schools by athletic ranking. He was not a top 10 kid, he was more like a 10-30 kid. We targeted the schools that intersected. Three showed interest and 1 finally worked out, by the skin of one's teeth. |
|
Grades, scores, schools? What will work for one doesn't work for all. Conn College, Trinity, and Bates are great schools but what is acceptable for them isn't nearly enough for Amherst, Bowdoin, Hamilton, Middlebury, or Tufts. WEs and Colby will fall between the extremes. Same holds for the UAA as well Good enough for CWRU, Rochester and Brandeis doesn't cut it at Chicago, Emory, WashU, and CMU with NYU in the middle. All great schools but the standards are not uniform. |
Congrats!!!! That’s a happy story to hear |
Not in the NESCAC, UAA, Patriot League, Ivy League etc. There will always be some in the lower band after all that is what recruited slots are for at the NESCAC. The vast majority of athletes will be in the 25-75 range because of the needs to meet the AI in the Ivy and Patriot Leagues or limited numbers of lower banded slots in the NESCAC (2 per sport plus 14 for football). |
| my kid picked up the sport relatively late, after sophomore year - and has offers of support from multiple WASP schools - likely would have been D1 material if started earlier - but was able to enjoy childhood and school years as a multi sport athlete. Many of our friends have sold their souls in pursuit of ivy end game |
Ok. My dc with interest from Nescac or whatever it’s called has recruiting interest from across those groups. But anyway, that’s not the focus and I’m not here to quibble about which school is more academically elite. None of them have particularly great athletics. That’s the issue |
What’s a WASP school? Yeah, I see that a lot on here. That’s why i think it’s important to clarify if you/dc is not one of those parents chasing a sport for a hook. My dc also picked up the sport late and although there are complaints here and there about that, dc had a fairly relaxed childhood and in fact had a passion hobby in a completely unrelated area that almost became serious at one point. |
Dude, chill |
get your point but there are many shades of gray here - for cross-country, the D1 sport has been heavily impacted by international recruits - most specifically by the African recruits who grow up at altitude and have a physiological advantage vs the 18-year old kid from Chevy Chase - many of the international recruits can’t really even speak English, are well into their 20s when starting school and some feel it’s ruining D1 running. D3 a much purer home grown approach - |
This may shock you, but some teens want input into their lives. Yes, you can try to control them - clearly you do - but if a kid has a passion that doesn’t exactly fit with your strict parameters, I’m not sure if the answer is to try to break them These are not 8 year olds |
the 4 best D3 schools for academics, many believe they rival the top ivies |