Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do the high academic independent schools recruit athletes? If so, does anyone know the process? Do they provide financial assistance, or is that need-based only?
What makes this hard for people to understand is that they confuse what they know --- or think they know --- about college athletic recruiting with what occurs in private high schools.
The NCAA has many rules under which college athletic recruiting operate. These rules do not exist in the Washington, DC private school world.
And there are no Athletic scholarships like there are in college sports.
The private school rules are set by the athletic conference the schools are members of. The rules for the Washington Catholic Athletic Conference (Gonzaga, DeMatha, etc.) are different from the rules for the Interstate Athletic Conference (Landon, St Albans, etc) or the MAC (Sidwell, GDS, Potomac, etc)
One rule they all seem to have is “No First Contact”. The schools agree they will not contact prospective athletes first. The student of his or her parents must contact the school first. But once that has been done there are very few rules. Schools can contact athletes, invite them to campus for visits and continue to communicate with them and encourage them to apply to the school.
Once the connection has been established, the coaches from the school need to be convinced that the athlete is someone they want to sponsor in the school’s Admissions process. If that is the case, they will then lobby the Admissions Committee to grant admission and to supply the necessary financial aid.
This helps a lot. A coach from the WCAC actually reached out to me but the schools in the IAC/MAC started following my child’s social media but have never said anything. I’ll reach out to the ones we may be interested in. Thank you!
The WCAC does give athletic money this is directly from their code of ethics.
https://www.wcacsports.com/information/code-of-ethics
“Recruiting, Admissions and Student Life:
Assuring that athletic recruitment practices respect the child, involve the parent, are consistent with Catholic values and WCAC regulations, and comply with established institutional policies and procedures applicable to the admission process;
Committing to awarding financial aid, tuition assistance or scholarships to student-athletes on the same basis as all other students”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do the high academic independent schools recruit athletes? If so, does anyone know the process? Do they provide financial assistance, or is that need-based only?
What makes this hard for people to understand is that they confuse what they know --- or think they know --- about college athletic recruiting with what occurs in private high schools.
The NCAA has many rules under which college athletic recruiting operate. These rules do not exist in the Washington, DC private school world.
And there are no Athletic scholarships like there are in college sports.
The private school rules are set by the athletic conference the schools are members of. The rules for the Washington Catholic Athletic Conference (Gonzaga, DeMatha, etc.) are different from the rules for the Interstate Athletic Conference (Landon, St Albans, etc) or the MAC (Sidwell, GDS, Potomac, etc)
One rule they all seem to have is “No First Contact”. The schools agree they will not contact prospective athletes first. The student of his or her parents must contact the school first. But once that has been done there are very few rules. Schools can contact athletes, invite them to campus for visits and continue to communicate with them and encourage them to apply to the school.
Once the connection has been established, the coaches from the school need to be convinced that the athlete is someone they want to sponsor in the school’s Admissions process. If that is the case, they will then lobby the Admissions Committee to grant admission and to supply the necessary financial aid.
This helps a lot. A coach from the WCAC actually reached out to me but the schools in the IAC/MAC started following my child’s social media but have never said anything. I’ll reach out to the ones we may be interested in. Thank you!
Anonymous wrote:High academic colleges also need their athletes to be able to hack it. So the selective schools absolutely look at kids in high academic high schools because they know they tic that box.
Anonymous wrote:Above - where did your chid end up? Catholic? Public? Son with same stats in the same boat although shy and did not interview as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do the high academic independent schools recruit athletes? If so, does anyone know the process? Do they provide financial assistance, or is that need-based only?
What makes this hard for people to understand is that they confuse what they know --- or think they know --- about college athletic recruiting with what occurs in private high schools.
The NCAA has many rules under which college athletic recruiting operate. These rules do not exist in the Washington, DC private school world.
And there are no Athletic scholarships like there are in college sports.
The private school rules are set by the athletic conference the schools are members of. The rules for the Washington Catholic Athletic Conference (Gonzaga, DeMatha, etc.) are different from the rules for the Interstate Athletic Conference (Landon, St Albans, etc) or the MAC (Sidwell, GDS, Potomac, etc)
One rule they all seem to have is “No First Contact”. The schools agree they will not contact prospective athletes first. The student of his or her parents must contact the school first. But once that has been done there are very few rules. Schools can contact athletes, invite them to campus for visits and continue to communicate with them and encourage them to apply to the school.
Once the connection has been established, the coaches from the school need to be convinced that the athlete is someone they want to sponsor in the school’s Admissions process. If that is the case, they will then lobby the Admissions Committee to grant admission and to supply the necessary financial aid.
Anonymous wrote:Do the high academic independent schools recruit athletes? If so, does anyone know the process? Do they provide financial assistance, or is that need-based only?