Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DC just went through this for the admissions edge, not for money. He was sought after by several top tier D3 schools. Ultimately decided that he was not willing to apply ED to those schools, which was required to get the admissions bump. He applied to several on an RD basis though and was waitlisted. So there are several scenarios here based on our experience:
1. You love the sport and want to play in college and are good enough that you will be recruited somewhere. You are willing to go to a lesser school than you might have gone to based on academics. We know a number of kids who followed this path. This may or may not include a scholarship offer.
2. You are pretty good at a sport, also academically qualified, and can get an admissions bump at some schools (probably D3, or D1 schools where your sport is not the focus). This will probably require an ED commitment.
3. You are a legit superstar and have probably been recruited in 10th or 11th grade and are getting some decent money from a D1 school. Your academics are less of a priority as long as you meet the NCAA guidelines.
PP here, superb post that needs to be read by all.
ED commitment is big. Everyone in my family that was recruited by ivy or top d3 school were required to apply EA/ED for an admissions bump.
PP does your son/daughter regret not doing ED?
Anonymous wrote:My DC just went through this for the admissions edge, not for money. He was sought after by several top tier D3 schools. Ultimately decided that he was not willing to apply ED to those schools, which was required to get the admissions bump. He applied to several on an RD basis though and was waitlisted. So there are several scenarios here based on our experience:
1. You love the sport and want to play in college and are good enough that you will be recruited somewhere. You are willing to go to a lesser school than you might have gone to based on academics. We know a number of kids who followed this path. This may or may not include a scholarship offer.
2. You are pretty good at a sport, also academically qualified, and can get an admissions bump at some schools (probably D3, or D1 schools where your sport is not the focus). This will probably require an ED commitment.
3. You are a legit superstar and have probably been recruited in 10th or 11th grade and are getting some decent money from a D1 school. Your academics are less of a priority as long as you meet the NCAA guidelines.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also note, athletic scholarships are for one year only and must be renewed each year. Get hurt? There goes your scholarship.
Not true for me. They usually sign a contract that states otherwise. They can't drop you because you get injured.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also note, athletic scholarships are for one year only and must be renewed each year. Get hurt? There goes your scholarship.
Not true for me. They usually sign a contract that states otherwise. They can't drop you because you get injured.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Full ride scholarships are generally available only for division 1 football (85 scholarships per school), men's basketball (13), and women's basketball (15), tennis (8), gymnastics (12), and volleyball (12). That's it. Under NCAA rules, no other sports require full ride scholarships. Instead, the other sports are "equivalency" sports, with the limits set at total scholarships equal to x full ride scholarships. So, for example, division 1 women's field hockey can have 12 equivalency scholarships. A coach is free to have 25 women on the team, and can divvy up the money among the 25 any way she wants. So a few players might get substantial scholarships, the rest won't get much. There are even fewer scholarships available at Division II schools (which generally speaking, aren't well known schools). There are NO athletic scholarships allowed at Division III schools. Any aid offered there must be financial aid or merit aid.
So the reality is, even for top athletes, there are very few full rides to college out there, unless you play football. As this article discusses, excluding football and basketball, the average athletic scholarship in 2004 was $8k.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/10/sports/10scholarships.html?pagewanted=all&_r=1&
The real advantage to sports is the admissions edge, not the scholarship. Sports help even if a student is not recruited. Especially being a captain.
Anonymous wrote:I have really young kids but I hear parents say that they will have their kid play x sport hopefully so they can get a college scholarship.
Does it really work?
If you had your child play a sport to get a college scholarship, did it pay off or not?
What sport did your child play?
At what age did you have your child start playing the sport?
How much money did you spend over the years so that your child can play the sport?
And anything else you want to mention!