Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At a D1 school, the student part of student-athlete is often secondary. If the student gets hurt, the scholarship gets pulled. If the student wants to take a challenging course load or major, the team's academic advisor will counsel against it. In some sports like football, graduation rates are abysmal, even at the better D1 colleges.
At an Ivy, academics always come first. Every athlete can choose to drop sports with no consequences for financial aid. The lowest eligible academic index athletes at an Ivy almost always score higher than the median SAT at a D1. The most common/easiest major for athletes is economics, not sports management, kinesiology, communications or marketing.
Your comment is confusing because Ivy League schools are Division I; they don't offer athletic scholarships, however.
While D1, the Ivies have an entirely different set of academic requirements to prevent the schools from admitting students just to play sports. Basically, the athletes need to be within one standard deviation from the overall student averages. And the AD is always subordinate to the faculty.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:At a D1 school, the student part of student-athlete is often secondary. If the student gets hurt, the scholarship gets pulled. If the student wants to take a challenging course load or major, the team's academic advisor will counsel against it. In some sports like football, graduation rates are abysmal, even at the better D1 colleges.
At an Ivy, academics always come first. Every athlete can choose to drop sports with no consequences for financial aid. The lowest eligible academic index athletes at an Ivy almost always score higher than the median SAT at a D1. The most common/easiest major for athletes is economics, not sports management, kinesiology, communications or marketing.
Your comment is confusing because Ivy League schools are Division I; they don't offer athletic scholarships, however.
Anonymous wrote:At a D1 school, the student part of student-athlete is often secondary. If the student gets hurt, the scholarship gets pulled. If the student wants to take a challenging course load or major, the team's academic advisor will counsel against it. In some sports like football, graduation rates are abysmal, even at the better D1 colleges.
At an Ivy, academics always come first. Every athlete can choose to drop sports with no consequences for financial aid. The lowest eligible academic index athletes at an Ivy almost always score higher than the median SAT at a D1. The most common/easiest major for athletes is economics, not sports management, kinesiology, communications or marketing.