Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think what OP is saying is that it's not that athletes get a leg up in admissions, it's that they get a leg up in the admissions process. Why can't they just have to apply like everyone else? and if their athletic prowess is valued by an admissions office, then great, but to have the process essentially done before everyone else in unseemly.
You expect admissions officers to be able to know how to build a team? For all the sports? They'll have to do scouting in addition to their jobs? Keep depth charts on their wall?
No, they leave it to the coaches, and give them "bands" or the like to allocate. Applicants still have to clear the bar, which is lower than an unhooked kid, yes. As they are for all hooked applicanta.
This is the only way it can work at all. Suggesting otherwise supports the collapse of the entire college sports ecosystem. Which is a legitmate position, if you support that, but just know that's what you are suggesting.
Anonymous wrote:I think what OP is saying is that it's not that athletes get a leg up in admissions, it's that they get a leg up in the admissions process. Why can't they just have to apply like everyone else? and if their athletic prowess is valued by an admissions office, then great, but to have the process essentially done before everyone else in unseemly.
Anonymous wrote:I think what OP is saying is that it's not that athletes get a leg up in admissions, it's that they get a leg up in the admissions process. Why can't they just have to apply like everyone else? and if their athletic prowess is valued by an admissions office, then great, but to have the process essentially done before everyone else in unseemly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is so deep I may have missed something similar and apologize if so but representing a college athlete recruited Junior year for a top Ivy college who also had the grades and course difficulty and ACT test scores to maybe be considered without the sport commitment hook but that sport also represented all the time she could have spent on a Ivy level extra curricular like working in a lab in her area of interest. The sport ended up giving her a big leg up but she worked very hard to get that and she also has strong other interests that will carry through college and I think too many people on this thread think athletes "waltzing" into great schools are not also great students.
It's not that some of the athletes are not very bright and hardworking students. It's the fact that athletic prowess is over emphasized relative to other attributes.
I understand why this system has developed, with the cash cows of entertaining football and basketball and then title 9 and so on. It is what it is but it makes no logical or practical sense to favor athletes for preferred access to our top academic institutions. No other country does this because it makes no sense.
Anonymous wrote:It's not that some of the athletes are not very bright and hardworking students. It's the fact that athletic prowess is over emphasized relative to other attributes.
Anonymous wrote:Why are PPs so jealous of athletes? I mean, how can you begrudge someone's athletic success just because you don't have that ability? Crazy. This whole thread has a very "shut up and dribble" vibe.
Anonymous wrote:You’re not being a very good friend. Celebrate your friends and their kids and achievements! I say this as a mom to a very average kid who has friends recruited to a bunch of top schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dude, being a top athlete is hard work. Good for her. Congratulate them instead of begrudging their dedication
+1
My DS plays a sport on a high level. People do not realize how many hours go into such a commitment. While your kid may be at the Friday night football game having a great time with their friends (and as they should), mine is on a field until 10 p.m. The sacrifice is there and the reward should be as well.
Anonymous wrote:This thread is so deep I may have missed something similar and apologize if so but representing a college athlete recruited Junior year for a top Ivy college who also had the grades and course difficulty and ACT test scores to maybe be considered without the sport commitment hook but that sport also represented all the time she could have spent on a Ivy level extra curricular like working in a lab in her area of interest. The sport ended up giving her a big leg up but she worked very hard to get that and she also has strong other interests that will carry through college and I think too many people on this thread think athletes "waltzing" into great schools are not also great students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sports crazy parents need to add up all the roster spaces at the top private colleges. Far less than lottery odds your kid is one of them. And all of teams give the nod to filthy rich families over random joe blow striver from the DMV. Talent is a secondary consideration.
I bet you all laugh and make fun of “dumb” poor people for wasting money on scratch off lottery tickets.
If your good not great athlete plays at “the next level” it’s prob going to be some podunk crap college nobody has ever heard of. And they’ll most likely quit the team after a year and transfer to the state university all their friends are at. I’ve seen this play out hundreds of times.
You think there are a lot of posters (any posters?) on the DCUM College and University forum who show up to post at all if their kid ends up at a “podunk crap college” for whatever reason? Is this your first time on DCUM?
Delusional strivers lie to themselves until the very end that their kid will con their way into a "T20" and/or play "at the next level." Well, for 99% of student-athletes, the next level is some backwater degree mill in some podunk town. I've seen it happen hundreds of times.
I’m sure this happens in some communities where sports are valued over academics and the parents are uneducated, and/or unsophisticated, and/or can only afford to send their kids to college with the help of an athletic scholarship. That community is very far removed from the communities where posters on this particular DCUM forum live. 90+% of the people here complaining about admissions hooks for athletes are p*ssed because an athletic UMC kid who attends the same school as the UMC poster’s child will be waltzing into an Ivy-level school as an athletic recruit while their little genius is “stuck” going to UVA, William & Mary or some other great but not as brag-worthy school. So, while you are welcome to mock whomever you please, I don’t know why you are addressing your mockery to this group.
Go add up all the current Ivy League student-athletes from the DMV, then subtract URMs, legacies and filthy rich. That is how many spots for random Joe Blows from the DMV you're talking about. I'd guess maybe a few dozen out of a couple million DMV kids? Again, most student-athletes end up degree mills. You're focusing on the handful who essentially win a lottery, while ignoring the big picture. You're probably some coach or schemer in the travel sports racket. Freeloading off selling false hope to delusional sports crazy parents who piss away every weekend for 10 years so their kid can end up playing in front of 10 people at Podunk College in Ghost town, USA.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Playing a sport at a level high enough to commit while maintaining grades, etc. deserves to be rewarded just as much as the kid who fiends 20 hours a week in the lab or practicing an instrument.
I think some of people's frustration with the process is that athletes are rewarded more than scientists and musicians. (Know any juniors who are biochemists or pianists who have been recruited?)
Musicians? Absolutely. Any other questions?