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Published byChristine Bates Modified over 9 years ago
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College Athletics INTRODUCTION AND RESOURCES
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Basic Information Student-Athletes may be recruited, but more often students must indicate interest in a program and contact college coaches to show their interest Students should talk with their high school or club coach about the possibility of participating at the college level. A coach is the most valuable resource in the recruiting process Few students receive athletic scholarships. Those that do most often receive partial or equivalency scholarships Identifying colleges rowing programs, signing up with recruiting sites or consultants and visiting must begin early
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NCAA Information NCAA schools participate in one of three divisions; I, II, III based on the size of school, and level of athletic competition. DIII offers no level of scholarship support Students must register with the NCAA at the NCAA Eligibility Center website by the end of their Junior year (preferably earlier) Please refer to the NCAA Eligibility Brochure/Timeline Register by completing the sections required on the registry site At the end of the registration process print out and sign the Transcript Release Form and bring it to Mrs. Manders in Guidance Students/parents should visit the NCAA site and read the Guide for the College Bound Student Athlete to become familiar with eligibility requirements and recruiting regulations
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Athletic Resources/Websites NCAA Registry http://web3.ncaa.org/ECWR2/NCAA_EMS/NCAA_EMS.html# http://web3.ncaa.org/ECWR2/NCAA_EMS/NCAA_EMS.html# National Letter of Intent http://www.nationalletter.org/aboutTheNli/index.html http://www.nationalletter.org/aboutTheNli/index.html www.BeRecruited.com allows high school student athletes to create an athletic profiles in order to showcase their ability by adding stats, videos, photos, and more. Student-athletes are then able to connect with college coaches across the country by sharing their athletic profile www.BeRecruited.com
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Rowing Facts In women’s rowing, there are 81 Division I, 15 Division II, and 42 Division III programs, a total of 138 colleges where high school rowers can compete at the next level. Men’s rowing is not sanctioned by the NCAA, but is offered as a club sport at many schools Women’s rowing has about 20 scholarships per team. As it is an equivalency sport, coaches divide the money as they choose Few rowers have the academic and athletic credentials to be actively recruited. Ask your coaches and do the research to know. Your coach should be your greatest asset in the process Many DI coaches expect potential recruits to make commitments by mid-fall of senior year. If you are being recruited be prepared to select your top school early (as early as October 1)
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Rowing Resources www.usrowing.org Information related to the rules for recruiting and college recruiting tips www.usrowing.org Rules of Recruiting - Rowing Guide to College Recruiting for Rowers and Parents www.row2k.com Extensive site providing college team information, events, stats, race results… www.row2k.com http://rowingdb.sparksconsult.com/ Sparks Rowing maintains a database of current collegiate rowing programs (men's/women's, DI/DII/DIII, and levels-lightweight and open/heavyweight). Search and filter the database by school name, program level, male/female, admissions selectivity, cost, academic intensity, public/private, location, majors, financial aid,housing, etc. http://rowingdb.sparksconsult.com/ Consultants Sparks Consulting http://sparksconsult.com/http://sparksconsult.com/ Rower’s Edge http://www.rowersedge.com/http://www.rowersedge.com/
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