NCAA president Myles Brand said Monday it might be time for the NCAA to work
with the NBA, other basketball organizations and even shoe companies on a plan
that would better prepare high school athletes for success in college.
Because the NCAA is stepping up colleges' and universities' accountability
for poor academic performance and graduation rates, Brand said it's unfair to
schools and student-athletes when the students arrive on campus without the
academic background to take college-level courses.
"Maybe working together with the NBA and lots of others ¡ª USA Basketball, the
(Amateur Athletic Union), the National Federation of High Schools ¡ª and
including key elements such as the shoe companies ... working all together, is
there something we can do to help improve that pre-collegiate environment?"
Brand said during a visit to Hampton University, where he took questions from
athletic department staffers.
Brand said he and NBA commissioner David Stern, who this year said the NBA
would consider becoming involved in helping secondary schools to better prepare
their athletes, discussed the issue at a "summit" last year in Chicago.
"It's one of the most recalcitrant and difficult problems we now face in all
of college sports, in part because the NCAA has no control over what happens
before college by definition," Brand said. Having student-athletes not capable
of making the grade "makes if difficult for the coach and it makes it difficult
for the young people who are being recruited, too. They're not always getting
the straight information."
Another summit is planned next month, Brand said.
In the meantime, to protect colleges from being penalized when unmotivated
student-athletes transfer to other institutions, sometimes at the end of the
season, the NCAA will this year begin requiring that athletes be academically
eligible at the school they are leaving to be able to accept a scholarship at a
new institution.
In 2008, the NCAA also plans to begin requiring that scholarship recipients
have 16 core courses in high school in an effort to ensure that they bring a
solid academic foundation to college classrooms, NCAA vice president Kevin
Lennon said.
When an assistant basketball coach pointed out that college coaches are not
allowed to meet with recruits until after it is too late for some students to
meet the core requirements, Lennon encouraged everyone to continue giving the
NCAA feedback.
By limiting college coaches' access to recruits, Brand said, the NCAA is
opening the door to third-parties who sometimes become players' representatives.
"I don't know that we've done the best job in enabling our coaches early on
to meet with students and families so that it would be another strong
influence," he said.
In a proposal Brand was to lay out later in the day, the NCAA also is
considering requiring that recruits register with the NCAA Clearinghouse that
monitors academics before making official recruiting visits that sometimes end
with scholarship offers.
In some cases, the offers are made before any academic review, Lennon said.
"The broader cultural thing that we're trying to say is that academics needs
to be placed before these athletic assets ¡ª official visits, scholarship
offers," he said.
Brand said the academic reform is working and that the graduation rate among
student-athletes is actually 2 percentage points higher than the rate among the
general student population.