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Page 1: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

COLLEGE RECRUITING

Page 2: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

College Scholarships

By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + More

Do you secretly hope that your child will someday win a full-ride athletic scholarship?

Many parents do, including my sister, who believes that her 9-year-old daughter enjoys an excellent shot at a soccer scholarship in 2021. What would prompt my sister, Jane, who is sane in other respects, to think her daughter, Kate, has a chance at an athletic scholarship?

Kate, a third grader, was recently picked to be on a top club soccer team in her San Francisco area neighborhood.

Yep, that's all the evidence that my sister has to go on.

Page 3: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

Agenda

College Options

Eligibility Guidelines

Thinking College – When/How to Start

Recruiting Rules and Guidelines

Questions To Ask

Important Facts

Creating Your Video Tape

Page 4: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

Agenda

College Options

Eligibility Guidelines

Thinking College – When/How to Start

Recruiting Rules and Guidelines

Questions To Ask

Important Facts

Creating Your Video Tape

Page 5: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

College Options

The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) is a semi voluntary association of over 1200 institutions, conferences, organizations and individuals that organizes the athletic programs of many colleges and universities in the United States.

The National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA) is the governing body of intercollegiate athletics for two-year colleges.

The National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) is an athletic association that organizes colleges and university-level athletic programs. Membership in the NAIA consists of smaller colleges and universities across the United States.

Page 6: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

NCAA

Member institutions have to sponsor at least seven sports for men and seven for women (or six for men and eight for women) with two team sports for each gender

May award athletic scholarships to student-athletes and the number of scholarships an institution may award varies from sport to sport

Must meet minimum financial aid awards for their athletics program

There are maximum financial aid awards for each sport that a Division I school cannot exceed

Division I

(335 Instituti

ons)

Institutions have to sponsor at least four sports for men and four for women, with two team sports for each gender

May award athletic scholarships to student-athletes, and the number of scholarships an institution may award varies from sport to sport

There are maximum financial aid awards for each sport that a Division II must not exceed

Division III (288 Instituti

ons)

Division III institutions have to sponsor at least five sports for men and five for women, with two team sports for each gender, and each playing season represented by each gender

Athletics departments place special importance on the impact of athletics on the participants rather than on the spectators

These institutions are not allowed to award any type of financial aid based in any way on athletic ability

Division III (432 Instituti

ons)

Each school decides which division it belongs to. The school makes that decision by matching it’s enrollment, financial situation and fan support with the requirements of each division. Then the school must meet those requirements each year.

Page 7: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

NJCAAThe National Junior College Athletic Association

(NJCAA) represents over 500 schools that are two-year colleges and are divided into three divisions with

scholarships offered only at the Division I and II levels.

Division I

May Offer Full Scholarships

Division II

Limited To Awarding Tuition, Fees And Books

Division IIIMay Provide No

Athletically Related Financial Assistance

NJCAA Colleges That Do Not Offer Athletic Aid

May Choose To Participate At The

Division I Or II Level If They So Desire

Page 8: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

NAIA

Close-knit communities and small class sizes on the typical NAIA campus

Recruitment process is less cumbersome, with fewer restrictions on the contact a student-athlete and coach can make

Most institutional scholarships are for only one year. Also, there are some scholarships that cover just tuition (or housing, or books) and others that cover housing, books, tuition, or full-ride scholarships.

NAIA (300+ schools)The National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) membership is comprised of approximately 300 fully accredited four-year colleges and universities throughout the United States and Canada.

Page 9: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

Volleyball by the Numbers

1781 schools sponsored varsity level volleyball teams in 2014 Athletic Scholarships

 DivisionNumber of Schools Number of teams Varsity Athletes Average team size limit per team

Men's Women's Men Women Men's Women's Men Women

NCAA I 334 23 334 462

5,236 20 16 4.5 12

NCAA II 294 17 294 286

4,706 17 16 4.5 8

NCAA III 432 69 432 927

6,673 13 15 - -

NAIA 223 22 223 388

3,793 18 17 8 8

NJCAA 308 - 308 - 3,812 - 12 - -

Other Divisions 190 17 188 251 2,350 15 13 - -

Totals 1,781 148 1,779 2,314

26,57

0 16 15

Chances of a high school athlete competing in College Volleyball Men Women

Number of High School Volleyball Players 52,149 429,634

Number of College Volleyball Players 2,314 26,570

% of high school players competing in college 4.4% 6.2%

Page 10: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

Agenda

College Options

Eligibility Guidelines

Thinking College – When/How to Start

Recruiting Rules and Guidelines

Questions To Ask

Creating Your Video Tape

Page 11: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

Eligibility

To be eligible to participate in Division I or Division II athletics, students must register and be certified by the NCAA Eligibility Center

Division II schools also require that you be a high school graduate and have a specified minimum GPA and SAT/ACT scores (The rules for minimum GPA, SAT/ACT, etc are applicable for athletic eligibility. Your admission to a school is governed by the entrance requirements of that particular school)

The NCAA does not establish eligibility requirements for student athletes in Division III schools

Page 12: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

New DI Requirements

• Minimum core-course GPA of 2.300 required;• Change in GPA/test score index (sliding scale); and• Ten core courses required before beginning of

senior year

There are new requirements for college-bound student athletes enrolling full time at an NCAA Division I college or university on or after August 1, 2015.

Page 13: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

NEW NCAA Division I Initial-Eligibility Academic Requirements

For college-bound student-athletes enrolling full timeat an NCAA Division I college or university on or afterAugust 1, 2015, there are three possible academicoutcomes:• Full qualifier = competition, athletics aid (scholarship), and

practice the first year

• Academic redshirt = athletics aid the first year, practice in first regular academic term (semester or quarter)

• Non-qualifier = no athletics aid, practice or competition the first year

Page 14: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

Division I (NCAA)

Division I Core GPA and Test Score Sliding Scale

Core GPA SAT ACT

3.900 440 41

3.500 600 50

3.200 720 59

3.000 800 66

2.900 840 70

2.300 1080

93

• Graduate from high school• Successfully complete 16 core courses as follows:

• 4 years of English• 3 years of mathematics (Algebra I or higher)• 2 years of natural/physical science (1 year of lab if offered by

high school)• 1 year of additional English, mathematics or natural/physical

science• 2 years of social science• 4 years of additional courses (from any area above, foreign

language or comparative religion/philosophy)

• Earn a minimum required grade-point average in your core courses and earn a combined SAT or ACT sum score that matches your core course grade-point average and test score sliding scale on this

Page 15: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

Division II/III (NCAA)

Division II currently* has no sliding scale. The minimum core grade-point average is 2.000. The minimum SAT score is 820 (verbal and math sections only) and the minimum ACT sum score is 68.

DII has 16 Core Courses • 3 years of English • 2 years of mathematics (Algebra I or higher)• 2 years of natural/physical science (1 year of lab if offered by high school)• 3 years of additional English, mathematics or natural/physical science • 2 years of social science• 4 years of additional courses (from any area above, foreign language or

comparative religion/philosophy)*Beginning August 1, 2018, to become a full or partial qualifier for Division II, all college-bound student-athletes must complete the 16 core-course requirement.

Page 16: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

Eligible Scores (NCAA)

The SAT score used for NCAA purposes includes only the critical reading and math sections. The writing section of the SAT is not used.

The ACT score used for NCAA purposes is a sum of the four sections on the ACT: English, mathematics, reading and science.

All SAT and ACT scores must be reported directly to the NCAA Eligibility Center by the testing agency. Test scores that appear on transcripts will not be used. When registering for the SAT or ACT, use the Eligibility Center code of 9999 to make sure the score is reported to the Eligibility Center.

Be sure to look at your high school’s list of NCAA-approved core courses on the Eligibility Center's Web site to make certain that courses being taken have been approved as core courses. The Web site is www.eligibilitycenter.org

Page 17: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

Eligible Scores (NAIA)

Be a graduate of an accredited high school or be accepted as a regular student in good standing as defined by the enrolling institution and: Meet two of the three following requirements. If as an entering freshman you do

not meet at least two of the three standards, you cannot participate in athletics for the first full year of attendance (2 semesters, 3 quarters, or equivalent).

PlayNAIA.org is the official clearinghouse for NAIA eligibility. Every student-athlete must register with the NAIA eligibility center to play sports at an NAIA college. The eligibility center is also a powerful tool to help athletes connect with coaches and NAIA schools - and find money for college through thousands of NAIA athletic scholarships.

1. TEST SCORE REQUIREMENT

2. HIGH SCHOOL GPA REQUIREMENT

3. CLASS RANK REQUIREMENT

Achieve a minimum of 18 on the ACT or 860 on the SAT.

Achieve a minimum overall high school grade point average of 2.0on a 4.0 scale.

Graduate in the top half of your high school class.

Page 18: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

Eligibility

Academic Eligibility Requirements: Check with the www.ncaa.org for the latest requirements. You may register for eligibility on their website at

www.eligibilitycenter.org NAIA ELIGIBILITY REGULATIONS:

You may register for the clearing house on their website at http://www.playnaia.org/

Page 19: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

Agenda

College Options

Eligibility Guidelines

Thinking College – When/How to Start

Recruiting Rules and Guidelines

Questions To Ask

Important Facts

Creating Your Video Tape

Page 20: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

Four-Year Time Line

Freshman

The first two years of high school are an athlete's time to grow and to develop skills.

Sophomore

Sophomore year is the time to get serious if you are interested in competing in college and in getting a sports scholarship.

Junior

No year is more important to recruiting success than your junior year.

Senior

Time is in short supply. You need to continue to make sure that you are eligible by filling any holes in your transcript.

Page 21: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

Agenda

College Options

Eligibility Guidelines

Thinking College – When/How to Start

Recruiting Rules and Guidelines

Questions To Ask

Important Facts

Creating Your Video Tape

Page 22: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

Definitions

ContactA contact occurs any time a coach has any face-to-face contact with you or your parents off the college's campus and says more than hello.

Contact Period During this time, a college coach may have in-person contact with you and/or your parents on or off the college's campus.

Dead Period The college coach may not have any in-person contact with you or your parents at any time in the dead period.

Evaluation.An evaluation is an activity by a coach to evaluate your academic or athletics ability.

Evaluation Period The college coach may watch you play or visit your high school, but cannot have any in-person conversations with you or your parents off the college's campus.

Page 23: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

Definitions Cont’d

Official Visit Any visit to a college campus by you and your parents paid for by the college. Before a college may invite you on an official visit, you will have to provide the college with a copy of your high school transcript (Division I only) and SAT, ACT or PLAN score and register with the NCAA Eligibility Center.

Prospective Student-Athlete You become a “prospective student-athlete” when:• You start ninth-grade classes; or Before your ninth-grade year, a college gives you, your relatives or your friends any financial aid or other benefits that the college does not provide to students generally.

Quiet Period The college coach may not have any in-person contact with you or your parents off the college's campus.

Unofficial Visit Any visit by you and your parents to a college campus paid for by you or your parents.

Verbal Commitment This phrase is used to describe a college-bound student-athlete's commitment to a school before he or she signs (or is able to sign) a National Letter of Intent.

Page 24: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

Agenda

College Options

Eligibility Guidelines

Thinking College – When/How to Start

Recruiting Rules and Guidelines

Questions To Ask

Important Facts

Creating Your Video Tape

Page 25: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

Questions to Ask

ATHLETICS What position/event am I being recruited for? Are there any policies regarding red shirts? What expectations are there for training and

conditioning? Off- season (Time commitment) What is the coaching style or philosophy? How many others are being recruited for the same

position/event? If I am seriously injured while competing, who is

responsible for my medical expenses

Page 26: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

ACADEMICS How good is the department in my major? What is your graduation rate? What academic supports are available to

student-athletes? Are there any mandatory study programs? What is a typical day for a student-athlete? Must student-athletes live on campus?

Questions to Ask

Page 27: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

Questions to Ask

Financial Aid What will your scholarship cover? Am I eligible for additional financial aid? Under what circumstances could I have my

scholarship reduced or canceled? What happens to my scholarship if I suffer an

athletic career-ending injury? Are there any academic criteria to keep my

scholarship?

Page 28: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

Agenda

College Options

Eligibility Guidelines

Thinking College – When/How to Start

Recruiting Rules and Guidelines

Questions To Ask

Important Facts

Creating Your Video Tape

Page 29: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

Important Facts

Earn the best grades you can, attempting the most challenging courses you can handle

Colleges are looking for good students as well as good athletes. It helps in their evaluations from NCAA and outside institutions.

CHARACTER COUNTS AS WELL

Page 30: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

Important Facts

Train to be the best athlete you can be. This means in-season and off-season. No matter what the sport an appropriate weight training program, speed/agility improvement, and flexibility program will benefit you.

Contact the schools yourself Either by website or letter Know contact limitations that may be involved

Page 31: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

Agenda

College Options

Eligibility Guidelines

Thinking College – When/How to Start

Recruiting Rules and Guidelines

Questions To Ask

Important Facts

Creating Your Video Tape

Page 32: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

Video

10 Minutes of Un-Edited Game Play Marker to Show Who/Where You Are

2-3 Minutes of different Skill-Sets Emphasis on Your Major Skill/Position Show Variations of Serves

Highlight Reel Is a Good Thing NOT The ONLY Thing

DO NOT PAY EXORBANT FEES FOR VIDEOS

Page 33: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

Tips

The recruiting process can be very overwhelming and difficult for student athletes. With over 7.3 million high school athletes in the United States and countless others across the world it is important to make yourself stand out. Social Media – If you even hesitate for a second to post it… DON’T. Email – Just like your twitter handle you need to make sure that your email

address is appropriate Phone Conversations/ Voice Mail – Talking on the phone can be awkward

for student athletes at first but after 5-10 phone calls that athlete should begin to feel more comfortable. However even as the student athletes become comfortable they still need to be prepared for a coach’s call

Page 34: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

Tips

Wherever you’re applying, make sure to follow these key steps: Research the school Reach out to the Coach Visit the school Ask questions (make sure you know them beforehand – don’t try to wing it!)

Apply Get accepted Make your decision!

Page 35: COLLEGE RECRUITING. College Scholarships By Lynn O'Shaughnessy June 22, 2010 | 3:28 p.m. EDT + MoreLynn O'Shaughnessy Do you secretly hope that your child

Questions?