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Much Ado About Nothing?

Temple Coach Baffled by Concerns About Athletes’ Lower Graduation Rates

OVERLAND PARK, KS
For the first time in fourteen years, there
has been an overall drop in the graduation rates for college athletes.
So now there seems to be some concern about athletes falling behind in
the classroom, and at least one African American coach finds that
concern a little disingenuous.

“I think the discussion about graduation rates is much ado about
nothing,” said John Chaney, basketball coach for Temple University.

Earlier this month, the National Collegiate Athletic Association
(NCAA) issued its latest report on the graduation rates of scholarship
athletes attending its 308 Division I schools. The survey revealed the
first overall annual decrease since 1984 — the first year the NCAA
started tracking the number of athletes who complete their degrees
within six years.

The data for this latest report were compiled, for the first time,
by the federal government instead of the NCAA. As a result, the
criteria and reporting forms varied slightly from the past.

The report focused on the graduation rates of athletes who entered
school as freshmen in the fall of 1991. They were counted as graduating
only if they earned a degree by 1997 at the school they originally
entered. In this study, transfers who graduated from other schools were
not counted as having graduated from any school.

Graduation rates declined in fourteen of the fifteen
gender-and-race categories tracked by the NCAA. The only category that
did not see a decrease in graduation rates was White female basketball
players, which remained unchanged at 70 percent — the highest rate in
the survey.

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