SMU Football Blog wrote:Graduating students is important. Athletes are students. Where we have gotten lost is that we seem to think it is more important for athletes to graduate than for students to graduate.
SMU graduates football players at a higher percentage than the student population as a whole.
The faculty still reviews individual grades and test scores for athletes. The faculty does not review individual grades and test scores for regular students.
SMU still accepts two out of three applicants.
Where we have gotten lost is people think academic integrity for the football program translates to the university as a whole. Where we have gotten lost is the manner in which we seek "academic integrity". Where we have gotten lost is people think "academic integrity" and winning football is an either/or proposition.
Other schools manage to graduate their athletes, too. And some of them win meaningful games. We should be following their lead and not continuing down the same path that has failed SMU for 15 years.
Blog, you are correct. The issue we face is not our academic standards. That is the lazy way to think about our issues. SMU needs continued leadership in graduating a high percentage of student athlete. And is it not a either/or proposition as you state.
Notre Dame, USC, Stanford, Northwestern, Wake Forest, Boston College, etc. aren't embarrassed by their athletic teams or academic standards. The suggestion that our soul as a university must be sacrificed for W's is a joke.
The counter is raise performance for everyone as has currently been proposed by the NCAA. Then everyone can't quit working about this issue and focus on getting a competitive team, not cutting corners.