Knight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics

Knight Commission on Intercollegiate Athletics

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COMMISSION REPORTS

View All Reports

Keeping Faith with the Student Athlete
The Knight Commission's Groundbreaking Report

A Call to Action
A Call to Action: Reconnecting College Sports and Higher Education

COMMISSION MEETINGS

Next public meeting: October 27, 2008
National Press Club
Washington, DC
RSVP to Katie.Reardon@widmeyer.com

FUTURE MEETING DATES:

  • Monday, Jan. 26, 2009 – Miami, FL
  • Tuesday, May 12, 2009 – Washington, DC
  • Monday, Oct. 26, 2009 – Washington, DC


  • NEWS ABOUT THE MEETING:
    June 17, 2008


    Summit on the Collegiate Athlete Experience
    Jan. 2006

    Faculty Summit on Intercollegiate Athletics
    Oct. 2007

    Prior Knight Commission press releases

    PUBLISHED OP-EDS

    Los Angeles Times
    Aug. 30, 2008

    Miami Herald
    Feb. 4, 2007

    Indianapolis Star
    Apr. 2, 2006

    COMMISSIONED RESEARCH AND POLLS

    WHITE PAPERS

    Athletics Recruiting and Academic Values: Enhancing Transparency, Spreading Risk and Improving Practice
    University of Georgia Institute for Higher Education

    Challenging the Myth
    A Review of the Links Among College Athletic Success, Student Quality and Donations by Robert H. Frank

    Executive Summary Division I-A Postseason History and Status

    Division I-A Postseason History and Status
    by John Sandbrook

    News

    COIA calls for closer monitoring of college athlete’s courses

    According to the NCAA, The Coalition on Intercollegiate Athletics (COIA) has issued a statement in response to recently published reports by the Ann Arbor News that college athletes at the University of Michigan were being “clustered” in less-challenging academic programs and allowed to enroll in independent-study courses as a way to improve their grade-point averages.  COIA calls upon athletic departments to more closely monitor the courses taken by college athletes at their institutions.  It is also reiterating its appeal for universities to adopt a proposal to collect data on enrollment and grading patterns of student-athletes.

    The COIA, an alliance of 56 Division I faculty senates interested in advancing academic reform, stated in a 2007 white paper called “Framing the Future: Reforming Intercollegiate Athletics” that data on student-athletes’ choice of major should be gathered and evaluated by the campus faculty governance body or the Campus Athletic Board and should also be provided to all prospective recruits. Also, to preserve academic integrity, the COIA called for the campus faculty governance body or the Campus Athletic Board to monitor college athlete enrollment by course.

    The organization’s statement as a result of the Ann Arbor News reports stated “such data should be designed to reveal whether there are clusters of athletes enrolled in identical courses or in courses with identical instructors, unusually high class GPAs in such courses or from such instructors, or grades significantly higher than predicted for athletes as compared to others in such courses or from such instructors.”

    “The COIA has not investigated the charges at Michigan; it is not our role to do so and thus we take no position on the merits and specifics of the allegations,” the statement reads. “We point out, however, that we have previously taken note of similar accusations at other universities and have warned of the potential for such abusive practices in the absence of explicit policies and controls to prevent them.” Notably, there are individuals and other media organizations (including the Michigan Daily) who are critical of the the method of the investigation by the Ann Arbor News, and its conclusions.

    Posted on 4/9/08 in StudentsMediaEducatorsNews ReleasesPermalink

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