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Post by vbf on Nov 12, 2014 18:47:18 GMT -5
How many guys on average each year get a full scholarship to Div I schools?
How do most Div I colleges break down their scholarships?
Is it a school by school decision and no general rule?
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Post by vbsocal56 on Nov 12, 2014 18:53:08 GMT -5
Pepperdine is probably the only school that regularly gives full scholarships because that school is so dang expensive. 35%-70% is probably the max most schools will give too highly touted recruits due to limited number of scholarships.
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Post by hardworkwins on Nov 12, 2014 19:01:43 GMT -5
Schools can also give grant money which is not technically a scholarship but can be given out as such.
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cadf
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Post by cadf on Nov 13, 2014 8:40:12 GMT -5
Kids get combos of "academic" and athletic money. That is why volleyball players need to be good students.
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Post by mojo101 on Nov 13, 2014 9:43:53 GMT -5
If you're a youth national team player, you have a chance to get a full ride scholorship to other schools other than Pepperdine. If your an outstanding player (just below a national player) and get good grades, you can get pretty close to having all your college costs covered!
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Post by vbsocal56 on Nov 13, 2014 10:53:51 GMT -5
Kids get combos of "academic" and athletic money. That is why volleyball players need to be good students. This is illegal for division 1 schools. Only division 2 schools can combine scholarships. Pepperdine got in trouble for this a few years ago.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Nov 13, 2014 11:11:25 GMT -5
Kids get combos of "academic" and athletic money. That is why volleyball players need to be good students. Kids cannot actually accept both academic and athletic scholarships. It is one or the other. They can accept academic scholarships and financial aid.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Nov 13, 2014 11:14:52 GMT -5
Kids get combos of "academic" and athletic money. That is why volleyball players need to be good students. Kids cannot actually accept both academic and athletic scholarships. It is one or the other. They can accept academic scholarships and financial aid. wrong
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Post by newenglander on Nov 13, 2014 12:18:48 GMT -5
As far as I know, most schools allow you to combine athletic and academic aid. Schools that can't do both have a tougher time getting athletes on partial scholarship for that reason.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Nov 13, 2014 12:40:10 GMT -5
Kids cannot actually accept both academic and athletic scholarships. It is one or the other. They can accept academic scholarships and financial aid. wrong Haha umm, nope, not wrong. You cannot receive both an academic and an athletic scholarship. You can be offered both from a school, but you can only accept one of the two. If people are accepting both it might be best to advise them to keep it on the down low because that school would be subject to an NCAA investigation in no time.
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Post by preschooler on Nov 13, 2014 12:57:03 GMT -5
I thought that men's volleyball is an equivalency sport. If I recall what Pepperdine got in trouble for was in part improper counting of the rewards. They used athletic talent was a factor that moved a student up in priority for financial aid which you can do but they were not counting such "aid" as part of the 4.5 when they should have been. As to the op question, this site is interesting www.scholarshipstats.com/volleyball.htm
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Nov 13, 2014 13:06:10 GMT -5
Haha umm, nope, not wrong. You cannot receive both an academic and an athletic scholarship. You can be offered both from a school, but you can only accept one of the two. If people are accepting both it might be best to advise them to keep it on the down low because that school would be subject to an NCAA investigation in no time. Haha umm, nope, I'm right and your wrong.
www.nationalletter.org/documentLibrary/athleticScholarship.html
Can student-athletes receive other, non-athletic financial aid?
Yes. Thousands of student-athletes benefit from academic scholarships and need-based aid, such as federal Pell Grants. In addition, there is money available from the NCAA's own Student-Athlete Opportunity Fund. Sometimes student-athletes cannot accept certain types of aid because of NCAA amateurism or financial aid requirements. Student-athletes and parents with questions on additional financial aid should check with their athletic department or college financial aid office.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Nov 13, 2014 13:10:18 GMT -5
Haha umm, nope, not wrong. You cannot receive both an academic and an athletic scholarship. You can be offered both from a school, but you can only accept one of the two. If people are accepting both it might be best to advise them to keep it on the down low because that school would be subject to an NCAA investigation in no time. Haha umm, nope, I'm right and your wrong.
www.nationalletter.org/documentLibrary/athleticScholarship.html
Can student-athletes receive other, non-athletic financial aid?
Yes. Thousands of student-athletes benefit from academic scholarships and need-based aid, such as federal Pell Grants. In addition, there is money available from the NCAA's own Student-Athlete Opportunity Fund. Sometimes student-athletes cannot accept certain types of aid because of NCAA amateurism or financial aid requirements. Student-athletes and parents with questions on additional financial aid should check with their athletic department or college financial aid office.
Aid is different than a scholarship. So I repeat, someone cannot accept both an academic and an athletic scholarship.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Nov 13, 2014 13:12:52 GMT -5
Yes. Thousands of student-athletes benefit from academic scholarships and need-based aid, such as federal Pell Grants.....
Obviously you chose the athletic scholarship for obvious reasons. Provide me with a link or maybe a bylaw.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Nov 13, 2014 13:20:46 GMT -5
Yes. Thousands of student-athletes benefit from academic scholarships and need-based aid, such as federal Pell Grants.....
Obviously you chose the athletic scholarship for obvious reasons. Provide me with a link or maybe a bylaw.
So they site a grant...which is financial aid and not a scholarship at all. Financial aid has nothing to do with academic achievement or extracurricular activities, while scholarships have everything to do with that. Financial aid has everything to do with family income and scholarships have nothing to do with family income. I have coached a number of student-athletes who have received both academic and athletic scholarship offers from a school but need to choose one or the other, as they cannot accept both. It is against NCAA laws. Hence why schools have been put on probation, penalized scholarships, etc. etc. for having student-athletes receiving both academic and athletic scholarships at one time. They didn't just penalize those schools for doing something that was legal...
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