Gophers athletes make significant strides in academics - Strib

Iceland12

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For the people that said that A.D. Coyle didn't recognize the previous progress and the people who shouted that he shouldn't, he certainly does here.

"It's hard being a student-athlete," he said. "There's nothing easy about balancing football and school."

Celestin, a senior linebacker, has hit the mark, earning academic all-Big Ten honors the past two years. His success in the classroom reflects exceptional improvement academically by the entire Gophers athletic department — football in particular — in the past decade..

Celestin carries a 3.2 cumulative GPA as a kinesiology major. He said he works with tutors three nights a week during the football season and even more during the spring semester.

His message to younger teammates or other Gophers athletes: Be willing to seek help from tutors.

"Some people are just afraid to ask for help," Celestin said. "But I believe if you need it, ask for it."..

Once an area of embarrassment and ridicule, the department's academic performance has become a source of pride. Gophers athletes recently have set department records for cumulative grade-point average and Graduation Success Rate (GSR).

The U also has led the nation's public schools in receiving Public Recognition Awards in the NCAA's Academic Progress Rate (APR) for four consecutive years.

The GSR takes into account transfer students, so it's meant to provide a more accurate snapshot of success in graduating athletes.

In 2006, the GSR scores of 14 of the school's 21 sports fell below the national average. The Gophers have flipped that script. In the most recent GSR report, 14 programs were above the national average and a 15th (women's swimming and diving) equaled the national average.

The football team has experienced the most dramatic turnaround after historically ranking near the bottom of the Big Ten in graduation rates. The program has raised its GSR score 30 percentage points in the past 11 years, and the team's latest single-year APR score of 991 ranked in the top 10 nationally.

"It's a credit to the people who were here before me that made it a priority," athletic director Mark Coyle said. "And we will continue to make it a priority."

Kill made academics a priority

Department staffers cite a number of factors for the improvement. Specifically, leaders in the McNamara Academic Center for athletes enhanced their infrastructure; Jerry Kill was hired as football coach and made academics a priority; and Jacki Lienesch took over as director of football academic advising after a stint at Florida State.

J.T. Bruett, director of the McNamara Center since 2015, said the department has added one additional academic adviser and another learning specialist in the past two years. They also have expanded the tutoring staff since 2010.

"Our tutoring program is the biggest in the Big Ten by far," he said.

For years, academic shortcomings in athletics caused angst within the university. A 2004 NCAA report found that only 58 percent of Gophers scholarship athletes graduated based on four-class averages for incoming freshmen between the 1994-95 and 1997-98 school years. That was the lowest mark in the Big Ten, a rate that then-university President Robert Bruininks called "unacceptably low."


In 2005, then-athletic director Joel Maturi described the NCAA's new APR standards as a "wake-up call."

A turning point came in 2009, when the Gophers football team was penalized three scholarships because its APR score (915) fell below the NCAA minimum of 925 and at least three players who left the program were academically ineligible.

"That was embarrassing," said Bruett, who worked in athletic compliance at the time. "I think at that point, [we] said, 'This is crazy. We have to make an adjustment.' "

Lynn Holleran assumed leadership of the McNamara Center in 2010 and formulated a new strategy. She reorganized responsibilities and bolstered the tutoring staff by hiring more graduate students, which is more costly. Tutors became more proactive in providing assistance rather than waiting for problems to arise.

"We knew we had the ingredients to turn it around," said Holleran, who now works in athletic administration at Penn State. "I just needed coaches to buy in and see what we wanted to do and how it could help them."

Kill led the charge. Hired in December 2010, He recalled recently that 21 players were on academic probation and another four were in danger of being ruled ineligible.

"So we had 25 people in big-time trouble," he said.

Kill cleaned up that crisis through rigid discipline. Players who skirted their academic responsibilities earned early-morning runs. Those who skipped class or showed up late for study hall had to wear shirts to practice that read: "Minnesota Loafers. I let my teammates down."

He punished classroom slackers by making them perform hours of hard labor by pulling weeds from a community garden that supplies vegetables for homeless shelters, or cleaning barns of police horses that patrol parks. Kill also benched players in games for academic reasons.

"We made sure that kids were accountable," he said. "We dug ourselves out of a hole."


In a recent interview, Kill singled out Lienesch, the football program's lead academic adviser.

"Jacki has been the best thing that's ever happened to that school," he said. "They can't pay her enough."...


http://www.startribune.com/gophers-athletes-make-significant-strides-in-academics/439115913/
 



The U has come a long ways since the bottom of the barrel APR scores of Mason's teams.
 

One thing that I think gets often left out: academics began to improve under Brewster. Unfortunately, when he was fired mid-season, it seemed to take a hit with some players giving up or not doing what they needed to do so it kind of went down a little.

But not everything Brewster did was bad. The slow climb for academics started there. Kill then took it to the next level.

Good job by lots of people. Something that I'm proud of as an alumnus.
 


Maybe the best thing Brewster did was to get the Gopher fan base to start believing that Big 10 Championships and Rose Bowls were not impossible dreams, and that nobody in Minnesota should be satisfied with Mason's 32-48 Big 10 record from their only Division I football team. I started buying season tickets because Brewster reignited my passion for Gopher football and I have had them ever since.
 

One thing that I think gets often left out: academics began to improve under Brewster. Unfortunately, when he was fired mid-season, it seemed to take a hit with some players giving up or not doing what they needed to do so it kind of went down a little.

But not everything Brewster did was bad. The slow climb for academics started there. Kill then took it to the next level.

Good job by lots of people. Something that I'm proud of as an alumnus.

A chart showing that was on the same page as the article in the newspaper.

Just found it online too.

Football’s gain

The NCAA’s Academic Progress Rate (APR) gauges how individual teams are doing in eligibility and retention of athletes based on a point system. A perfect score is 1,000. The NCAA punishes teams that fail to meet certain APR standards. Here is a look at the four-year rolling APR averages the past 11 years for the Gophers football team:

Year APR +/-

2005-06 919

2006-07 927 +8

2007-08 915 -12

2008-09 934 +19

2009-10 935 +1

2010-11 932 -3

2011-12 955 +23

2012-13 962 +7

2013-14 975 +13

2014-15 992 +17

2015-16 992 —
 

Here are the cumulative GPA's too.

Year-by-year GPAs

Cumulative grade-point average for all Gophers athletes:

Year Fall Spring

2006-07 3.10 3.09

2007-08 3.11 3.12

2008-09 3.16 3.16

2009-10 3.15 3.15

2010-11 3.14 3.15

2011-12 3.17 3.18

2012-13 3.18 3.22

2013-14 3.21 3.22

2014-15 3.22 3.24

2015-16 3.21 3.22

2016-17 3.22 3.23
 





Here are the cumulative GPA's too.

Year-by-year GPAs

Cumulative grade-point average for all Gophers athletes:

Year Fall Spring

2006-07 3.10 3.09

2007-08 3.11 3.12

2008-09 3.16 3.16

2009-10 3.15 3.15

2010-11 3.14 3.15

2011-12 3.17 3.18

2012-13 3.18 3.22

2013-14 3.21 3.22

2014-15 3.22 3.24

2015-16 3.21 3.22

2016-17 3.22 3.23

Grade inflation.
 

Grade inflation.

Not a problem at WMU.

That 2015-16 APR was 943 which was in the 40-50th percentile in the nation. Which was down from the 4 year average of 958. Which was comparable to Minnesota's 992.
 

I'm not sure I recall anyone specifically saying Coyle didn't recognize previous academic success.

But, there are a lot of things that come out of the PR machine and other individuals that make it sound like the new regime has accomplished something academically. The only thing they've done thus far is give it lip service (they just haven't been here long enough for any results to analyze - not to say they won't be successful).

Then, throw in the implications of the "culture change" rhetoric, and it's not surprising people take it a certain way. Especially if you're trumpeting "culture change" on nationally observed press conferences, then explaining what you actually mean to some obscure blog interviewer, or a hack like doogie on some cut-rate 2-minute interview ran at 11 pm that nobody watches.

It's all calculated. They have the best and brightest PR consultants on indefinite retainer. If they didn't want that impressed on people, it wouldn't be.

Rightfully, the previous regime should get 100% of the credit. Coyle should talk about how he plans to sustain that. I'm glad Coyle finally said something with some substance.

In the end, it's great that these kids are excelling at a prestigious university and setting themselves up for life after football.
 




One thing that I think gets often left out: academics began to improve under Brewster. Unfortunately, when he was fired mid-season, it seemed to take a hit with some players giving up or not doing what they needed to do so it kind of went down a little.

But not everything Brewster did was bad. The slow climb for academics started there. Kill then took it to the next level.

Good job by lots of people. Something that I'm proud of as an alumnus.

Thank you for saying this! Brewster wasn't as bad as he was made out to be.
 





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