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What division is best for me?
Posted On 07/29/2009 15:25:55 by administrator

What sport division is best for me?

College Athletics: The NCAA, NAIA, and NJCAA  

Before you start dreaming about athletic shoe endorsements or freeing up shelf space for your Wimbledon trophy, you should start considering an athletic scholarship as a viable means of paying for college. In order to do that, you got to start with the basics. There are three primary organizations that govern collegiate athletics, and each of them vary in their eligibility, size, and propensity for awarding scholarships. By understanding what each one does and how they work, you can better determine what kind of school might be right for you (and your killer jump shot, butterfly, or ability to bend it like Beckham).

NCAA

When you think of big-time college athletics, this is it. The granddaddy of college sports, he National Collegiate Athletics Association (NCAA) has over 1,000 member schools that are classified according to size, competitiveness, and ability to award athletic scholarships. To make it slightly more confusing, these classifications are referred to as divisions.

Division I: These are the schools that play before national television audiences and have athletic departments with multimillion-dollar budgets. Notre Dame, Ohio State, UCLA, and Florida State are all popular examples of Division I programs with fan-bases numbering in the hundreds of thousands. Division I teams are also subdivided into two divisions (Division I-A and I-AA) for football. Each division carries certain stipulations regarding stadium size, required fan turnout, and scheduling appropriate opponents.

Division II: These schools are smaller in size and with slightly smaller scholarship allotments; no more than 60 scholarships may be offered in sports other than football and basketball during an academic year. While there are many talented athletes playing for Division II schools, the competition does not measure up to Division I and these schools receive less media exposure. Popular examples of Division II schools include Seattle Pacific University, Michigan Tech, and The University of Alaska-Anchorage.

Division III: Most Division III schools have no more than a few thousand students. You'll find many of the nations renowned liberal arts colleges competing at this level, such as Gustavus Adolphus, Amherst, and Washington University. Division III schools do not offer athletic scholarships. But athletes may earn financial aid awards that offset the high tuition of these schools. Division III programs have very limited recruiting budgets, but the level of competition is not much lower than at Division II schools.

NAIA

In addition to the NCAA, the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) governs the athletic programs and contests of its 360 member colleges, all of which are small institutions. There is no limit on how many scholarships can be offered by NAIA schools. But small schools have limited budgets, which limits the number of scholarships available. The level of competition is typically on par with that of NCAA Division III schools.

NJCAA

An additional category of college athletics is the National Junior College Athletics Association (NJCAA), which consists of over 500 junior colleges. NJCAA schools offer full and partial scholarships in 23 sports. Often, athletes who are academically ineligible to attend NCAA Division I colleges enroll at NJCAA colleges for two years, become eligible, and transfer to NCAA schools during their junior year. Junior colleges often have an open door admissions policy, which means anyone may enroll who has graduated from high school or earned a General Equivalency Diploma. Junior colleges have a wide range of athletes from future pros who didnt have the grades to get into NCAA schools, to athletes that were never recruited in high school.

Tags: NCAA NAIA NJCAA



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