| Players
who are interested in playing at the college level may want to register at
Rich Kern's recruiting registry. Click here.
Get info regarding the NCAA
Clearinghouse at http://www.ncaaclearinghouse.com/.
Get info regarding SAT's at http://www.collegeboard.com/.
US News & World Report's "Best
Colleges" at www.usnews.com/usnews/edu/college/rankings/rankindex_brief.php |
|
Timeline for College Athletic Scholarships
by Tom Fakehany (visit Tom's website, 411 Volleyball, for more
information) |
|
Never lend your car to anyone
to whom you have given birth to, but you can never do too much to help
them obtain a college athletic scholarship. They key to succeeding
is exposure. You must let college coaches know that you are out
there, but you must not jeopardize the thousands of dollars of scholarship
money by violating the current NCAA rules.
I have read and studied Jim and
Marcy Herb's book entitled, "In Search of the Athletic Scholarship".
This book is really a manual for the student athlete and their
parents. It is a parent and student/athletic "Do It Yourself" book,
written by the parents of a high school volleyball player, and what they
learned in the process of successfully searching for a college athletic
scholarship.
The book covers such topics as
how to get started, preparing your athletic resume, how and when to make
the first contact, your first face to face meeting, maintaining academic
eligibility, the NCAA Initial Eligibility Clearing House, campus visits,
how to prepare your video tape and much more. If you're looking at
playing sports in college, with or without a scholarship, this book is
required reading for both the student and the parent. |
|
Freshman Year
Time Line:
-
Get settled in high
school. Concentrate on a solid high school curriculum.
-
Talk to your coaches or
Athletic Directory about local volleyball club teams.
-
Setup a workout schedule
allowing comfortable time for academics and sports.
-
If you think you are
interested in attending a college for a sport, send an introduction
letter in your freshman year.
-
Send an update at the end of
the season, along with your club schedule.
-
Register with the NCAA
Clearinghouse (it's never too early, but it can be too late).
-
Prepare your athletic
resume. |
|
Sophomore Year
Time Line:
-
Continue striving for
academic success. Research NCAA academic requirements.
-
Make sure that you are "on
target" for all core requirements.
-
Stay active in Club
Volleyball and High School Volleyball.
-
Visit your High School career
center or counselors office and start investigating colleges and their
admission requirements.
-
During the summer between the
Sophomore and Junior years, prepare your athletic resume.
-
Prepare to send out your
initial contact letters with resumes. Include high school and club
volleyball playing schedules, if available. If schedules are not
available, mail a follow-up letter and schedule as soon as they become
available, but still send out initial letters.
-
Update academics with
Clearinghouse.
-
Monitor the academic
requirements of the universities you want to attend.
-
Send an update letter to the
schools you are interested in, send club schedule in the winter.
-
Refine and update your
resume.
-
Prepare a skills videotape
(10-15 minutes in length with 6-7 minutes of basic skills and the rest
of game footage).
-
During the fall season, go to
the college matches (if they are local) and talk to some of the players,
the coaches, etc....or during the summer before your Junior year, make
unofficial visits to the colleges. |
|
Junior Year Time
Line:
-
Send out athletic resumes
now, if you have not already done so.
-
Register with the NCAA
Initial Eligibility Clearinghouse.
-
Request that ACT/SAT test
scores be sent to the NCAA Initial Eligibility Clearinghouse.
-
Keep up with your studies and
once again review the NCAA requirements to make sure they have not
changed.
-
Keep investigating other
colleges and send out additional resumes.
-
Prepare videotape to be sent
when requested.
-
Send out update as your
season closes. Include your new stats and any special recognitions
you may have earned.
-
Visit some of the campuses
that you are interested in, if you can.
-
Try to watch some local
college games in your sport, especially if one of the schools you are
interested in is playing close by.
-
In July, after completion of
your Junior year, phone contact with college coaches is
permissible. Begin heavy contact with the schools you are
interested in, even making a few phone calls (but remember that coaches
cannot call you back until July 1 after you complete your Junior
year).
-
Update your academic
information with the Clearinghouse.
-
If your top choices of
colleges have not panned out, send info to your second and third
choices.
-
Send out your club schedule
ASAP.
-
If coaches want to make home
visits, they will do this after Nationals/Davis are finished.
-
Make more unofficial visits
to schools that interest you. |
|
Senior Year Time
Line:
-
Do not let up on
academics.
-
Review your core requirements
with your high school counselor.
-
Send out your senior team
schedule as soon as possible for high school and club
volleyball.
-
Keep college coaches posted
on any changes or updates to your team schedules.
-
Send out last of resumes, if
new interest in other schools.
-
Find out Letter of Intent
dates for Volleyball from NCAA.
-
Take advantage of, no more
than 5, college paid visits, if offered.
-
Ask a lot of questions and
weigh all the advantages and disadvantages of the schools you are
interested in.
-
Study hard and play hard, but
remember you are a student athlete and the student comes first. If
a school is seriously recruiting you, they will invite you to make an
official visit (where travel, room and board is paid during one of their
home weekends.) Continue phone contact with schools. Some
schools ask their top recruits to verbally commit to attending during
the spring or summer before their senior year. Most schools like
to be finished recruiting by the end of the volleyball season. The
thing to remember is that a commitment is not binding until a National
Letter of Intent (NLI) and Offer of Financial Aid is signed by the
recruit. The first official signing day for Volleyball is
typically in early February and extends into August. Recruits may
change their mind about a school after they've made a verbal commitment,
but not after signing the NLI. If they do not attend the school
they sign with or transfer before one year is completed, they will lost
at least a year of eligibility. Players must also understand that
being brought to campus on an official visit does not constitute an
offer of a scholarship. Do not wait until your senior year to make
first contact or register for the Clearinghouse.
|
|
There are so many minor details
for students to know about the recruiting process that thousands will
never know. Recruiting classes are typically 200-300 players per
year. Most recruiting is finished by April each year. Many
coaches attending USA Volleyball tournaments in April and later are
looking at juniors and sophomores, as well as standout freshmen.
Coaches still looking at seniors in the spring may have had some lack of
continuity in their recruiting (maybe a coach left) or had a player
transfer out of school in the spring or may be an NAIA school or lower
level NCAA program or some other circumstance. There are lots of
questions I'm sure that you have regarding the recruiting
process.
An outstanding place to discuss
the recruiting process is on the Youth, Junior USA Volleyball, AAU
Volleyball NAGWS Volleyball and Federation Volleyball e-mail list.
You can subscribe to it free at http://www.onelist.com/subscribe.cgi/jov.
**Alex M. Postpischil,
Assistant Coach, University of Maryland, and Former Assistant Coach,
Creighton University, provided help in the writing of this
article. |