Very good read. It makes a lot of good points. I think the african american gradutation rates may be slightly biased. I don't know if they take in to account those players opting to go pro early. It doesn't seem like there choice should effect the grad rate for a school.
With the NBA min age rule, I imagine the bball graduation rates for traditional powerhouses will dramatically drop also.
He is taking into account the rates based on who leaves early to go pro, that is why in the report he has this quote about Florida, "Florida does have a good graduation rate". That is the one point I disagree with because it is based on the so called unbiased GSR. (Graduation Success Rate) Everyone seems to be convinced that Florida does extremely well in graduating its' football players. That is because of the GSR (Graduation Success Rate) statistic that the NCAA posts on its' website. The GSR is a bogus stat specifically designed by the NCAA so that they already have in place a rigged measurement if they are ever forced to actually use academic success as a standard for post-season eligibility. The latest NCAA stats show Florida with an overall Student-Athlete GSR of 92%, by comparison Ohio State's is even 80%. Both of these numbers are a cruel joke. The only academic success statistic that actually means anything is the % of students who entered as Freshman at a University, and actually graduated. If you look at those numbers, especially as it relates to football and the actual number of athletes that graduate, Florida is just as bad as the rest of them on Black athletes, and actually worse than Ohio State in total.
The latest posted NCAA actual 4-Class graduation % stats for Football players at Ohio State is Black 32%, White 71%, Overall 49%. For Florida the rate for Blacks is slightly higher at 38%, for Whites it is significantly lower at 50%, and the Overall rate is lower than Ohio State at 42%.
I am not trying to imply that Florida is any worse overall than Ohio State, but this perception that Florida is such a great academic university for student athletes is quite simply false, and is a result of their ability to propagandize the GSR as a legitimate measurement of academic success. The fact of the matter is that almost all of the schools in the super conferences have dismal actual graduation rates for their football and men's basketball programs, with notable exceptions such as Stanford and Notre Dame. That is why it is such a fraud when these conferences have the guts to actually call the players in those programs student athletes, when in fact less than half of the recruits in those two programs actually ever graduate. It's all a joke anyway at most of these schools, so it really does not matter whether those that opt to leave early are counted or not counted towards a university's student athletes academic success measurements because the NCAA will never actually enforce any minimum academic standards in the big money sports. The worse hypocrisy of this is when the coaches from these schools actually try to say that they are looking for the best "student athletes" to go to their schools, when in fact the vast majority of them could not care less.
See for yourself at the NCAA Graduation Rates website:
http://www.ncaa.org/grad_rates/