The APR Scores Provide A View Into The Academic Progress of Our Student-Athletes
This
week, the NCAA released the Academic Progress Rate data for all
Division I institutions. The NCAA now has three years of data in this
new system for measuring academic progress of individual sports teams.
The system is designed to change behavior of certain programs by
putting penalties in place. For the third year, no Towson teams were penalized in the report.
In the
APR report, every student-athlete on athletics aid in a specific
program has the opportunity to earn two points each semester ? one
point for eligibility and one point for retention or graduation. The
APR score is based on the percentage of points earned. For example, a
program that earns 95.6 percent of the possible points is given an APR
score of 956.
The
news from the report was encouraging nationally. The percentage of
programs that received penalties declined from 3.6 percent to 3.3
percent. Football and baseball, the two sports with the most issues
nationally in the first two years, both improved. The average APR score
nationally was approximately 960
At Towson,
18 of our 19 programs scored above the NCAA “cut score” of 925.
Volleyball, which has a 1000 APR over the past three years, was
recognized by the NCAA because its score was in the top 10 percent
nationally in its respective sport. Indoor track (992), outdoor track (992) and softball (987) were in the top 20 percent nationally.
In
addition to those four programs, three men's programs and the eight
remaining women's programs were above the national average. Those
programs included men's lacrosse (967), men's swimming (965), men's
soccer (962), women's basketball (975), women's cross country (990),
field hockey (974), gymnastics (980), women's lacrosse (987), women's
soccer (988), women's swimming (992) and women's tennis (987).
Of the
remaining four programs, baseball and football were both under the
national average for all teams, but did well compared to other baseball
and football programs. With an APR score of 958, the football program's
score was in the top 30 percent in the country for football programs.
The baseball score (958) was in the top 40 percent in the country.
Men's
golf was above the NCAA cut score with a 937 score. With an APR score
of 917, men's basketball was below the 925 cut score for the third
year, but remains within the statistical confidence boundary with the
squad size adjustment, so no penalties were applied. Towson's
men's basketball APR has improved each of the three years of the study,
from 885 in the first year, to 902 in the second year to the current
917.
The
basketball program has scored well in the eligibility category, but not
as strong in retention, which was amplified by the coaching change
three years ago.
Last
summer, the Academic Services staff prepared a plan to insure that the
men's basketball program would meet the cut score by the fourth year.
The two 2006 seniors (Cantrell Fletcher and Lawrence Hamm) that did not
graduate last year have completed requirements for graduation this
spring and will pick up APR points for the program. In addition, five
of the six 2007 seniors are on track to graduate by the end of the
summer term. The sixth student could graduate, but plans to return on
his own to complete a double major, adding an economics major to his
completed business administration program. At this point, it looks like
the APR score for the basketball program will be above the 925 cut
score after the 2006-07 data is tallied.
The APR Report is good news for Towson.
The academic achievement of our student-athletes is one of the best
strengths of our program. In the latest federal graduation report, our
student-athletes graduate at a rate 13 percent better than the student
body (69%/56%). This APR report is further confirmation that our
coaches, academic services staff and faculty contribute to an
environment that encourages our student-athletes to achieve
academically.
You can take a look at the link to our scores and share in the pride. With academic success as a core value at Towson, we will find it much easier to continue to build something special here. Thanks for being part of it.