What is the Academic Progress Rate and what does it attempt to measure?
The following is a direct quote from the NCAA website as to the purpose of the Academic Progress Rate or APR: The NCAA has developed an incentives-disincentives program that rewards those sports teams that do well academically and penalizes those that do not. College presidents have mandated the development of this system of accountability, which will take into account the various missions of our member institutions. The goal is to encourage improved academic performance of all student-athletes on all sports teams. Here’s how it works: incentives and disincentives are tied to meaningful measures of academic performance that involve the academic progress rate (APR), the NCAA graduation success rate (GSR), and/or federal graduation rate data. The APR is an academic measurement that includes primarily currently enrolled student-athletes. The federal methodology and the GSR do not reflect current, actual conditions. The APR was developed to provide a more accurate, real time “snapshot” of
The following is a direct quote from the NCAA website as to the purpose of the Academic Progress Rate or APR: The NCAA has developed an incentives-disincentives program that rewards those sports teams that do well academically and penalizes those that do not. College presidents have mandated the development of this system of accountability, which will take into account the various missions of our member institutions. The goal is to encourage improved academic performance of all student athletes on all sports teams. Here’s how it works: incentives and disincentives are tied to meaningful measures of academic performance that involve the academic progress rate (APR), the NCAA graduation success rate (GSR), and/or federal graduation rate data. The APR is an academic measurement that includes primarily currently enrolled student athletes. The federal methodology and the GSR do not reflect current, actual conditions. The APR was developed to provide a more accurate, real time “snapshot” of