THE HIGHLIGHT
REEL, INC.
"The Premier Sports Recruiting and College Planning Process for the
Student Athlete."
Dear Student Athlete:
You got it. The most important thing
is education. Remember, you have a better chance of
being successful in life with a college education
then you do going professional. Use your athletic
talent as a mere tool to help you strive for that
college education. College coaches love recruiting
student-athletes with good grades. If your grades
are high enough then I can get you an exempted
academic scholarship or partial scholarship based on
academics alone. We will work hand in hand with the
school's financial aid and admissions office. The
first thing I do is evaluate a student athlete's
grades and circumstances to see if any other form of
financial aid is available. The college financial
aid office will decide what "needs based aid" the
athlete can get and even then I will work with them
to get as much money as possible. Then we try to
boost this with a partial athletic scholarship if no
full athletic scholarship is provided. There are a
lot more academic funds available than athletic
scholarships. Athletes have to work hard in school
and achieve good grades. What you need to
understand, and this is important for parents to
realize as well as the athlete is that if a student
qualifies for an exempted academic scholarship then
most of the time that money does not count against
the total athletics department budget. Now you can
see why this is so attractive to a college coach.
College coaches can't take chances with borderline
student-athletes anymore because their athletic
program will be penalized for their athlete's poor
performance in the classroom. The team will actually
lose scholarships! The National Collegiate Athletic
Association now insists on certain academic
standards so you have to keep your grades up and do
well on the SATs. Good grades are vital to your
chances of being recruited and playing a college
sport. Coaches need to be able to make up a "package"
that you will find attractive and has the least
impact on the college athletic budget.
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