Athletics
program to be studied
By Arthur
Page
News Services Director
President
William R. Greiner has announced that UB will begin a year-long, campus-wide
effort to study its athletics program as part of the NCAA Division I
athletics certification program.
Specific
areas the study will cover are academic and fiscal integrity, governance,
rules compliance, as well as a commitment to equity, student-athlete
welfare and sportsmanship.
While academic
accreditation is common in colleges and universities, this program focuses
solely on certification of athletics programs. Following a pilot project,
the Division I membership overwhelmingly supported the program and its
standards at the 1993 NCAA Convention. UB completed its first certification
self-study in 1993. At the 1997 convention, the Division I membership
voted to change the frequency of athletics certification from once every
five years to once every 10 years and to require a five-year interim-status
report. Thus, the current self-study will be the second in the certification
process for UB.
The certification
program's purpose is to help ensure integrity in the institution's athletics
operations. It opens up athletics to the rest of the university/college
community and to the public. Institutions will benefit by increasing
campus-wide awareness and knowledge of the athletics program, confirming
its strengths and developing plans to improve areas of concern.
The committee
responsible for the study will be chaired by Barbara A. Ricotta, associate
vice president for student affairs and dean of students; and include
various members of the faculty and staff, as well as athletics department
personnel. A member of the NCAA membership services staff recently traveled
to the campus for a one-day orientation visit to meet with the committee
and its sub-committees.
Within
each area to be studied by the committee, the program has standards,
called operating principles, which were adopted by the association to
place a "measuring stick" by which all Division I members are evaluated.
The university also will examine how the activities of the athletics
program relate to the mission and purpose of the institution.
Once the
university has concluded its study, an external team of reviewers will
conduct a four-day evaluation visit on campus. Those reviewers will
be peers from other colleges, universities or conference offices. That
team will report to the NCAA Division I Committee on Athletics Certification,
another independent group. The committee will then determine the institution's
certification status and announce the decision publicly. For institutions
that fail to conduct a comprehensive self-study or to correct problems,
tough sanctions can be imposed.
The three
options of certification status are: (a) certified; (b) certified with
conditions; and (c) not certified. While universities and colleges will
have an opportunity to correct deficient areas, those universities/colleges
that do not take corrective actions may be ruled ineligible for NCAA
championships.
The NCAA
is a membership organization of colleges and universities that participate
in intercollegiate athletics. The primary purpose of the association
is to maintain intercollegiate athletics as an integral part of the
educational program and the athlete as an integral part of the student
body. Activities of the NCAA membership include formulation rules of
play for NCAA sports, conducting national championships, adopting and
enforcing standards of eligibility, and studying all phases of intercollegiate
athletics.
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