Do Football Players Study For Finals?
by Herbert I. London http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/2801/football-players-study-for-finals December is the month of bowls, football bowls -- some of them with obscure names and others quite familiar such as the Cotton Bowl, the Rose Bowl and the Sugar Bowl. Christmas has become as much a football festival as a time for religious reflection and gift sharing. It is also a time for final exams with the winter semester coming to a close…but I began to wonder how gridiron heroes can meet their academic obligations. After calling several athletic departments with teams in bowls, I learned that it is customary to have two practices a day in preparation for the big game. Ordinarily, it is a nine-to-noon practice with pads and running plays and a two-to-five pm practice to go over X's and O's. How then can anyone study for exams? Presumably there are student-athletes who do, but for the large majority of communication majors and those attending basket weaving courses or their equivalent, there isn't any need to be concerned. These are student-athletes in name only. They are actually in college to play football. These athletes give alumni something to cheer about on Saturday afternoon. What happens, though, to those athletes who do not qualify for a pro team. In many cases, they have little to fall back on: their educational experience is a sham which most serious academics acknowledge. How many LSU football players will graduate from the university? There is a long-standing joke that is a companion statement to this question: How many LSU football players does it take to change a light bulb? Answer: All of them, as they get credit for the experience. December is also the month of hypocrisy. While most students are in the library preparing for finals, football players are out on the field practicing blocking and tackling. They haven't any time for study and apparently very few worry about that matter. Football coaches, who generally earn more than college presidents, are paid to produce winning teams, not scholars. It doesn't make the slightest bit of difference if the quarterback read Kant's Critique of Pure Reason if he hasn't read the playbook. His goal is reading defenses, not books. So when you sit in that easy chair watching bowl game after bowl game, it is worth asking if any players on your screen prepared for final exams or are even taking the finals. Football generates a lot of revenue for bowl-bound teams; students may do the cheering, but they do not score touchdowns or add significantly to the schools' bottom line. As a consequence, it doesn't mean much if the players cannot write or read very well: they aren't in college to promote cognitive skills, just bottom lines.
Related Topics: Herbert I. London receive the latest by email: subscribe to the free gatestone institute mailing list Comment on this item |
Subscribe to the Mailing List Enter your email address: Latest Articles
Most Viewed |