All FAMU Sports in Compliance with NCAA

FAMU's Rattlers, who use this logo, are compliant.

Each of the 18 sports at Florida A&M University is 100 percent compliant with NCAA requirements, the FAMU athletic department has announced.

It was good news to a department that had to report more than 200 violations to the NCAA a little more than a year ago.

Among the violations were accusations of ineligible players being allowed to compete and improper conduct by coaches involving a change of grade. But a significant rise in the school's Academic Progress Rate this year has the athletic department excited about the program's possibilities.

"They say it isn't news for a dog to bite man. But this is man biting the dog, so this is news," Robert Townsend, director of athletics, said.

Last year, 12 teams did not meet the Academic Progress Rate requirements. "We were considered to be at the bottom of the list. This is revolutionary for us," Townsend said.

Townsend said APR ratings are based on retention, academic progress and eligibility.

Photo credit: Dionna King/the Famuan
FAMU officials met Oct. 11 to celebrate the university's teams meeting NCCA regulation requirements.

The athletic department's self-report was released Oct. 11 at a "Rattlers Strike Back" luncheon.

Members of the FAMU athletic staff gathered to commemorate the accomplishment.

Much of the credit for the program's reemergence was given to five academic advisers who are dedicated to ensuring that the school's athletes were meeting academic standards. The team of advisers was put together in 2005 and has made a concentrated effort to get FAMU's student athletes on the right track.

One of the five advisers, Dwanna James, said coming up with a uniform plan to help the students was important.

"We had to listen to their needs," James said.

The staff then made sure they were committed to making sure the student athletes maintained their grades.

"We did some intrusive advisement. We went into class to make sure they were there. We made them get progress reports," James said.

Staff members said the students adapted well to the adjusted aid they were receiving.

"Our student athletes want to get their degrees. They just had to see that they had a staff and a department that wanted [to] help," said Dwayne Robinson, assistant athletic director of academic affairs.

"Once you give 100 percent, they give 100 percent too," Robinson said. "We are really stepping it up. We plan to hire more staff and keep improving."

Now that the athletic department has proved itself academically, it has hopes of regaining some of the scholarships from the NCAA that were lost because of previous violations.

As announced last winter, part of the university's punishment was a reduction in grants and aid to all FAMU sports.

Baseball grants were to be reduced by three. Grants in men's and women's swimming and women's track, reduced by two. Men's and women's basketball, men's track and field, bowling, softball and volleyball were each to lose one grant in 2005-06. Women's track was to lose an additional grant in 2006-07.

Football was hit hardest, losing 14 grants in all. Six had already been taken away. The remaining eight were to be subtracted over the next three years, ending at the conclusion of the 2008-09 season.

Akeem Anderson, a student at Florida A&M University, writes for the Famuan.

Posted Oct. 16, 2006


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