Thursday, August 29, 2019
Biotechnology
 Biotechnology Essay  The welfare and development of todays student-athlete is central to the  administration of Big Ten Conference intercollegiate athletics. Providing  opportunity for young men and women to mature in a wholesome and healthy way is  critically important to our universities. A commitment exists at all levels of  our universities to providing the resources to support the welfare of Big Ten  student-athletes. At the 1996 NCAA Convention, the Division I membership debated  a number of issues related to financial assistance for student-athletes.  Limitations on Pell Grants, stipends awarded by the federal government for  educational purposes, were removed.   Discussions took place, and continue to  occur, on ways to liberalize rules on how student-athletes can earn money from  work done during the off-season. Around the same time, the NCAA Executive  Committee increased the annual funding of the special assistance fund from $3  million to $10 million. Big Ten institutions provide more than 6,400 young men  and women opportunities to play on 250 intercollegiate teams. These young people  receive more than $42 million annually from Big Ten institutions in  grants-in-aid (tuition, room and board, books). While receiving the opportunity  for a world-class education, they compete with and against some of the finest  amateur athletes in the country. Needy student-athletes in the Big Ten may  receive up to $2,000 annually above the value of their grant-in-aid via federal  aid and are eligible for cash payments from the special assistance fund for  items like clothing, emergency trips home and other special needs.         Big Ten  universities also assist student-athletes in identifying summer employment  opportunities, career placement and catastrophic-injury insurance plans. They  also assist with a $1 million insurance plan that financially protects  student-athletes with professional sports aspirations in the event they suffer a  disabling injury. Today, the system that served so many so well and for so long  is being called into question by the media, the public and even by some coaches  and student-athletes. They assert that some student-athletes in football and  basketball should be paid for their participation. They believe that the market  forces that drive professional sports, or any other private-sector activity,  should provide the controlling principle for the relationship between the  student-athlete and the university. This issue of financial assistance for  student-athletes is critical to defining and examining the relationship between  intercollegiate athletics and higher education as we approach the 21st century.    While we must be open to novel approaches and new ideas, paying student-athletes  to play is not supportable within the context of Big Ten intercollegiate  athletics  now or in the future. In my view, revenues derived from  intercollegiate athletics are the sole property of the institution and should be  expended in support of the broadest array of mens and womens educational and  athletics opportunities. Thus, revenues are earned in private-sector activity  and spent within the confines of the university for appropriate educational  purposes. Some critics of college athletics cite the economic and educational  exploitation of the student-athletes who participate in our major revenue sports  as a major flaw in the system. We believe the educational and the lifetime  economic benefits associated with a university education are the appropriate  quid pro quo for any Big Ten student-athlete, regardless of the sport. For many  decades, Big Ten intercollegiate athletics has been funded largely by revenues  from mens basketball and football programs.   This situation is not likely to  change in the foreseeable future. Our institutions have sponsored sports  programs that enabled outstanding athletes such as Magic Johnson, Isiah Thomas,  Red Grange, Archie Griffin, John Havlicek and Dick Butkus (the list is endless)  to obtain an education and play their sport, in turn providing resources for  educational and athletics opportunities for such people as Suzy Favor, Jesse  Owens, Mark Spitz and Jack Nicklaus. Under this system, people like John Wooden  and Gerald Ford played alongside student-athletes much less famous, but equally  deserving of an intercollegiate athletics experience. Intercollegiate athletics  has provided, and will continue to provide, opportunities for social mobility  through education for future generations of young men and women. We must ensure  that all young people admitted to our universities are prepared to compete  academically so that the overall student-athlete academic outcomes are  compatible with their peers within the general student population. Recent  efforts to raise NCAA initial-eligibility standards are attempts to counter the  argument that unprepared student-athletes are being admitted and then exploited  for their athletics contributions.    Ten mens basketball and football events and more than 300 million Americans  watch these sports on television. Ticket and television revenues derived from  those sources are shared among our members so that each university can sponsor  the .    
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