tm3308
Well-Known Member
They are. Iowa has the top 50% rule, so so kids from shaky rural schools come completely unprepared, but they were in the top 50 in their bad school. That being said, there are athletes admitted that don't meet that standard.
Now, I taught some great students who were also football players at Iowa. And it isn't like a southern school where reading and writing are optional , but I did teach some athletes who wouldn't have been accepted as a general student.
Not sure of any other student group that gets preferential admissions treatment, unless perhaps for diversity issues, but I am not sure where UI stands on that now.
They get breaks in classes as well, or at least football and men's basketball players do. I have a friend who got into one of the "special" sections of a course that I took last year. The level of work expected from the students in this class was ridiculously low. Almost no homework, and the inmates ran the madhouse. Don't want to take the quiz today? Okay, we'll push it back to next week. Forgot to write your paper that was due today? No problem, turn it in in a few day.
That's not to say all of these athletes NEED those breaks. But many likely would never be able to carry a REAL 12-hour (or however many hours they take) course load.