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NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETICS
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Putting Bylaws Into Practice
Case Studies: Putting Bylaws Into Practice Brenda White & Eric Bensing Legislative Services Team
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Assumptions: Assume all transcripts for each student are included in the provided documentation. Assume the students did not participate anywhere other than the leagues and intercollegiate competition listed. Assume all students are first-time NAIA participants, unless otherwise noted. Assume you are certifying students today for Spring 2017, unless otherwise noted. On the transcripts, you will not need to know what a specific symbol means on the transcript unless otherwise noted.
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Scenario 1: Cap’n Crunch
Question 1 Scenario 1: Cap’n Crunch Key Concepts: Identification, Season of Competition, Term of Attendance Cap’n Crunch was enrolled at Quaker Oats College for the Fall 2015 term. Classes started for the fall term on August 31, Cap’n Crunch played for Quakers in their opening Football game of the season on August 27th. On August 28, Cap’n decided to fully withdraw from school and therefore, Quaker Oats College cannot issue a transcript. Did Cap’n Crunch identify at Quaker Oats College during the Fall 2015 term? Yes, because Cap’n Crunch played in an intercollegiate contest for Quaker Oats College, he identified for the Fall 2015 term at Quaker Oats College. No, because Cap’n Crunch withdrew from all of his classes prior to the Fall 2015 term beginning, he did not identify for the Fall 2015 term.
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Question 1 Answer: #1- Yes. He did identify at Quaker Oats College because he represented Quaker Oats in an intercollegiate contest. Rationale: Article V, Section B, Item 8, Note 3 Participation in an intercollegiate contest in the fall before school starts identifies the student with the institution and charges the student with a season of competition and a term of attendance, even if the student decides to transfer or leave school before classes start.
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Scenario 2: Countess Chocula
Question 2 Scenario 2: Countess Chocula Key Concepts: SOC, outside competitive experience In Countess Chocula attended Milky State Community College where she played basketball. MSCC is an accredited institution, but not a member of the NJCAA or any other athletic association. Countess Chocula was enrolled in less than 12 institutional credit hours at MSCC during the period in which she played basketball. The eligibility center issued a determination and charged Countess Chocula a season of outside competition in women’s basketball for the season. What led the Eligibility Center to evaluate her experience as outside competitive experience? It is because the student was not enrolled in 12 or more institutional credit hours during the season at her junior college. Only students enrolled full time can be evaluated for collegiate experience. It is because the team did not belong to an athletic association. Participation for an institution that is not a member of a collegiate athletic association cannot be evaluated as intercollegiate experience. It is due to the fact the letter from the school states that Milky State Community College competed as a club team during the season.
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Question 2 Answer: #3- It is due to the fact the letter from the school states that Milky State Community College competed as a club team during the season. Rationale: Article V, Section B, Item 18 A student may be charged for non-collegiate participation when a student is not enrolled in a collegiate institution, or is enrolled but does not represent the institution in intercollegiate competition.
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Question 3 Scenario 3: Yogi Bear Key Concepts: residency, four year institution, two year institution Yogi Bear attended Forest Green Junior College to compete in baseball. The baseball program competes in the NJCAA. Yogi competed at Forest Green Junior College for two years in and Yogi is pursuing a bachelor’s of science degree at his junior college and has 65 credits at the conclusion of spring 2016 term. Yogi is now seeking to transfer to an NAIA school to continue playing baseball for the academic year. Is Yogi subject to the 16 week residency requirement? Yes, because competed in baseball he must sit for 16 weeks. Yes, because Yogi was pursuing a bachelor’s degree so he will be treated like a four-year transfer and must sit the residency period. No, because Yogi competed for a junior college.
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Answer: #3- No, because Yogi competed in baseball under the NJCAA.
Question 3 Answer: #3- No, because Yogi competed in baseball under the NJCAA. Rationale: NAIA Bylaws V.H. Transfer: Previous Identification at a Junior College A student whose immediately previous identification and participation was with a two-year institution and who transfers to an NAIA member institution shall not be required to meet the 16-week residency. Regardless if a student is pursuing a bachelor’s degree, the key is the athletic association the student is competing for.
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Question 4 Scenario 4: Yogi Bear Key Concepts: eligibility center determination, transfer Prior to Fall 2015 Yogi Bear thought about transferring to an NAIA institution and went through the Eligibility Center for a determination. He was determined eligible for the academic year. However, Yogi decided to go back to Forest Green for his last season at the junior college. Now he is preparing to transfer to a NAIA institution for the fall 2016 term. Since he already received a determination of eligible from the Eligibility Center, can the student be certified on campus for the academic year in order to be determined eligible? Yes, since Yogi already received a determination of eligible through the eligibility center and he was making progress towards a bachelor’s degree at his community college, he can be certified on campus before competing. No, since the student did not “use” his Eligibility Center decision, he must be reactivated through the Eligibility Center. Yes, all transfer junior college students may be certified on campus to compete without going through the Eligibility Center.
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Answer: #2- No, student must be reactivated.
Question 4 Answer: #2- No, student must be reactivated. Rationale: CFAR Policy Section III, Item 2 and the Situational Analysis situation number eight defines the need to be reactivated. If an Eligibility Center decision is not used during the academic term it is provided, the student must be re-evaluated for any changes or updates that might affect the student’s decision.
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Scenario 5: Tony the Tiger
Question 5 Scenario 5: Tony the Tiger Key Concepts: EC Determination and New NAIA Members Tony the Tiger attended Frosted State University in and and competed for their club Baseball program prior to Frosted State being an NAIA member. Frosted State University was under the NCCAA, but became an associate member of the NAIA in Prior to the student’s third season at FSU, Tony was certified on campus by his FAR. Should Tony have received a determination from the Eligibility Center prior to the season? No, because the student competed for the institution for two years prior and was certified on campus. Yes, because Frosted State University’s baseball program was a club program prior to entering the NAIA and does not meet the Council of Faculty Athletic Representatives policy, Section III, Item 5, exception to receiving an Eligibility Center determination for new members. No, because Frosted State University was certified under NCCAA rules for the first two years of competition and there was not a break in enrollment.
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Question 5 Answer: #2-Yes. The student should have gone through the Eligibility Center prior to competing in Rationale: CFAR Policy Section III, Item 5b- New NAIA Members Per the CFAR Policy on new NAIA members, A student shall be exempt from the requirement of registering with the NAIA eligibility center and may represent an NAIA institution in competition without receiving an “eligible” determination from the NAIA Eligibility Center provided the student represented the new NAIA institution in an intercollegiate contest (see point 2).
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Scenario 6: Sonny Key Concepts: Freshman Eligibility Question 6
Sonny graduated from high school in December Following graduation, he attended Cocoa State Junior College for spring 2017 academic term where he played basketball. During the summer of 2017, Sonny decided to transfer to Puff State University (an NAIA Institution) for the fall You are certifying Sonny prior to the fall 2017 term. Based on his academic and athletic timeline, which academic requirements must Sonny meet in order to become eligible for the fall 2017 term? 24/36-Hour Rule, Progress Rule, Eligibility Center determination of eligible 24/36-Hour Rule, Progress Rule, GPA, Eligibility Center determination of eligible Initial Freshmen Requirements, Nine-Hour Rule, Progress Rule, Eligibility Center determination of eligible 24/36-Hour Rule, Progress Rule, Initial Freshmen Requirements, Eligibility Center determination of eligible
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Question 6 Answer: #3- Progress Rule, Initial Freshmen Requirements, 9-Hour Rule, and Eligibility Center determination of eligible Rationale: V.B.5; V.C.6; V.C.9 NAIA bylaws defines an entering freshman as a student who upon becoming identified with an NAIA institution has not been previously identified with any institution(s) of higher learning for any two semesters or three quarters (or the equivalent). The student has attended 1 TOA but not a full academic year and therefore is required to meet the initial freshmen requirements and Nine-Hour Rule after one TOA. Student is charged 1 SOC for representing Cocoa State College.
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Scenario 7: Sonny, Continued
Question 7 Scenario 7: Sonny, Continued Key Concepts: Freshman, Mid-Year Matriculation, Progress Rule Due to Sonny being charged one season of competition, how many credits will Sonny need to earn in order to meet the Progress Rule to compete in the fall 2017? 24 institutional credits hours 12 institutional credit hours
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Answer: #2- 12 institutional credit hours
Question 7 Answer: #2- 12 institutional credit hours Rationale V.C.9 Exception A freshman who initially becomes identified after the first term in the fall shall meet the progress rule requirement by having passed 12 semester or 20 quarter institutional credit hours. This exception shall apply to the second season of competition only.
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Scenario 8: Sonny and Puff State
Question 8 Scenario 8: Sonny and Puff State Key Concepts 24/36-Hour Rule Mixed Terms Puff State University is on the quarter system. You are now certifying Sonny for the Winter 2018 quarter term. How many credits will the student need to meet for the 24/36-Hour Rule? 24 institutional credit hours earned in the previous two terms. 36 institutional credits hours earned in the previous two terms. 36 institutional credit hours earned in the previous three terms.
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Question 8 Answer: #1- 24 institutional credit hours earned in the previous two terms Rationale: V.C.6 casebook example of 24/36-Hour Rule- Mixed Terms When certifying a student who is transferring from a semester to a quarter system or vice versa, you will never convert the credit hours to the current system. Always certify the credits taken at face value. For students who have enrolled in mixed terms, the student will be certified based of the last two academic terms. Students will be certified for 36 institutional credit hours when they have enrolled in three quarter terms.
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Question 9 Scenario 9: Toucan Sam Key Concepts: Initial Freshman Requirements; Post-Secondary Enrollment Toucan Sam is a home school student who participated in the Running Start Program through Tropicana Community College during the and academic school years. The home-school transcript indicates a high school graduation date of June 2015, but only shows 9th and 10th grade coursework. TCC transcript shows he enrolled at the community college for six quarter terms. Would Toucan Sam be certified to compete per freshmen eligibility requirements or per continuing eligibility requirements (i.e. 24/36-Hour Rule)? *For the purpose of this question, TS has not enrolled in any other institutions since high school graduation. He has been on a mission trip in the rain forest. He would be certified under the freshmen eligibility requirements due to not earning any terms of attendance while at TCC. He would be certified under continuing eligibility requirements due to earning six quarter terms of attendance, requiring him to be certified as a non-freshman.
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Answer: #1- Toucan Sam will be certified as an incoming freshman.
Question 9 Answer: #1- Toucan Sam will be certified as an incoming freshman. Rationale V.B.11 casebook example non-term – High School High school students may take 12 or more hours of college credits in a term without establishing a term of attendance.
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Question 10 Scenario 10: Boo Berry Key Concepts: Terms of Attendance, Identification, 24/36-Hour Rule, Concurrent enrollment Boo Berry was enrolled at Whole Grain Community College for the spring 2014 and fall 2014 academic terms. The first week of the fall 2014 term at WGCC, Boo Berry decided to transfer to Casper University. Boo Berry fully withdrew from all of his courses at WGCC and enrolled full-time at Casper University for the fall 2014 term. Would fall 2014 count as one term of attendance? Yes, because he only completed coursework at Casper University during the fall 2014 academic term. No. Because he identified, fully withdrew as stated on the official transcript, and identified at a second institution. Boo would have been charged two terms of attendance. Yes. A student cannot be charged two terms of attendance during a single academic term.
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Question 10 Answer: #2- No. Because he identified, fully withdrew as stated on the official transcript, and identified at a second institution. Boo would have been charged two terms of attendance. Rationale V.F.5 Because Boo identified at WGCC, fully withdrew, and identified at Casper University, Boo would be charged two terms of attendance in one academic term.
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Scenario 11: Quisp Key Concepts: suspension/ dismissal Question 11
Quisp attended Rocky Road University and after the conclusion of the Fall 2015 term, he was notified he was academically suspended from RRU. RRU requires a student to sit out for two full academic years before returning to school. Quisp decides to return home and work full time before he feels he is ready to return to school. Going into spring 2017, Quisp decides to attend your institution with the hopes of playing college tennis for the first time. Is Quisp eligible to compete for your institution despite the suspension from RRU? No, PSA must serve residency at a 4-year institution or be reinstated by suspending institution. No, Quisp must sit out two full academic years before becoming eligible to compete. Yes, since Quisp was suspended for academic reasons, he only needs to meet NAIA eligibility requirements, provided he has not competed in any intercollegiate sport for one year after suspension.
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Question 11 Answer: #3 – Yes, since Quisp was suspended for academic reasons, he only needs to meet NAIA eligibility requirements, provided he has not competed in any sport for one year after suspension. Rationale: V.D.6 Exception #2 “A student who has been dismissed/expelled or suspended (or its equivalent) for failure to meet institutional academic requirements, but still meeting NAIA eligibility requirements, shall not be subject to this restriction provided the student has not participated in intercollegiate athletics at any collegiate institution for one full calendar year after suspension from the original institution.”
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Question 12 Scenario 12: Lucky Key Concepts: Identification, withdraw before census date Lucky, enrolled in her first term as a freshman at Charm University for the fall 2016 semester. Classes started on August 22, Lucky decides to withdraw from her 15 institutional credit hours and move back home. Lucky remains at home working for the spring 2017 and fall 2017 academic terms without attending school. Going into the spring of 2018 semester, Lucky is ready to transfer to your institution. Charm University provides a letter Registrar’s Office and enrollment verification form along with her transcript. Will Lucky be charged a term of attendance for her time at Charm University? No, the verification letter shows that Lucky fully withdrew and therefore cannot be charged a TOA. Yes, the official transcript and letter from Charm University shows she was enrolled in 15 institutional credit hours of W’s and therefore she will be charged a TOA. No, due to the student withdrawing within 21 days.
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Question 12 Answer: #2- Yes, the official transcript and letter from Charm University shows the student was enrolled as a full time semester. Rationale: Article V, Section F, Item 2 Due to Lucky identifying with Charm University by enrolling in at least 12 institutional credit hours as reported on the institution’s official transcript, she will be charged one term of attendance.
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Scenario 13: Lucky Continued
Question 13 Scenario 13: Lucky Continued Key Concepts: Identification, withdraw before census date Spring 2018 Lucky is now enrolled at your institution and she is ready to compete in women’s tennis. You have confirmed with Charm University that she never competed in women’s tennis at their institution. Will Lucky be eligible to compete during spring 2018? Yes, since she meets initial freshmen eligibility requirements, there are no other eligibility rules she will need to meet. No, since she has one semester of W’s and has been charged with a term of attendance, Lucky has not met the Nine-Hour Rule. Yes, since she has met the initial eligibility requirements, has been out of school for at least two full consecutive semesters, and it has been confirmed she never competed before she left Charm University, she will not have to meet the Nine-Hour Rule.
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Question 13 Answer: #3- Yes, she will be eligible per the freshmen initial eligibility requirements AND has not enrolled for at least two full semesters, she will not need to meet the Nine-Hour Rule. Rationale: Article V, Section F, Item 4 If a student becomes identified at an institution and officially totally withdraws from that institution within 21 calendar days and subsequently becomes identified at an NAIA institution after remaining out of school for at least two full consecutive semesters, the term shall be charged as a term of attendance, but the term shall not be counted in application of the Nine-Hour Rule or 24/36-Hour Rule.
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