Do not disagree with your point at all, but way back in the dark ages, FUBeAR earned an MBA from Clemson University and the only time he spent in a Clemson classroom with a Clemson Professor was when he took the GMAT (FUBeAR recalls the in-room proctor was a CU Prof…maybe not). 80% of classes @ FU with FU Biz Prof’s & 20% @ GaState with GaState Biz Prof’s.Thorny wrote: ↑Tue Jun 04, 2024 12:44 amIt's not the students I am worried about. I'm sure we expect the FSU's, Florida, and Alabama's of the world to have players that are a bit less focused on academics and more focused on going pro.sluggo wrote:That's hard for me to read given that I was a math and computer science tutor for 3 years, while completing ROTC and serving as a army 2nd lieutenant in my junior year.
It's a stereotype; show me the evidence that they are ALL lazy and don't go to class.
However, Furman is already having students graduate high school early so they can attend spring practice and fans are discussing adding graduate programs to help Furman be more competitive in attracting transfers. For better or worse, this what it takes to be competitive at the FCS level and signal to prospective players that we take football seriously.
Part of my concern is that, in an effort to facilitate attracting transfer students, I expect within the next few years having a degree from an academic institution will not have the same implications that it once did. Historically, some credits didn't transfer, there were specific class requirements for majors, and a degree from a university meant you spent more than a calendar year there. Where we are going may include players graduating with a degree while only spending one semester at a University and their class in puppeteering counting as organic chemistry for their BS in biology as that is what it will take to compete at the FCS level and signal to prospective players that we take football seriously.
So…there have always been exceptions to the traditional tracks, but, to your point, exception is rapidly becoming the rule.
We few, we happy few, we band of brothers,
For he today who sheds his blood with me shall be my brother
For he today who sheds his blood with me shall be my brother