I find the whole Ohio State story very interesting. As a former Michigan fan and life-long OSU hater, watching OSU's downfall has made me feel a sense of subdued joy. But what I can't stand is all this talk about Pryor and the seemingly never-ending debate on whether athletes should get paid. Ugh. The answer is NO.
I don't understand why a free education, room and board, meals, trips across the country, and the chance to play collegiate athletics isn't enough.
But the kids come from underprivileged backgrounds! They don't have the financial support as some other students!
And? Think about the alternative. You don't take the scholarship. What are you doing instead? For most of these athletes, college would be a pipe dream without sports because of their academic grades. You want money? Quit the team. Quit school. Go work at McDonalds. Then you'll have money. Or you can do what a majority of college students do and live off peanuts, and just have fun. You're an athlete in college! Why can't you just enjoy it??? YOU GET A FREE RIDE. Stop being so greedy. I would have killed for that. I'm sorry you don't have extra money for tattoos and fancy whips. I shed a tear for you.
Well schools could throw them a little bone...just a little pocket cash...
Yeah, just to the football players? If you give spending money to the football team, you better be prepared to do the same for the baseball, basketball, and tennis teams. All sports. Men's and women's. Do you think athletic departments and universities are prepared to shell out that kind of money?
Think about all the money they make off ticket sales, jerseys, etc! They must be rolling in dough!
Only the most high-profile programs have a chance at making cash. And if they do, the revenue generated is dispersed amongst the other lower revenue generating sports. To put it in perspective, Duke basketball even lost money last year. Duke! Shaka Smart, head coach at VCU, gets a million dollar raise for making the Final Four. Where does the money come from? A tuition hike, not a substantial amount, but enough to bring the VCU an extra million dollars from admissions. Well what do ya know...And don't get me started on Title IX. A blessing for women's sports, but an economic burden on athletic departments.
Look, the NCAA is just trying to create an equal playing field for all its student athletes. Do they have a perfect system right now? No, definitely not. But it is what it is right now, and receiving benefits is against the rules. That's why I feel little sympathy for Tressel getting the axe, or Pryor feeling the heat. Do things the right way, act like a student-athlete should, and there are no problems. If OSU did, Tressel would still be the head coach and Pryor is leading OSU to another BCS bowl, is the big man on campus, and continues to improve on his NFL stock. Not thinking about possibly moving to a D3 coaching job and worrying about the supplemental draft that may or may not happen...
Anyway...
Shifting gears completely, I noticed that my students have no concept of time. They can read a clock and everything, but time means little to them. I find this sad and fascinating at the same time.
My clock in my classroom has been off for the last month or so. It's one hour fast, and I don't know how it got that way, but it is. I could easily change it back to the right time, but that would require me getting a chair out, standing on it, and turning the knob on the back of the clock, and I'm too lazy for that. Heck, just subtract one hour exactly and you have the current time. Not hard. Plus I'm all set for daylight savings time in the fall.
But my kids don't get it. If a student wants to use the bathroom, he needs to right down the time on his hall pass and get it signed by the teacher. Today I had a student at 8:30 in the morning ask to use the bathroom, and he wrote down 9:30, the time on my clock. Maybe he was just rushing? Maybe. But this happens all the time. It's the first period of the day! How do you not get the 8 o'clock hour correct?
And there are times when kids will write passes later in the day and they will do double-takes at the clock and say things like, "Is it really X:XX o'clock?" I always just shake my head, because if it were really an hour ahead, they wouldn't be in my class anymore. How do they not know this? How do they not know the time when they're in a certain class period? It's baffling to me.
And finally...
OUR WEDDING DATE IS SET.
October 12th, 2012. Book it. We've also secured a house in the Outer Banks, and it's beautiful. Adam and Kevin, I will try to send you a link to it in the next couple days.
~Mikey D
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6 comments:
The solution to stop rule breaking is never loosening up the rules. Making marijuana legal will not prevent drug use. Allowing college athletes a stipend will not disuade schools from trying to cheat or student athletes from pursuing extra benefits.
That being said, I don't think it's fair for schools to make money off of players' jersey sales or from NCAA Football video games that mimic players' physiques and personas. There has to be some kind of compromise on those grounds that doesn't give a school a recruiting advantage over another.
You may have the same wrong clock all day long, but your students don't.
Excellent! I can't wait until 10/12/12!
But the thing is that these schools aren't making money off all the "extras". Maybe the top schools like OSU, Florida, Texas, and USC have the opportunity to, but schools like Washington State, New Mexico, and Central Florida...they're making jack. I'm not sure what kind of comprise could be reached on that end.
Hmmm...my students don't have the same wrong clock? I don't really follow what you're saying. Maybe I'm being dense.
Yes, very exciting indeed. It's nice to actually have a date to tell people instead of just saying "fall".
What Adam is saying is that you stay in the same room all day, looking at the same clock all day. You adjust to the wrong time very easily.
The kids look at many different clocks during the day, (I'm assuming) all of which are correct except for yours. It's harder for them to adjust.
I think it's a pretty easy mistake to make.
Congrats on setting a wedding date.
But when I am the first class of the day?!? School starts at 8:00! How do you think it's 9:30???
Maybe because 15 minutes of your class feels like an hour and a half...zing!
Haha, ouch. Nice.
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