In high school, that is pretty average, and as you can see in the chart you showed, that would get the kid admitted to an average number of colleges.I have always thought that 3.0's were GOOD.
The Twitter account from the OP appears to be from Mike Dixon who is an Admissions Advisor from Doane College. I would guess he knows a thing or two about college admissions. He probably just wrote that info on a white board in his office.Some dude wrote that on a markerboard. Why is it considered legit?
But do non-athletes get "recruited"?Yes, there are a multiple numbers (GPA, ACT/SAT scores, etc.) that colleges will look at when determining entrance requirements, and athletes (especially the top ones) are given lowerr standards than the average student.
The top students do.But do non-athletes get "recruited"?Yes, there are a multiple numbers (GPA, ACT/SAT scores, etc.) that colleges will look at when determining entrance requirements, and athletes (especially the top ones) are given lowerr standards than the average student.
I agree. The best high school students, whether they are athletic or academic standout are going to be heavily recruited by colleges.I have no problem with individual schools setting their own entrance criteria and holding athletes to those standards.
And, yes...high level academic students get recruited heavily.