For the record I’m not in favor of going full on Bammer/SEC and start cheating like a flea bitten mutt, however, things don’t always work out in life.
An honest way of dealing with it is straightforward discussions. If they’re not cutting it give them goals and a timeline just like every other competitive discipline.
Every parent who plunks down $40k plus a year is exptecting Johnny to get a degree and a good start to a career. GT processes kids out academically all the time, yet when it comes to athletes we’re supposed to string along those that can’t quite make it because it provides us a degree of moral superiority ??? What if we were doing just that with your precious degree program and gave every kid a degree whether they earned it or not? That’s essentially what some are advocating. Yeah there would be a ton of GT academic elitists with a panty knot rammed so far up their 5 hole you’d be able to hear the outrage in Johannesburg.
You're mixing apples and oranges here.
Yes, Tech washes people - athletes and others - out for academic reasons all the time. But what some here are talking about is washing out a student based not on his performance in the classroom, but on
his performance on the football field. That's different. Tech made a deal with the players: stay in school
and play football and we'll pay for most of it. If they can't cut it academically, they usually leave. But if they can't get on the field, keep trying, and they stay in school, then the rest of the bargain still stands. Tech took a chance that the player will be a contributor to the main income-earning sport sponsored by the GTAA and the reason the young man came to Tech was to play
and go to school. However, the bargain doesn't end if the player can't get on the field. Taking the scholarship away is, in effect, kicking the kid out of school for reasons that have little or nothing to do with his education. That won't do. I don't care what some schools - there are less of them then we might think, imho - do, that isn't how we've done things and it is both cynical and short-sighted to start with that kind of thing now.
Or, at least, that's how it seems to me.