List of award winners (searchable)
Complete NCAA release
COOKEVILLE, Tenn. – For the second consecutive year,
Tennessee Tech’s softball and women’s golf teams are
among those who received Public Recognition Awards Wednesday from
the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) for top
academic performance.
The awards are given to teams scoring in the Top 10 percent
nationally in the Multi-Year Academic Progress Rate (APR), which is
part of the NCAA’s academic reform program.
“We take a great deal of pride in the academic success of
all our teams, and especially this latest news of the Public
Recognition Awards for softball and women’s golf,” said
Mark Wilson, TTU Director of Athletics.
“It verifies, once again, that we are successfully
fulfilling our mission toward our student-athletes, and it speaks
to the diligence of our student-athletes,” he said.
“Our students are coming in better prepared when they enter
Tennessee Tech, and they are staying on track to earn their
degrees.”
Golden Eagle softball coach Bonnie Bynum said the goals of the
softball program remain lofty, both on the field and in the
classroom.
“I am excited to learn that softball has won the APR Public
Recognition award,” she said. “It's a testament to how
hard our kids work year round. Coach (Tory) Acheson put a high
emphasis on academics, and I look forward to continuing that
reputation for our softball program in the years to
come.”
Golf coach Polk Brown echoed Bynum’s thoughts.
“The girls on the team work very hard on and off the
course, but they place the highest importance on what they do in
the classroom which is reflected in them receiving this award for
the second consecutive year,” Brown said. “I am very,
very proud of them, and they embody what the term
‘student-athlete’ is all about.”
The APR provides a real-time look at a team's academic success
each semester or quarter by tracking the academic progress of each
student-athlete. The APR includes eligibility, retention and
graduation in the calculation and provides a clear picture of the
academic culture in each sport.
The APR awards two points each term to student-athletes who meet
academic eligibility standards and who remain with the institution.
A team's APR is the total points earned by the team at a given time
divided by the total points possible, multiplied by 1,000. It
includes four years (this year's numbers included the school years
of 2008-09 and 2009-10, 2010-11 and 2011-12). High-performing teams
receiving public recognition awards posted APR scores ranging from
978 to a perfect 1,000.
This year 976 teams (594 women's teams, 382 men's or mixed teams) were publicly recognized for high academic achievement. In all, 268 institutions (out of 346 Division I schools) placed at least one team on the list. Last year 954 teams were recognized.
“These kinds of APR numbers continue to point out that our student-athletes and our staff continue to take seriously our goal of stressing the importance of academic success,” Wilson said. “Our coaches, our academic support system and personnel, and our student-athletes are doing a good job.”
Twenty-three (23) Ohio Valley Conference teams were among those
who received Public Recognition Awards. The 23 awards are the most
awards the league has earned in the eight-year history of the
awards, eclipsing the 22 honors earned in 2004-05. In total, eight
different OVC member institutions earned at least one award, the
same number as a year ago.
In addition to the two Golden Eagle squads, OVC teams honored
include seven from Belmont (baseball, men's basketball, women's
basketball, women's golf, women's soccer, men's tennis and women's
tennis), four from SIUE (men's cross country, softball, women's
soccer and women's tennis), three each from Eastern Illinois (men's
golf, women's golf and women's tennis) and Morehead State (women's
tennis, women's outdoor track and field and volleyball), two from
Murray State (women's basketball and men's golf), and one apiece
from Austin Peay (women's golf) and Jacksonville State (women's
tennis).
Multi-year APR scores for all Division I sports teams, including the teams receiving public recognition awards, will be announced on June 11. That announcement will also include immediate and historical penalties for low-performing teams.