Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Report: Black Players Left Behind in Graduation Rates of Bowl-Bound Teams - Higher Education

Report: Black Players Left Behind in Graduation Rates of Bowl-Bound Teams - Higher Education: A study of this year’s bowl-bound schools reveals they are graduating White players at a significantly higher percentage than African-American players.

The average graduation success rate for African-American football players at the bowl-bound schools is 65 percent, compared to 84 percent for whites, according to the annual report released Monday by The Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport at the University of Central Florida.

Richard Lapchick, principal author of the study and director of TIDES, says that the disparity is largely a reflection of the lack of quality education African-American players are receiving as adolescents.

“The news is really about America’s problem of solving the disparities between African-Americans and Whites in society,” Lapchick says. “Things like graduation rates keep getting better for both African-Americans and Whites but that gap (between them) can take the heart out of the good news about the improvement.”