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2005 Football Graduates with Coach
Mike Shula (L-R): Anthony Madison, Brodie Croyle,
Charlie Peprah, Brandon Brooks, Jake Collins, Coach Shula,
J.B. Closner, Matt Miller
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• NCAA
2004-05 APR Public Report 
• NCAA
Confidence Boundary Report 
• NCAA
APR Definitions
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – The NCAA Division I 2004-05 Academic
Progress Rate reports released today show The University of Alabama
football program significantly improved from the last report – up
36 points in the two-year average for football. UA
will not receive any penalties or scholarship reductions in any
sports.
“This report shows we are making progress,” said Athletics
Director Mal Moore. “With the commitment we have from our
coaches and our student-athletes, we expect continued improvement
in the years to come.”
The APR Multiyear Rate Upper Confidence Boundary, a measure that
takes into account statistically the small sample sizes of some
teams, shows all UA sports above the cut score of 925.
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2005 Basketball Graduate Chuck Davis
with Coach Mark Gottfried
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While men’s basketball showed a decline in this APR report
due to transfers out of the program and early departure for professional
sports careers, Coach Mark Gottfried’s overall success with
his student-athletes shows a 100 percent graduation rate (18 of
18) for seniors who complete their eligibility. The Multiyear Rate
Upper Confidence Boundary score for men’s basketball is at
948.
One sign of continued progress is the success of student athletes
in the just-released fall 2005 semester grade reports. Some 195
student-athletes made the Athletics Honor Roll with grade point
averages of 3.0 or better. Twelve of 16 teams had team GPAs of
3.0 or better. The composite GPA of UA student-athletes through
the fall 2005 semester was just a fraction below a B average or
2.914.
Coach Mike Shula, completing his third year as head coach, has
helped the football graduation rate improve. Since Shula arrived
at UA in 2003, the football team’s graduation rate has seen
steady improvement and now stands at 67 percent, one of the highest
rates all-time for the UA football program and better than the
overall student graduation rate during the same period. Because
the NCAA tracks graduation rates in six-year intervals (and four-year
averages within those intervals), the results under Shula will
not be reflected in their graduation reports for several more years,
but the current success is visible and measurable.
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DeMeco Ryans receives his diploma
during the December 2005 Commencement.
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Fourteen UA players competing in the Cotton Bowl had already earned
their degrees including Charlie Peprah, who has his master’s,
and DeMeco Ryans, who graduated after just seven semesters, won
the NCAA Top VIII award, and is the most decorated student-athlete
in UA football history. At last year’s Music City Bowl, 11
players had already graduated.
UA athletics officials also confirmed the following under Coach
Shula’s leadership:
- 38 players have stayed through their fourth year; 19
have already graduated; 4 more will graduate in spring 2006,
bringing that total to 23 of 38 (60%).
- The 2001
class has graduated 8 of 15 already and 4 more will graduate
in May, totaling 12 of 15 (80%).
- The 2002 class
has graduated 3 of 12 in just 3.5 years (Ryans, Simpson, McLain);
6 are on track to graduate in 2006 for a total graduation rate
of 75%.
- The overall GPA of the football team
is almost a 2.4.
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The newly-renovated Paul
W. Bryant Academic Center. For more information on Bryant Hall, please
click here.
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One of the secrets behind the academic success for current Tide
athletes is Alabama's Center for Athletic Student Services (CASS),
headed by Jon Dever. In April 2005, a $10.3 million renovation
of Bryant Hall was completed, transforming the former athletic
dormitory into the Paul W. Bryant Academic Center, a state of the
art academic center benefiting more than 425 Crimson Tide student
athletes. The 52,300 square-foot building is among the finest in
the country. It houses a 48-seat computer lab, a math lab with
18 laptop computers aiding athletes when they travel, a reading
lab with six computers, a writing lab, two 50-seat classrooms,
a 140-seat classroom, and 32 individual study/tutor rooms.
The Bryant Academic Center serves not only as a functioning full-service
academic facility but also as the home for the CASS staff and the
Champs’ Lifeskills program. Moore calls the center “the
crown jewel in the Alabama athletic department’s Crimson
Tradition Fund facility enhancement campaign.”
“This project has been priority one since we started the
renovations of our athletic facilities,” Moore said. “Academics
is at the center of our mission at Alabama and we wanted to create
a place that would aid all our student-athletes in their educational
pursuits. I feel very strongly that Bryant Hall will benefit every
student-athlete, not just during their years at Alabama, but for
a lifetime.”
The CASS support team includes Dever, several professional staff
members, graduate assistants and more than 50 tutors who work with
the athletes daily on every subject. Dever has also partnered with
other UA agencies to provide testing services to identify student
athletes who may have learning problems and to arrange for specific
assistance in defined areas if needed.
From the moment a recruit first walks onto the campus to the moment
an athlete graduates with diploma in hand, the academic center
is there to serve them, Dever said. For the first year at the Capstone,
freshman and junior college transfers are required to attend nightly
study halls. After that, the attendance is based on the individual's
GPA and study needs. Each student athlete is assigned an athletic
academic program advisor.
Advisors closely track students’ academic progress, class
attendance, and study hall requirements. The CASS staff offers
career advice and counseling, makes sure all athletes are maintaining
satisfactory progress toward their degrees, and monitors academic
eligibility.
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