Atlantic 10 Primer Part 2
INDIANAPOLIS, IND. -- The Atlantic 10 Conference, the new home
of Butler athletics, has been hailed as one of the best conferences
in the country, because of its overall athletic success. The
league also ranks among the nation’s best when it comes to
academics.
The presidents and chancellors of Atlantic 10 institutions, in
conjunction with Atlantic 10 Commissioner Bernadette V. McGlade,
have made a strong commitment to making the academic and athletics
equation a successful one. Over the years, the league membership
has strived to better recognize the academic accomplishments of its
student-athletes. The Commissioner’s Honor Roll, which cites
every Atlantic 10 student-athlete with a 3.5 grade point average or
better, recognized a record 1,359 student-athletes in the Fall
2011.
The league sponsors Academic All-Conference teams in each of its
sports and honors two student-athletes as the A-10 Student-Athletes
of the Year. Moreover, the Atlantic 10 provides four
postgraduate scholarship grants to qualified
student-athletes. In 2011-12, nearly 200 student-athletes
earned Academic All-Conference recognition, while Dayton’s
Yvonne Marten, Jennifer Nalepa from Saint Louis, Marissa Norman of
Rhode Island and Charlotte’s Macey Ruble received
postgraduate scholarship grants.
The Atlantic 10 has 56 of the more than 950 Division I sports
teams being honored with public recognition awards for their latest
multi-year Academic Progress Rate scores. The Atlantic 10
Conference ranks fourth in number of teams recognized by the NCAA
and fifth in overall APR average among all 32 Division I
Conferences with a 981 average. The league boasted 40 squads with
perfect scores and 104 teams with a score of 990 or better. In
total, 188 A-10 teams were at or above the national average,
representing 70 percent of all A-10 teams. Of the 21 championship
sponsored sports in the Atlantic 10, 19 had a sport average higher
than the national average. There are six sports (field hockey,
women’s cross country, lacrosse, women’s swimming &
diving, women’s indoor track & field and women’s
outdoor track & field) in which every A-10 team in that sport
is above the national average.
The Atlantic 10 boasted a third-place ranking in the single-year
Graduation Success Rate (GSR) among all Division I leagues.
Measured in a six-year window, 89 percent of freshman enrolling in
an A-10 institution in 2004 graduated. Twelve of the league’s
14 institutions are above the national four-year GSR average of 80
percent and five of those programs, Dayton, George Washington,
Richmond, Saint Joseph’s and Xavier are all over 90 percent.
The Atlantic 10 also rates in the Top 10 in men’s basketball,
women’s basketball and baseball in the single-year GSR. The
league is ninth nationally in men’s basketball, graduating at
a 74 percent rate, nearly seven percent above the national average.
In women’s basketball the league ranks sixth with an
incredible 96 percent graduation rate for its 2004 freshman class,
10 percent higher than the national average. In baseball, the A-10
is tied for third nationally with an 87 percent GSR, also 10
percent higher than the national average.
This year, Butler had 11 teams honored by the NCAA for achieving a
multi-year Academic Progress Rate (APR) in the top 10 percent of
their Division I peers. That total ranked Butler as one of
the top schools in the nation. Ten of Butler’s 19 teams
recorded a perfect APR score of 1,000.


