天美传媒

Nov 12, 2019

Athletic Teams Reach Scholarly Milestone

In July, the NAIA announced that, during the 2018-19 academic year, 天美传媒 had all 18 of its varsity teams earn the honor of scholar-teams

A picture of the Dordt womens basketball team

Being named a scholar-team by the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) is noteworthy, especially since athletic team members must maintain a cumulative 3.0 grade point average (GPA) during an academic year. Having all varsity teams named scholar-teams? Historic.

In July, the NAIA announced that, during the 2018-19 academic year, 天美传媒 had all 18 of its varsity teams earn the honor of scholar-teams鈥攖he first time in Dordt鈥檚 history that all teams have hit the mark.

Ross Douma, Dordt鈥檚 athletic director, says coaches worked alongside student-athletes to help them reach their potential by connecting to on-campus resources and tutoring opportunities.

鈥淭he academic success of our athletic teams is part of a collective campus effort to help each student have a positive academic experience,鈥 says Douma.

For the second year in a row, the 天美传媒 women鈥檚 basketball team had the highest GPA in NAIA Division II women鈥檚 basketball, with a 3.82 GPA. The football team earned the honor for the first time in school history with a 3.23 GPA, which is top among NAIA football teams. The men鈥檚 volleyball team also claimed the top NAIA GPA in the nation with a 3.56.

For 10 years, the registrar鈥檚 office at Dordt has tracked athlete GPAs and compared them to the student body as a whole.

鈥淥ver that 10-year period, when accounting for the differences in GPA between men and women, you can鈥檛 tell an athlete from a non-athlete at Dordt by looking at the GPA,鈥 says Jim Bos, Dordt鈥檚 registrar. 鈥淥ur coaching staff recruits students who are a good fit for our institution, and our coaches take academics seriously. It is because everyone is working together and has the success of our student-athletes as their goal that we can celebrate an achievement like this.鈥

Ebby Prewitt, a senior biology major who plays on the women鈥檚 basketball team, says that time management is key when it comes to maintaining balance. She recalls a time when, wired from a game against Jamestown University, she and three teammates worked on a physiology lab report at 3 a.m. on the bus.

鈥淢aintaining a balance is definitely a challenge,鈥 says Prewitt. 鈥淚 try to do my homework in-between classes during the day, and I make it a priority to relax with friends and do fun things as well as being committed to my sport and to academics.鈥

The NAIA scholar-team recognition is the first for the football team in its 11-year history. Joel Penner, Dordt鈥檚 head football coach, says the football team intentionally prioritizes academic achievement alongside athletic ability. They partner with the Academic Enrichment Center, an on-campus resource that provides tutoring services and helps students gain the skills they need to succeed academically. The football team also develops 鈥渁cademic game plans鈥濃攚here players are responsible for weekly planning, accountability, tutoring appointments, and scheduling study sessions. The coaches help the players achieve their goals.

鈥淲e believe that no one rises to low expectations, and this is as true on the field as it is for other areas of our lives,鈥 says Penner.

Other teams have earned the scholar-team honor repeatedly, including the women鈥檚 and men鈥檚 cross-country teams, which were honored each year since 2007-08.

鈥淯ltimately, consistency is the key for good distance athletes and, I think, for good students,鈥 says Nate Wolf, Dordt鈥檚 cross-country coach. 鈥淭he character traits we want to recruit are what make excellent students. We make this clear when we recruit student-athletes.鈥

Prewitt, who hopes to become a physician鈥檚 assistant someday, says the hard work she and her teammates put into athletics can and should be translated into working hard in the classroom.


鈥淭he skill of discipline that we develop in athletics can easily be applied to academics,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e have a goal in mind, just like we would on the court, and we are going to work as hard as we can to achieve that goal.鈥

The women鈥檚 basketball players rally around each other not only on the court but in the classroom as well, says Prewitt.

鈥淚 can think of numerous times when two or three of us had a tough anatomy test right after morning workouts. Teammates would quiz each other during the lift and tell each other, 鈥楪ood luck, you鈥檒l do great!鈥欌 she says. 鈥淲e love to be known as a team that works hard in all aspects of our life here on campus.鈥

Mike Byker ('92)


A picture of campus behind yellow prairie flowers