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Should Easton Coaches Have Access to Grades?

Easton Area School Board member wants coaches more involved with player academics.

 

Frank Pintabone had planned to bring guests to Tuesday night's board meeting -- former Easton Area High School athletes whose lives stalled after graduation.

Some of them had scholarship offers, but their grades just weren't there.

"They did what we asked athletically, but we didn’t do what we should have forced them to do academically," Pintabone told his school board colleagues as he proposed a new policy for student athletes.

It would require all athletes with a C-average or lower to take mandatory tutoring sessions with their coaches -- if those coaches are teachers -- after school. It would also allow those coaches to access players' grades.

That's a practice the district used to allow, but has since dropped out of confidentiality concerns, Pintabone said. He thinks reintroducing it would allow coaches to keep track of how their students were performing in the classroom.

In the past, students needed to be passing four major subjects to stay on their teams, said Athletic Director James Pokrivsak. With the high school changing to flexible scheduling, officials are looking at new standards.

Still, Pokrivsak said it's not as if coaches are ignoring academics. Students can still be removed from teams if their grades aren't good enough.

"Our coaches work with those kids. We can’t baby-sit them," he told the board.

He also said there could be privacy concerns, since not every coach is a district employee. Pintabone countered that in those cases, an assistant coach who does work for the district could have access to the grades.

High school Principal Michael Koch said the issue is a problem, but asked Pintabone to come up with a more concrete plan.

Related Topics: Frank Pintabone and easton area high school

Rasterone

10:31 am on Wednesday, September 12, 2012

ALL kids sometimes wind up short as to grades ---this is something parents and kids need to address as well. Its not role of school to babysit just a select few students as to college options and issues --and for that matter many a plumber or heavy equipment operator earns a much better living than many a college attendee has in store--and no daunting college loans either....
Now I would agree that EASD needs to invite parents and kids to address "college" several years earlier --say by grade 8 --and some of the college savings programs perhaps even much much earlier. PA GSP is a pretty good plan as is the SAGE "sweetner" and believe it or not there are actually a few PA links to welfare programs wherein some recipients who save even small sums for college can come out well .

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R.D. Frable

11:09 am on Wednesday, September 12, 2012

It's a tricky proposition; as you reported, a coach or assistant might not be a teacher of whatever the student is having issues with. Meanwhile, nobody knows how parents will handle such a sitch, if they even choose to.

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