My daughter started college in the fall of her junior year and went full time 
her senior year.  With careful planning, it is possible for a kid to complete 
his/her requirements by the beginning  of their junior year.  I have raised 
this question before on another forum, “Would the NCAA allow a student to play 
in college if they have met the core requirements but not yet graduated from 
high school?  Also, many high schools will allow college classes to double for 
high school graduation requirements (as my daughter did—she graduated high 
school at the beginning of her sophomore year in college).  Would the NCAA 
allow a student to go to college without their core credits completed and 
practice (train) but not play until the requirements are met?

 

jerry

 

From: Gatortalk@googlegroups.com [mailto:gatort...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf 
Of ke...@baldwinnc.com
Sent: Sunday, August 02, 2009 7:45 AM
To: gatortalk googlegroups
Subject: [gatortalk] RE: [gatornews] [SUN]: RB Taylor's moves remind many of 
his dad

 

Not sure what to make of this kid.  

 

 

Maybe next year will give us a true indication of what his stats are.  

 

I assume that kids have to go to high school for 3 and 1/2 years before they 
can go to college?  

 

 

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: [gatornews] [SUN]: RB Taylor's moves remind many of his dad
From: "Shane Ford" <goufgat...@bellsouth.net>
Date: Sat, August 01, 2009 9:49 pm
To: "GATORNEWS" <gatorn...@googlegroups.com>

 


RB Taylor’s moves remind many of his dad







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