ELIGIBILITY CHECKLIST: At the beginning of your sophomore year, register at eligibilitycenter.org. At the end of your junior year, ask your counselor to send your transcript to the NCAA Eligibility Center. Take the ACT or SAT and use the code “9999” to have your official scores sent directly to the NCAA Eligibility Center. Check with your counselor to make sure you are on track to graduate on time with your class and have the required amount of core courses. Beginning April 1 of your senior year, request final amateurism certification. Be sure to ask your counselor to submit your final transcript with proof of graduation.
For academic eligibility purposes, the NCAA defines an education-impacting disability (EID) as a current impairment that has a substantial educational impact on a student’s academic performance and requires accommodation.
Some of the most common EIDs include:
A high school student with a documented EID must meet the same initial-eligibility requirements as other students but may be provided certain accommodations to help meet those requirements. For instance, a student with a documented EID may be allowed to take classes designed for students with EIDs if the classes appear on the list of approved NCAA core courses at the student’s school.
In order for courses designated for students with EIDs to be approved, the course must be substantially comparable, qualitatively and quantitatively, as a regular core course offered in that academic area and must appear on the high school's list of approved core courses.
Students planning on attending a Division I school and whose EID documentation is approved by the NCAA Eligibility Center may take up to three additional core courses after graduating high school and before enrolling full-time at a Division I school, as long as they graduate high school in eight consecutive semesters after starting ninth grade.
Students planning on attending a Division II school may take an unlimited number of core courses after starting ninth grade and before enrolling full-time at a Division II school.
If you are a student with a documented EID, you only need to alert the NCAA Eligibility Center to your EID if you are planning on enrolling full-time at a Division I school and would like to take additional core courses after you graduate high school.
Information about EIDs submitted to the NCAA is not released to colleges unless the student-athlete makes a specific written request.
To document an EID with the NCAA Eligibility Center, a student-athlete must submit the following material:
As part of its commitment to providing a pathway to opportunity, the NCAA awards scholarships and grants for further education to college athletes who demonstrate outstanding academic and athletic achievement. Colleges and universities are also awarded grants to improve academics and enhance campus culture – all to support student-athletes.
In addition to the $3.2 billion schools award in athletics scholarships each year, the NCAA funds more than $10 million in scholarships and grants annually to graduate student-athletes and member schools.
Questions? Email scholarshipsandgrants@ncaa.org.
Click on the links below for other scholarship opportunities:
**You can also explore additional scholarship opportunities on your school's counseling website**