<p>or can you send it to individual schools? If the Clearinghouse gets them, do you still have to send to the schools? What about D3?</p>
<p>Yes-to be eligible to play. D3 I am fairly certain you still do, but maybe not. For D2 and D 1 yes. NAIA also if you want to play in that league.</p>
<p>Some schools might still ask for you to send them scores individually in addition to having them go on your eligibility center information. (clearinghouse is the old term). It will probably be on a case by case basis.</p>
<p>We were just at Parents Recruiting Workshop with college coaches and a similar question came up. The answer given to use by the coaches was if you want to play D1 or D2 your scores have to be sent to the Eligibility Center by the SAT or ACT, and your official high school transcript sent by your high school guidance counselor to the Eligibility Center. Since D3 eligibility is determined by the individual school admission requirements you do not need to be declared eligible by the Eligibility Center. However, all the coaches recommended going through the Eligibility Center. The scores and transcripts will also have to be sent to the college as part of the Admission process which is completely separate from the Eligibility Center.</p>
<p>Not DIII-- because there are no athletic scholarships.</p>
<p>Ugh! Just trying to save a step or two, but looks like it’s not possible. Thanks, anyway.</p>
<p>All you have to do is put the NCAA code in when you take the ACT/SAT and they automatically get forwarded to the NCAA. On the Clearinghouse site, there is a button to click and they send a notice to your school to send transcripts. That is all you have to do, it’s pretty easy.</p>
<p>Check with your child high school about sending the transcripts. At my children’s high school the only way they will send a transcript is if you give them an addressed and stamped No 10 envelope. They do not honor online requests.</p>
<p>Is is appropriate to send in the transcript at the end of junior year, or is it best to wait-- and, if so, till when?</p>
<p>If we are hoping to improve our act/sat scores, should we hold off on sending those in the ncaa as well (if those are scores we are hoping not to have to send to the universities themselves)?</p>
<p>Must this all be completed before any official visits?</p>
<p>They will do a pre-read at the end of your junior year. If you are a good student it’s best to get that done as early as possible. If you are borderline qualifying academically, talk to the coaches and see what they want you to do.</p>