Education. Athletics. Money. Time. These are the common key aspects of the struggles and conflicts between student athletes and schools. To put this into perspective, this is the life of a student athlete. They suffer from having to balance their education and athletics, along with their social life and finding a way to stay financially stable. This alone should give you an idea on how difficult it is to be a student athlete that results in them receiving zero compensation from their respective schools. This leads to the main topic of student athlete reforms. This is simply the basis of the student athlete community fighting for a change. That change being that they as student athletes should be able to make money off of their own personal …show more content…
This being that student athletes have to spend a large amount of time working on their sport whether that be working out or working on skills. On top of these consistent hours of hard work, they must maintain a GPA of at least 2.3, and a 980 SAT score to stay eligible. As a result of their hard work, the schools make millions of dollars due to their production in sports. Schools could not even provide the money for some of these student athletes to pay off their other expenses. If they paid these athletes for their “work,” it “would allow them to concentrate on their studies and athletics without being distracted” (Bouchrika). In simpler terms, if schools just paid these student athletes, then they would be able to focus more on their education/student aspect as much as they would athletically. Because of this information now being known, it should be understood that paying the student athletes would only be beneficial which further adds to my reason on why student athletes should receive …show more content…
Injuries that could even be life altering or career ending. With this in mind, you’d expect schools who provide athletic scholarships to also provide healthcare coverage. But surprisingly enough, they do not, which doesn’t make sense or seem fair as these student athletes are putting their bodies on the line to play for these schools who profit from it. As stated by California Governor Newsome, “Collegiate student athletes put everything on the line — their physical health, future career prospects and years of their lives to compete. Colleges reap billions from these student athletes’ sacrifices and success but, in the same breath, block them from earning a single dollar. That’s a bankrupt model.” This quote from him means exactly what it means…highway robbery. Schools should simply show and give some type of compensation to these student athletes. Instead, the schools have shown no signs of making change which have led to the student athlete reform being an ongoing issue for many years. Unless schools decide to make any type of change, this problem will continue to go on. This is the final reason why they should pay student