Handicapping 2010 NFL Football Season, the Coaching Changes

Category : Region V

Handicapping 2010 NFL Football Season, the Coaching Changes

This should be another great year of NFL football as there is much to get excited about. The first things I want to make sure everyone is aware of are the new head coaching changes. First, in Buffalo Chan Gailey in now the head coach. His last football job was offensive coordinator with the Kansas City Chiefs but was let go just weeks before the start of the 2009 season. You probably are more familiar with Gailey as the head college football coach for the Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets. He was there for 6 seasons and appeared in a bowl game every one of those seasons. He also was the Dallas Cowboys head coach for 2 season from 1998-1999.

He was not the Bills first choice as they really wanted to hire Bill Cowher but settled for Gailey. The Bills have been stagnating for quite some time with not only inconsistency by missing the playoff but also juggling quarterbacks. Good luck to coach Gailey.

Now off to Seattle as the Seahawks have a new coach in Pete Carroll. Gone is Jim Mora and in is former coach of the University of Southern California Trojans. Carroll has been rumored every year to make the move to the NFL and finally he did. The Seahawks were underachievers last season yet still have enough talent to compete in the NFC West Division. Carroll is no stranger as a NFL head coach as he previously was the head coach for the New York Jets and the New England Patriots. It has been awhile since Carroll was in the NFL but he should fit right in with the Seahawks.

Now at last the final head coaching change is in the nation’s capital as the Washington Redskins now have Mike Shanahan as their head coach. You had to know that Shanahan was going to coach again and coach soon. He spent 14 seasons as the Denver Broncos head coach and won 2 super bowls. Parlay this with Redskins owner Dan Snyder making key player moves like acquiring Donovan NcNabb should make the Redskins a playoff team this coming season. I am very interested to see how the Redskins perform this season more than any other team. They are definitely committed to making a playoff run and the excitement this brings has my eyes on them.

To wrap things up, there are only 3 head coaching changes for the 2010 season. All are well known head coaches and should have success. As for me I predict the Redskins will not only get tremendous attention this coming season but will win their division. I know its way too early for that talk but the NFL football excitement has begun.

For more insight on handicapping the NFL, be sure to visit my site. Also remember the start of NFL preseason is August 8, 2010 with the Hall of Fame games in Canton, OH.

Troy Powers is a long Las Vegas Sports handicapper who recommends that you follow a football betting system for this 2010 NFL season.


Article from articlesbase.com

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Enough Complaining About Changes to Florida’s Bright Futures Scholarship!

Category : Region II

Enough Complaining About Changes to Florida’s Bright Futures Scholarship!

Proposed changes to Florida’s Bright  Futures scholarship – a merit scholarship that covers either 75% or 100% of tuition only, are annoying.  Here’s why.

A Florida Senate proposal would lift standards for a partial scholarship as follows:  3.0 GPA  and 970 SAT (or 20 ACT) to 3.0 GPA and 1050 SAT.

The full merit scholarship standards would go from a 3.5 GPA and 1270 SAT (28 ACT) to 3.5 and 1290 (or 29 ACT).

Critics claim the changes would have a “disproportionate impact” on Florida’s low-income families.

While it’s undeniably true that low-income students don’t test as well as their more affluent competition, that’s not the point. It’s time for a reality check.

Florida’s Bright Futures Scholarship was designed to keep the best and brightest students home in Florida – by making it easy to send them to Florida’s public universities, get educated and then use their knowledge to contribute to the local economy.  Particularly in the “STEM” disciplines – Science, Technology, Engineering and Math.

However, reality is far from the ideal.

STEM courses are so tough that many Bright Futures students dropped them, because they need a minimum 3.0 GPA to maintain the scholarship, according to a 2008 study by Professor Shouping  Hu of Florida State University’s College of Education.

You don’t need to show outstanding performance to qualify for this merit scholarship – the national average for SAT scores is 1,000.  You need only a 970 to qualify.  So if you’re a Florida high school student, you can be literally below average and still “earn” a merit scholarship courtesy of Bright Futures!

This is horrible public policy – Florida’s lawmakers have legislated that less than average students can qualify for “merit” money!

To me, this is like the end of every youth sports season when the entire league gets a trophy.  Not for winning – just for showing up.  Yay.

This may not make me popular, but I don’t “buy” the criticism about minorities’ disadvantages.  Our country is a nation of minorities, many of which have bootstrapped themselves, overcoming daunting barriers such as skin color, religious background and language comprehension to achieve greatness.

A recent example is the Asian-American community – about twenty years ago, admissions officers from highly-competitive colleges practically tripped over each other to admit qualified students in order to diversify their colleges’ student bodies.   As is the case with most selective colleges, they allowed Asian-American students entry despite lower than average standardized test scores, because their desirable ethnicity counter-balanced these shortcomings.

Now we’ve come full circle – Asian American students’ test scores are discounted – they’re scoring so well on these tests that admissions officers expect it from them.  This is just a simplified example, but a perfect score by an Asian-American kid might count the same as a 95% percentile score from another student.

Perhaps the biggest confusion surrounds the financial aid that is available to disadvantaged students.  There happens to be a TON of money out there for needy students – billions, in fact. It’s in the Federal Financial Aid system and in the endowments of the colleges themselves.

But this is money is not merit-based.  The vast majority of it is given out on a need-based analysis, according to the financial formulas of the Department of Education and the colleges themselves.

There are several hundred, maybe more than one thousand colleges in the country that meet 90% or more of a student’s financial need.  Many are accessible for students with average or slightly better-than-average performance on the SAT or ACT.  Some don’t even look at performance on standardized tests.

I’d like to see the discussion shift to how to use the Federal Financial Aid system to fund a college education.  Quit whining about the death of Bright Futures – it’s not productive.  Not only is it unsustainable financially – we’re million short according to a recent Miami Herald article – but it’s a bad message – we reward below average students.

Something’s gotta give.

 

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