og15 wrote:SecondTake wrote:tripa wrote:
Nice, 4.0 GPA and you're still putting him in a box
4.0 GPA for a famous, millionaire ex-athlete is probably the equivalent of a 3.0 GPA for your average student.
Don't tell me JR Smith isn't getting some serious breaks here.
Look at all of the supposed 'college' educated athletes across all the sports that have college programs. Many of those guys would never have made college, let alone passed a single grade if they were your average person.
There's no meritocracy for athletes in college - well there is, but it's not the kind earned at the desk.
I'll give it to JR though, even if that 4.0 GPA is equivalent to a 3.0 it's pretty good, and more than I would have expected given what we've seen from him in his career. Clearly he's not dumb. But I need more data before I crown him a top 5% mental performer, like a 4.0 would imply.
@Lockdown504090 made a good point. Athletes know how to work hard. I can see how someone like Jr with a lot of time, money and top notch work ethic could do this regardless of how he presents himself on court - assuming this isn't law school.
JR Smith is a grown man with lots of money, doesn't have to worry about working for tuition or about loans or about food in college. He's also likely not going to be interested in hanging out with the college students. Basically all the things that can either occupy your time or distract you in college are not factors for him.
If he's focused on what he's doing, why can't he do well in his classes? He's not trying to be a doctor or something here, lol.
shakes0 wrote:Drygon wrote:What's GPA and how impressive is JR Smith's accomplishment to put some perspective?
assuming it's on a 4.0 scale that means he got all A's in his classes.
Impossible to really appreciate if we don't know what classes he was taking.
Was he taking real college classes or was he taking basket weaving? But even if he is taking all easy athlete classes it's still a very nice accomplishment and requires work.
He's just proving what I learned during my second try at college after failing out the first time. College is actually really really easy if you go to all the classes and do the assigned work. It's not till grad school that things get hard.
Certainly easier, but of course "easy" depends on what your major is, and what the classes are.
Majors like sciences and engineering, etc are still difficult if you go back and do it, you won't get by just showing up and doing the reading and assignments. Many of those professors are even trying to deliberately trim the herd.
As a science major when I was in college though, all my electives in liberal arts were easy A's. I even took some of the higher level classes in some of them and compared to my science classes, they were easy. The only times I didn't get an A and got an A- or *gulp* a B+ in those classes was because I was too busy studying for my science classes and neglected those classes a bit. Most of the professors were also less interested in making things unnecessarily difficult.
Some notes:
In this podcast, JR mentions having a tutor for his trigonometry course (though it sounds like an intro). Thats not a bird or easy course, at least to me, lol.
Other notes:
Its true that as a grown man, and former successful male athlete with money saved, JR has access to things some students don't.
But some students have those privileges anyway, regardless of age, or what stage of life they're in.
Their families are paying for their education, tutors, food, needs, wants, allowances, etc. I think thats great. Other students don't have access to those things though (and may not have, growing up).
All that to say: imo, what JR is doing is intersectionally breaking down quite a few systemic barriers: in education, sports and business. I hope he's continuing to take care of himself and his loved ones along the way.