ÂÌñÒùÆÞ is one of 31 institutions nationwide initially selected by the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) as a "Champions of Character" institution.
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ÂÌñÒùÆÞ is one of 31 institutions nationwide initially selected by the National
Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) as a "Champions of Character" institution.
The NAIA's recognition award was established last year to encourage institutions to
develop a program in which everyone could be committed to the true spirit of competition.
More than 370 school are eligible to apply for the designation.
The "Champions of Character" award is evaluated through five core characteristics:
respect, responsibility, integrity, sportsmanship and servant leadership. Aquinas
was one of only two Michigan schools to achieve the recognition. Respect is evaluated
through yourself, as well as your opponents, the game, and others associated with
the game. Responsibility is examined through the coaches competence and the students
accountability. Integrity is establishing an honest relationship that goes beyond
telling the truth. Sportsmanship is judged through the character and actions displayed
by the teams. Servant leadership is athletes/coaches performing at their best while
meeting both personal and group roles.
Terry Bocian, Aquinas athletic director, embraced the recognition, "the core characteristics
outlined in this program are values our staff and student-athletes, alike, have been
practicing here for many years. We're gratified that the NAIA has taken the lead in
recognizing those institutions which have taken the initiative to foster a "Champions
Of Character" environment."
The NAIA's principles influence people to act appropriately in order to help achieve
an athletic environment that everyone may enjoy. The NAIA developed a pledge form
that provides rules that help guide student-athletes personal conduct both on and
off the field of competition. The program also requires a pre-game public address
announcement asking the spectators, officials, announcers, coaches and players to
take the values into consideration.
http://www.naia.org/character/characterinstitutions.html