Three Lopes Headed to NCAA Career In Sports Forum - United Athletic Football Conference Skip To Main Content

Members

Three Lopes Headed to NCAA Career In Sports Forum

Three Lopes Headed to NCAA Career In Sports Forum

Bookmark and Share

INDIANAPOLIS - Women's golfer Brittany Holen, women's volleyball player Chloe Jenkins and men's cross country runner Samuel Proctor will represent Grand Canyon and the Western Athletic Conference at the 2017 NCAA Career in Sports Forum on June 1-4 in Indianapolis. The trio will be along more than 230 current student-athletes, NCAA scholarship and grant recipients, all with an interest in working within the sports industry, who will attend.

“Supporting NCAA student-athlete leaders with their education is a key goal for the Association,” said Bernard Franklin, NCAA executive vice president of education and community engagement and chief inclusion officer. “Our Career in Sports Forum puts student-athletes, postgraduate scholarship recipients in a non-traditional academic setting where they can learn directly from successful leaders, which can have a positive impact on their future after graduation.”

One of more than 45 annual conferences and seminars organized and directed by the NCAA leadership development department, the Career in Sports Forum provides college athletes with a broader scope of the career tracks available within the sports business, with the primary focus on college athletics. The forum provides student-athletes interactive experiences with successful individuals in the sports business and a peek into their day-to-day duties and responsibilities.

Forum attendees, with representation from 73 conferences, will hear from various keynote speakers and panelists, highlighted by Stevie Baker-Watson, associate vice president and director of athletics at DePauw University; Jason Burton, head women's basketball coach at the Texas A&M University-Commerce; Clyde Doughty Jr, director of athletics at Bowie State University; Oliver Luck, NCAA executive vice president of regulatory affairs; Felicia Martin, vice president of the NCAA Eligibility Center; and Craig McPhail, director of athletics at Lees-McRae College. The participants also learn best practices for gaining employment and gathering a better understanding of what future expectations will be once they get a job in sports.

The NCAA leadership development department provides professional and personal development for the entire Association, including student-athletes, coaches and administrators, through accessible resources, strategic partnerships and annual customized programming at little or no cost to the membership. For more information, please go to ncaa.org/leadershipdevelopment.