I know none of you are NCAA compliance officers (I think), but, a question semi-related to the Malou situation about how something would be treated.
I went to high school in Boone. While there, I semi-predated the "AP revolution" to college prep courses where you take a class to take a test to receive or not receive college credit. We had AP classes for Spanish and, I think, some sort of composition or literature but not for other humanities, social sciences, sciences, or mathematics. At that time in Iowa, if your high school did not offer a class, you could "cross-enroll" or something and take it at DMACC for free/the state would reimburse you for the cost of the class (not sure which, but same result). Since the high school did not offer American history or true calculus (only a wussy pre-calc class), I went ahead and took them at DMACC in Boone. Easy enough to go to DMACC at 7:30AM for calculus and history in the morning and head back to school for band and afternoon classes and activities, right? Particularly after I was able to drive myself around.
Getting it done before college, where my time got pinched, with a really good instructor in a small class in Boone, was one of the better decisions that I've ever made. Made that eventual economics degree so much easier. To my question...
I had some non-scholarship or partial-scholarship offers for track and cross country (mostly the small, private schools throughout Iowa and like South Dakota and things, nothing fancy) coming out of high school, as well, though I declined them. This was because (a) sick of running, didn't even do track my senior year, partially because I needed the time for calculus and (b) I would rather go to a big research university, just down the road, like ISU. I could live at home and commute that way, too, and this was back when ISU tuition was super-duper cheap prior to the recession. Graduating *during* the recession was another matter...
So what would the NCAA have thought about me taking 6-10ish credits from DMACC for two years to build up college credit in an era before AP was as ubiquitous as it is now? Would they have, hypothetically, stripped a year of eligibility from me for still being in high school and the age of a high school student yet, at the same time, taking credits from a junior college? Not saying this is directly the situation with Malou, who has went through a million more twists and turns, but I just wonder how they factor something like this into their requirements.