DEVELOPING A MODEL FOR FOOTBALL CONFERENCE EXPANSION
Developing a Model for Football Conference Expansion: The Demand for Winston-Salem State University and Attendance in Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference Football
Developing a Model for Football Conference Expansion
1.0 INTRODUCTION:
College athletics in the United States has prospered significantly since its inception. It has also been faced with controversy ranging from threatening the academic integrity of higher education to extreme levels of commercialization. Regardless, college athletics has provided millions of students with opportunities to not only compete in athletics but also achieve an education and ultimately a college degree. This entry examines college athletics in higher education. It uses both historical and sociological sensitivities to provide a conceptual framework for this analysis. These sensitivities provide a historical context to understand the origin and development of college athletics and a sociological context to understand how college athletics has evolved into a social spectacle that provides millions with a source of entertainment and a cultural event that inform their daily life.
The purpose of this paper is to examine the relationship between game-specific attendance in the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) and the presence of recently admitted expansion member Winston-Salem State University in games during the 2007 football season.
1.1 Overview of MEAC
MEAC was founded in 1970 with seven schools: Delaware State University (then Delaware State College), Howard University, the University of Maryland Eastern Shore, Morgan State University, North Carolina A&T State University, North Carolina Central University, and South Carolina State University. Membership has fluctuated through the years, but now stands at twelve schools, including six of the founding members.
Both North Carolina Central University and Savannah State University have submitted applications to join the MEAC and are being considered at this time with the MEAC's moratorium on expansion being lifted.
1.2 Overview of Winston-Salem State University
Winston-Salem State University is a four-year public, coeducational, research university located in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. It was established by Dr. Simon Green Atkins in 1892. It is a historically black university.
Chartered by the state of North Carolina in 1897 as Slater Industrial and State Normal School and renamed Winston-Salem Teachers College in 1925, it was the first African American institution in the United States to grant degrees in elementary teacher education. The name was changed to Winston-Salem State University in 1969, and it merged into the University of North Carolina system in 1972. It is a member school of the Thurgood Marshall Scholarship Fund.
Table 1: Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) Members
School
Location Founded
Affiliation Enrollment
Years Nickname
Bethune-Cookman
Daytona Beach, FL
1904
Private/Methodist
3,400
1979-present
Wildcats
Coppin State
Baltimore, MD
1900
Public
3,200
1985-present
Eagles
Delaware State
Dover, DE
1891
Public
3,700
1970-present
Hornets
Florida A&M
Tallahassee, FL
1887
Public
11,700
1979-1984,
1986-present
Rattlers
Hampton
Hampton, VA
1868
Private
4,500
1995-present
Pirates
Howard
Washington, DC
1867
Private
11,200
1970-present
Bison
Maryland - Eastern Shore
Princess Anne, MD
1886
Public
4,000
1970-1979,
1981-present
Hawks
Morgan State
Baltimore, MD
1867
Public
6,600
1970-1979,
1984-present
Bears
Norfolk State
Norfolk, VA
1935
Public
8,500
1997-present
Spartans
North Carolina A&T
Greensboro, NC
1891
Public
10,400
1970-present
Aggies
South Carolina State
Orangeburg, SC
1896
Public
4,500
1970-present
Bulldogs
Winston-Salem State
Winston-Salem, NC
1892
Public
6,400
2008-present
Rams
North Carolina Central University left MEAC to join the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA) in ...