SCHUBERT ATHLETICS STUDY CENTER
The Athletics Study Center
(ASC) was opened in April 2008. Located
in Hyslop 113, and part of the overall Athletics Academic Services department,
the ASC provides a comfortable study setting that houses desktop computers, a
printer and laptop computers that are available
for use on road trips and within the ASC. Mandatory and non-mandatory study
table is held in the ASC.

Athletics Study Center (ASC)
Rules
- Individual study time is
NOT social time; no talking.
- Food and drink are not
allowed.
- Facebook, MySpace,
Twitter (all social networking sites) and other non-academic websites are not
allowed. Time spent at study table is for academic purposes only.
- Student-athletes will not
be able to save to any hard drive. Work should be saved on a flash drive or
emailed to U-mail accounts. All hard drives will automatically be purged each
night.
- If one experiences any
difficulty with a computer, laptop or the printer, help should be sought from
an ASC monitor.
- It is the
student-athlete's responsibility to check in and check out of the ASC with the
ASC monitor. No study table hours will be recorded manually.
- Hats are not permitted to
be worn in the study center.
Athletics Study Center (ASC)
Hours of Operation
Student-athletes may record
their study table hours during the academic year within the following hours of operation:
Monday-Thursday: 8:30 a.m.-9 p.m.
Friday: 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.
Dedicated to George and Arlin Schubert
The academics center was founded thanks to the generous donation by George and Arline Schubert, who established an endowment to support the works of the athletics academic support program.
George Schubert is
professor and dean emeritus at the
University of North Dakota. He has
authored books, book chapters and over 70 published papers. He taught at
UND,
where he served as chair of the department of speech-language pathology
and
audiology and also served as NCAA faculty representative. He retired
from UND
in 1999, but continues to research, write and publish.
Arline
Schubert earned a bachelor's degree in English
education from UND, a masters degree in speech and, after 18 years of
teaching
high school, came back to UND to earn her doctorate of juris prudence
from the UND School
of Law. She practiced law for 18 years, served as assistant attorney
general
for North Dakota,
and an attorney for UND. Several of her
articles on the topic of sports and gender equity have appeared in the
Law
Review.