LAWRENCE, Kan. — The University of Kansas received a notice of allegations from the N.C.A.A. on Monday that alleges significant violations within its storied men’s basketball program, including a responsibility charge leveled against its Hall of Fame coach, Bill Self.

The notice includes three Level 1 violations tied primarily to recruiting and cites a lack of institutional control. It also includes notice of a secondary violation in football tied to then-coach David Beaty that involved the use of an extra coach during practice.

While the document does not go into detail about what the basketball program is accused of doing, Kansas was among the most prominent programs swept up in an N.C.A.A. probe into a pay-for-play scheme that began with an F.B.I. investigation into the apparel company Adidas. A former Adidas employee testified that he made payments to the family of one Kansas recruit and the guardian of a current player. Text messages presented in court revealed a close relationship between Self and the Adidas employee.

The school said in a statement that it “strongly disagrees with the assertion that it ‘lacks institutional control.’ In fact, the university believes the record will demonstrate just the opposite.”