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Bigger Than Sports: Why Title IX Matters

By Caryn McTighe Musil and Jennifer Hahn, Ms. Magazine. Posted December 25, 2007.


Women's educational equity turns 35, and there's a lot to celebrate.

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Patsy Mink had always dreamed of becoming a doctor, but none of the 20 medical schools she applied to accepted women. Edith Green wanted to become an electrical engineer, but her family told her "not to be silly." Bernice Sandler, teaching part-time at a university after earning her doctorate, learned that her department would not consider her for a full-time position because she "[came] on too strong for a woman."

These three women, carrying with them personal experiences of discrimination, came together in the early 1970s to help create the first legislation specifically prohibiting sex discrimination in education: Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972.

Sandler, an education specialist with the U.S. House of Representative's special subcommittee on education, spent a couple of years lobbying, filing lawsuits and gathering data -- with the support of many feminist organizations -- until she convinced Rep. Edith Green (D-Ore.) to hold the first congressional hearings on sex discrimination in education. Two years later, Green, with the support of Rep. Patsy Mink (D-Hawaii) and others, introduced Title IX, which passed through Congress with little attention and was signed into law by President Richard Nixon.

Though the word "sports" does not appear anywhere in Title IX, the law has become synonymous with increased opportunities for girls in athletics. But this is only a small part of the story: Title IX also played the pivotal role in opening doors to educational opportunities for girls and women in all areas of education, from kindergarten through graduate school.

Every time a girl fixes an engine in auto shop, bubbles in her answers on a less-biased SAT, or successfully files a complaint to stop sexual harassment, she has Title IX to thank. "Before Title IX, if you were discriminated against all you could do is maybe transfer to another school -- if they'd let you," says Sandler, considered the "godmother" of the law. "Title IX [allowed students to] say, 'This is not only wrong; this is illegal.'"

Here are some of the K-12 advances that can be attributed to Title IX:

  • Girls' participation and achievement in math and science has increased substantially.
  • Discrimination against girls and teachers who become pregnant has decreased.
  • All areas of vocational education have been opened to both sexes.
  • Sexual harassment in schools is now clearly illegal.
  • The PSAT and SAT have become less biased against girls.

In colleges and graduate schools, the impact of Title IX has been even more remarkable. Just before Title IX was signed into law, women were underrepresented as undergraduates, at just over 40 percent of all students. By 2005, women students comprised almost three out of five undergraduates and had moved into fields formerly dominated by men, particularly business and the sciences.

In graduate and professional schools, too, young women have enjoyed far greater access: In 1970, women earned only 14 percent of doctoral degrees, but today earn nearly half. In medical schools the numbers jumped from less than 10 percent to nearly 50 percent, and law school numbers from about 7 percent to nearly 49 percent. Armed with their professional degrees in medicine and law, women have entered those professions at steadily increasing rates.


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Caryn McTighe Musil is senior vice president at the Association of American Colleges and Universities (AAC&U). Jennifer Hahn is a research associate for Ms. Kathryn Peltier Campbell and Sue Klein provided research assistance.

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I Rember All Too Well...
Posted by: Turiye on Dec 26, 2007 9:09 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Although it was 1972, after the passage of Title IX, I chose Mechanical Drafting as a course choice in High School. The boys in class had had this course since the 9th grade, I was entering 11th.
The teacher ignored all of my questions and not a single kid in that class would help me, although mechanically inclined I was not familiar with terms and certain tools used. I had to drop the class in order not to receive an incomplete or an F, since my GPA was good. I had to go to the Vice-Principals office in order to drop it. He was a Class 1 putz! I had to listen as he told me " I understand, 'girls' are just not good in math or sciences", I was not known for my tolerance of this shit since both My Mom and Dad were Feminists, but I kept my big mouth shut. I despise him to this day.
My youngest daughter is 18, she has been an Ice Hockey player for over 11 years, youngest player at try outs for the Womens Hockey Team for the last winter Olympics. She and the rest of the women were told only those that made the team would receive a letter. It was an open try out in Cromwell, CT at Yale.
I came home one day, there was a letter from the US Olympic Committee, I knew the youngest person ever taken was 17, due to school obligations. Although she was not on the team, they praised her skating and Hockey skills and looked forward to seeing her at the next Olympic Try outs.
She would not have come as far as she has, along with Field Hockey, La Crosse and Soccer if not for Title IX. It is important and necessary for all female atheletes

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Sports Matter Too...
Posted by: igoeja on Dec 26, 2007 4:36 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Men benefit disproportionately in admissions from sports. In the Game of Life, a book examining sports in college, the author, a former college president, found that jocks were 50% more likely to be admitted compared to other students, and more likely than alumnus' or affirmative action kids, both benefitting by 17%. Although women have increased their academic representation, it is undercut by the free pass jocks receive.

By the way, reducing jocks free ride would not affect the percentage of minorities in higher education, since most jocks are white males.

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Side Effects of Title IX
Posted by: lynned2002 on Dec 26, 2007 7:20 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My son has been an avid sports fan ever since I can remember. Gender does not matter to him, he doesn't know any better. He has been following the Lady Gauchos basketball team from UCSB since he was about 10 years old. His hero is Lindsay Taylor, a woman. 20 years ago a boy never would have had a female sports hero. Yes, there is a lot of work to be done, but we're getting there! By the way, I am a female engineer who has put up with alot of bias. But we are paving the way. You go girls!!

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Curious
Posted by: Amanda_Woods on Dec 28, 2007 8:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In what way is the SAT and PSAT still biased?

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