Title: TITLE IX
1TITLE IX
- NAIA Convention
- April 14, 2008
- Theresa Berg
- Associate Athletic Director
- Niagara University
- tberg_at_niagara.edu
- (716) 286-8603
2TITLE IX of the Education Amendments 1972
- No person in the United States shall, on the
basis of sex, be excluded from participation in,
be denied the benefits of or be subjected to
discrimination under any education program or
activity receiving Federal financial assistance. - - 20 U.S.C. Section 1681
3BRIEF HISTORY
- Enactment of Title IX
- After voting down the amendment that would have
exempted revenue-producing sports under Title IX,
Congress adopted the Javits Amendment for Title
IX regulations to take in consideration the
nature of certain sports. - 1980 Department of Education is established and
Office of Civil Rights (OCR) oversees and
enforces Title IX
- 1984 Grove City v. Bell, the Court determined
that Title IX pertained only to
programs/activities receiving direct Federal
financial aid - 1988 Civil Rights Restoration Act was passed
mandating that schools receiving any type of
Federal financial aid must adhere to Title IX
- 1992 Franklin v. Gwinnet County Public Schools,
the Court ruled compensatory and punitive damages
could be awarded
- 2002 Commission on Opportunity in Athletics
appointed to review Title IX on its 30th
anniversary
- 2003 Decision to uphold Title IX is announced and
compliance standards remain the same
- 2005 Jackson v. Birmingham Board of Education,
the Court ruled individuals are protected from
retaliation for protesting sex discrimination
- OCR issues Further Clarification letter
threatening Title IX
4Title IX Requirements
- Participation
- Athletic financial assistance
- Other program areas benefits, opportunities, and
treatments
5REQUIREMENT 1 - PARTICIPATION Three Prong Test
- Prong One or Proportionality Prong
- Male and female athletes are substantially
proportionate to their respective undergraduate
enrollments OR
- Prong Two
- Demonstrate a history and continuing practice of
expanding opportunities for the underrepresented
sex (usually females) OR
- Prong Three
- Completely and effectively accommodate the
interests and abilities of the underrepresented
sex
6SURVEYS AND PRONG THREE
- The Additional Clarification creates a
- loophole and shifts responsibility from the
- school to the student in complying with
- Prong Three. Surveys should not and can
- not stand alone in determining how to
- fully and effectively accommodate the
- interests and abilities of students (Prong
- Three).
- - NCWGE, 2007
7REQUIREMENT 2FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE
- Athletic Scholarships
-
- Total scholarship dollars allocated to male and
- female sport teams do not have to be equal but
- must be in proportion to the percentage of male
- and female student-athletes.
- Example If 60 of the athletes are male, then
60 of the scholarship money is to be allocated
to the male athletes.
- - Reith (WSF), 2004
8REQUIREMENT 3OTHER PROGRAM AREAS
- Comparisons are to be made between male and
female programs in their entirety not sport by
sport. Also, Title IX does not require that each
team get exactly the same services and supplies
or that equal dollars are spent between the sport
teams (Javits Amendment). Rather they must
receive fair treatment and benefits. In assessing
these program areas schools need to evaluate the
quality, amount, suitability, maintenance and
replacement, and availability. - - Reith (WSF), 2004
9REQUIREMENT 3THE LAUNDRY LIST
- Equipment and Supplies
- Scheduling of Games and Practice Times
- Travel and Daily Allowance
- Access to Tutoring
- Coaching
- Locker Rooms, Practice and Competitive
Facilities
- Medical and Training Facilities and Services
- Housing and Dining Facilities and Services
- Publicity
- Recruitment of Student-Athletes
- Support Services
10MYTH Title IX only pertains to athletics.
- FACT Although Title IX is
- associated mostly with athletic
- programs, it is not just a sports law.
- The law applies to all educational
- programs of institutions that receive
- federal funds.
- - Reith (WSF), 2004
11MYTH Girls and women are less interested in
sports than boys and men.
- FACT This is a gender-based stereotype
- that perpetuates discrimination and will
- not hold up in court. If athletic
- opportunities are available, girls and
- women will get involved. This is proven
- by the dramatic rise in participation at
- the high school level since 1972.
- - NCWGE, 2007
12MYTH Title IX requires Prong One or the
Proportionality Prong to be met.
- FACT Schools have three different
- ways to comply with the participation
- requirement of Title IX giving
- administration flexibility to decide how
- they will allocate equal athletic
- opportunities to men and women.
- - NCWGE, 2007
13MYTH The three prong test requires quotas for
women.
- FACT Quotas are based on pre-
- determined numbers and the three prong
- test has no such numerical requirements
- but rather provides benchmarks for
- schools to decide how to allocate
- athletic opportunities fairly.
- - NCWGE, 2007
14MYTH Schools must offer the same number of mens
and womens teams.
- FACT Equal participation opportunities
- most be afforded to both genders. Schools
- do not have to offer the same number of
- teams or a particular sport.
- NGWSE, 2007
- www.womenssportsfoundation.org
-
15MYTH Athletic opportunities for men have
decreased due to Title IX.
- FACT Participation rates have increased
- for both men and women at the high
- school and college levels.
- - NCWGE, 2007
16CHANGES IN INTERCOLLEGIATE PARTICIPATION BY
GENDER 1981-1999- United States General
Accounting Office 2001
17CHANGES IN INTERCOLLEGIATE PARTICIPATION BY
GENDER 2001-2004- Cheslock, J. Whos Playing
College Sports? Womens Sports Foundation, 2007
18MYTH Schools must cut mens athletic teams to be
in compliance with Title IX.
- FACT Title IX does not mandate a
- certain number of sport teams or equal
- number of sport teams between men and
- women rather that both sexes have equal
- opportunities to participate in sports.
- - NCWGE, 2007
19NCAA AND NAIA INSTITUTIONS NET OUTCOME OF ADDED
AND DISCONTINUED TEAMS- United States General
Accounting Office, 2001
20NCAA AND NAIA ADDITION AND DISCONTINUATION OF
MENS TEAMS- United States General Accounting
Office, 2001
21NCAA AND NAIA EXAMPLES OF DISCONTINUED TEAMS IN
SELECTED SPORTS THROUGH 2001- United States
General Accounting Office, 2001
22NCAA AND NAIA EXAMPLES OF ADDED TEAMS IN
SELECTED SPORTS THROUGH 2001- United States
General Accounting Office, 2001
23ACOSTA/CARPENTER STUDY 1977-2008
- HIGHEST EVER PARTICIPATION BY FEMALE ATHLETES
- Highest ever number of womens teams 9101 teams,
8.65 per school
- Five move frequently offered sports for women
are, in order
- (1) Basketball, 98.8 of schools have a team,
(2) Volleyball, 95.7, (3) Soccer, 92.0, (4)
Cross-Country, 90.8, (5) Softball, 89.2.
- REPRESENTATION OF FEMALES AS COACHES OF WOMENS
TEAMS REMAINS LOW
- 42.8 of womens teams are coached by a female
head coach.
- 57.2 of womens teams are coached by a male head
coach.
- 2 to 3 of mens teams are coached by a female
head coach.
- 20.6 of all teams (mens and womens) are
coached by a female head coach
- When Title IX was enacted in 1972, over 90 of
the head coaches for womens teams and about 2
of the coaches of mens teams were females.
24ACOSTA/CARPENTER STUDY 1977-2008
- HIGHEST EVER NUMBER OF PAID ASSISTANT COACHES OF
WOMENS TEAMS 57.1
- HIGHEST REPRESENTATION OF FEMALE ADs SINCE MID
70s
- 21.3 of athletics directors are females. This
represents a significant increase from 18.6 in
2006. In 1972 when Title IX was enacted, females
served as athletics directors in over 90 of
programs for women. - Some schools have no female voice, at any level,
in the athletics administrative structures. The
percentage of schools totally lacking a female
voice has dropped from 14.5 in 2006 to 11.6 in
2008. - The most common administrative structure is
composed of three administrators a male
athletics director and one female
assistant/associate and one male
assistant/associate. - ONLY 27.3 OF HEAD ATHLETIC TRAINERS ARE FEMALES
- ONLY 11.3 OF HEAD SPORTS INFORMATION DIRECTORS
ARE FEMALES
- HIGHEST EVER NUMBER OF FEMALES EMPLOYED IN
INTERCOLLEGIATE AHTLETICS
25ACOSTA/CARPENTER STUDY 1977-2008
- PARTICIPATION OPPORTUNITIES FOR FEMALE ATHLETES
COMMENTARY
- Why participation rates are at their highest
levels ever
- Second generation of Title IX beneficiaries
- Lawsuits supportive of Title IX
- Societal acceptance of females as athletes
- Improved and increased media coverage
- Advocacy efforts of individuals/organizations
- However, the interests and abilities of female
college
- athletes have not been exhausted. There is room
for only 1
- out of 17 female high school athletes on current
college
- teams.
26Dropping Sports Complex Decision
- Declining interest in a specific sport nationally
or regionally
- Increased liability
- Sport program has a history of poor performance
- Lack of sport sponsorship in the conference or
region
- Administrative philosophy to allocate resources
to a select number of sport programs in the
department
- - NCWGE, 2007
27Creating an Equitable Athletics Department
Financial Considerations
- Reallocate a percentage of funds of sports
receiving an excessive amount
- Drop minor mens sports (this is not in the
spirit of Title IX) to maintain top mens teams
and fund new womens teams
- Tier sports according to how each group will be
funded
- - NCWGE, 2007
28Additional Financial Considerations
- Contract Limitations
- Debt Service and Capital Expenditures
- Recruiting Reform
- Size of Coaching Staffs
- Size of Non-Coaching Staffs
- Size of Administrative Staffs
- Excessive and Unnecessary Expenditures
- Scholarships
- Travel Expenses
- Number of Competitions
- Sport Budget Limits
- Roster Limits
- - NCWGE, 2007
29CURRENT EVENTSAND
30GENDER EQUITY
- Gender equity is an atmosphere and a reality
where fair distribution of overall athletic
opportunity and resources are proportionate to
women and men and where no student-athlete,
coach, or athletic administrator is discriminated
against in any way in the athletic program on the
basis of gender. That is to say, an athletic
program is gender equitable when the mens sports
program would be pleased to accept for its own
the overall participation, opportunities and
resources currently allocated to the womens
program and vice versa. - - NCAA Gender Equity Task Force
31RESOURCES
- Acosta, R. Vivian Carpenter, Linda J. (2008).
Women in Intercollegiate Sport. A Longitudinal,
National Study Thirty One Year Update 1977-2008.
Brooklyn, NY Project on Women and Social Change
Brooklyn College of the City University of New
York. - Cheslock, J. (2007). Whos Playing College
Sports? Trends in Participation. East Meadow, NY
Womens Sports Foundation.
- National Coalition for Women and Girls in
Education (NCWGE), Title IX Athletics Policies.
Issues and Data for Education Decision Makers,
Updated May 10, 2007. - Reith, Kathryn M. (2004). Playing Fair. A
Womens Sports Foundation Guide to Title IX in
High School and College Sports. East Meadow, NY
Womens Sports Foundation. -
32WEBSITES
- http//bailiwick.lib.uiowa.edu/ge
- www.ncwge.org
- www.womenssportsfoundation.org
- www.titleix.info