E. Gordon Gee, "Title IX and the Restructuring of Intercollegiate Athletics"
(page 2 of 4)
Sometimes, people seem more eager to shout about Title IX than to
understand what it is and how it operates. Strong misconceptions about
college athletics have clouded understanding of what Title IX is and
what it can actually do. So before one can begin a sensitive and
well-informed discussion of Title IX's policy implications, some basic
facts need to be considered.
Fact Number One: Football does not "pay for" women's sports at
most of the institutions belonging to the NCAA. Most Division I-A
football programs run substantial yearly deficits and cannot even pay
for themselves, let alone fifty percent of a university's athletic
program.
Fact Number Two: In "Fact Number One" above, you can take out
the word "Football" and insert the words "men's basketball," and the
statement will still be true.
Fact Number Three: Nearly every college athletic program in
this country is a subsidized program.
Fact Number Four: When a university cuts programs to balance
its budget, athletic programs are usually among the last to be cut. The
suspicion that administrators look for any excuse to cut athletic
programs is without foundation. Most administrators see the energy and
excitement sports programs bring to a campus as benefits too dear to
lose.
It seems that not everyone is aware of these facts. Most of the
popularly conceived "problems" that critics of Title IX find with the
measure are based on outrageous (by which I do mean outrage-inducing)
fantasy, while the more critical (and actual) problems that surround
Title IX get overlooked - or do not even enter the imagination.
One of the first controversies over Title IX to emerge in
higher-education circles had to do with the notion of institutional
autonomy - for although schools might have agreed strongly with the policy
of expanding opportunities for women in sports, many were concerned
about judicial interference and felt that they alone should decide what
their policies should be. Sometimes, they would discover that compliance
with Title IX actually required less representation of the female
population than their athletics program had already achieved and would
wonder why they were not being allowed to regulate themselves.
In 1972, when Title IX was passed by Congress, opportunities for
women to compete in college sports were woefully inadequate, and their
programs were seriously and shamefully underfinanced in budgets weighted
heavily toward men's sports. Whether a school had long been
coeducational or whether it had only recently admitted women did not
make a difference. The world of college sports had to be altered
dramatically to allow for women to participate on equal terms. However,
when studying a policy - especially one as fraught as Title IX - one needs
to look not just at the policy's intent, but also at the means chosen to
bring about the desired change. We can all accept the principles behind
Title IX, but we must also examine the means that have developed in
order to promote the policy.
By any measure, Title IX shifted the
landscape of women's sports in this country for the better. American
women are now a dominant force in international competition. NCAA
championship teams in women's basketball and soccer now fill the
headlines in sports pages and draw the crowds and revenues that follow
popularity. Nearly every athletic director in the country mentions the
success of women's teams as much as men's. Title IX was largely
responsible for this shift in the culture.
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