Intercollegiate Sports in America, 1900-2015
 

Spring 2015

Tuesday 4-6 and online

Home Page at: http://jvl250.com/his15/his15/index.html

The Title IX Revolution

Required Reading
Read at least three in addition to the required items.

Howard J. Savage, et. al. "Athletic Participation and its Results," American College Athletics (New York: Carnegie Foundationfor the Advancement of Teaching, 1929) pp. 104-134.

  1. Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for Women.
  2. The American Sports Council website.
  3. Welch Suggs. "Duke U. Discriminated Against Female Football Player, Jury Finds," The Chronicle of Higher Education (October 13, 2000).
  4. John R. Thelin. "Good Sports? Historical Perspective on the Political Economy of Intercollegiate Athletics in the Era of Title IX, 1972-1997," The Journal of Higher Education (2000).
  5. Tami M. Videon. "Who Plays and Who Benefits: Gender, Interscholastic Athletics, and Academic Outcomes," Sociological Perspectives, Gender and Sports (2002).
  6. Lindsay Bosslett. "Rejecting Punitive Damages in Title IX Cases, Appeals Court Overturns $2-Million Award to Female Kicker," The Chronicle of Higher Education, November 19, 2002.
  7. Karen Blumenthal. "Title IX's Next Hurdle. Three Decades After Its Passage, Rule That Leveled Field for Girls Faces Test From Administration," The Wall Street Journal, July 6, 2005; see also accompanying table.
  8. Victoria Carty. "Textual Portrayals of Female Athletes Liberation or Nuanced Forms of Patriarchy?" Frontiers (26:2, 2005).
  9. Alexa C. Mignano, Britton W. Brewer, Christa Winter, and Judy L. Van Raalte. "Athletic Identity and Student Involvement of Female Athletes at NCAA Division III Women's and Coeducational Colleges," Journal of College Student Development (2006).
  10. Marie Hardin, Julie E. Dodd, and Kimberly Lauffer. "Passing It On: The Reinforcement of Male Hegemony in Sports Journalism Textbooks," Mass Communication and Society (2006).
  11. Deborah J. Anderson, John J. Cheslock, and Ronald G. Ehrenberg. "Gender Equity in Intercollegiate Athletics: Determinants of Title IX Compliance," The Journal of Higher Education (2006).
  12. Kelly P. Troutman and Mikaela J. Dufur. "From High School Jocks to College Grads: Assessing the Long-Term Effects of High School Sport Participation on Females' Educational Attainment," Youth Society (2007).
  13. Cynthia Fabrizio Pelak. "The Relationship Between Sexist Naming Practices and Athletic Opportunities at Colleges and Universities in the Southern United States," Sociology of Education (2008).
  14. Sally R. Ross and Kimberly J. Shinew "Perspectives of Women College Athletes on Sport and Gender," Sex Roles (2008).
  15. Steph MacKay and Christine Dallaire. "Campus Newspaper Coverage of Varsity Sports: Getting Closer to Equitable and Sports-related Representations of Female Athletes?" International Review for the Sociology of Sport (2009).
  16. Laura J. Burton, Carol A. Barr, Janet S. Fink, and Jennifer E. Bruening. "'Think Athletic Director, Think Masculine?': Examination of the Gender Typing of Managerial Subroles Within Athletic Administration Positions," Sex Roles (61, 2009).
  17. Cheryl Cooky. "'Girls Just Aren't Interested': The Social Construction of Interest in Girls' Sport," Sociological Perspectives (52:2, 2009).
  18. Amanda Ross Edwards. "Why Sport? The Development of Sport as a Policy Issue in Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972," The Journal of Policy History (22:3, 2010).
  19. Katie Thomas. "No Tackling, but a Girls' Sport Takes Some Hits [Flag Football]," The New York Times, May 15, 2010.
  20. Alice Dreger. "Sex Typing for Sport," Hastings Center Report (2010).
  21. Thomas J. Aicher and Michael Sagas. "Are Head Coaches in Intercollegiate Athletics Perceived as Masculine? An Evaluation of Gender Stereotypes, and the Effect of Sexism on Intercollegiate Coaches," Gender Issues (27, 2010).
  22. James Card. "Gone Fishing on Scholarship, With Hopes of Turning Pro," Inside Higher Ed, June 22, 2010.
  23. Katie Thomas. "College Team Teaches a Lesson in Acceptance [Gender Roles]," The New York Times (2010).
  24. Laura Grindstaff and Emily West. "'Hands on Hips, Smiles on Lips!' Gender, Race, and the Performance of Spirit in Cheerleading," Text and Performance Quarterly (2010).
  25. Betsey Stevenson. "Beyond the Classroom: Using Title IX to Measure the Return to High School Sports," The Review of Economics and Statistics (2010).
  26. Curtis Eichelberger. "Women Basketball Loses Money for Colleges on High Salaries." Bloomberg April 1, 2011.
  27. Katie Thomas. "Long Fights for Sports Equity, Even With a Law," New York Times, July 28, 2011.
  28. Commitment to Equity (University of Florida: NCAA Self-Study, Certification 1998).
  29. Commitment to Equity (Princeton University: NCAA Self-Study, Certification 1997-98).
  30. R. Vivian Acosta and Linda Jean Carpenter, "Women in Intercollegiate Sport: A Longitudinal, National Study, Thirty-five Year Update (1977-2012)," Brooklyn College, City University of New York, [2012].
  31. National Coalition for Women and Girls in Education (NCWGE), " Title IX at 40: Working to Ensure Gender Equity in Education," Washington, DC: NCWGE, 2012.
  32. Katherine Hobson, "Treat Cheerleaders as Athletes, Pediatrics Academy Advises," Wall Street Journal, October 22, 2012.
  33. Matthew J.X. Malady, "Where Are All the Women Coaches?" Slate.com, Friday, Sept. 28, 2012.
  34. Ben McGrath, "Queen of the D-League, How Does a Woman Coach a Men's Basketball Team?" The New Yorker, April 25, 2011.
  35. Hively, Kimberly and Amani El-Alayli, "'You throw like a girl:' The Effect of Stereotype Threat on Women's Athletic Performance and Gender Stereotypes," Psychology of Sport and Exercise (15, 48-55).
  36. Schull,Vicki, Sally Shaw, and Lisa A. Kihl, "'If A Woman Came In...She Would Have Been Eaten Up Alive'": Analyzing Gendered Political Processes in the Search for an Athletic Director, Gender and Society (27:56, 2013)
  37. Bracken, Nicole M. and Erin Irick. 2004-10 NCAA Gender-Equity Report, NCAA, 2012.

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