Title IX Must Be Tailored for Today's Society

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Audience: My audience for this essay will be college age athletes impacted by Title IX.

All is Fair in Love & Sports

In January of 2011, Delaware University announced that it was discontinuing its men’s wrestling, swimming, tennis, and gymnastics programs (Gottesdiener, 2011). Organizations like this are being diminished and discarded at an ever-increasing rate all across America. College and high school students competing in these athletic events are truly passionate about their chosen sport. In many cases, promising athletes are offered scholarships, initiating a symbiotic relationship between the student and the school they play for. In 1972, a new legislation was put forward with the intent of leveling the school-sponsored playing field. “No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, or denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any educational program or activity receiving federal funding” (What Is Title IX, 2014). This law is widely accepted as being an invaluable catalyst for the momentous success in female athletics today. Although Title IX has without a doubt been incredibly beneficial to female sports programs, it has not too recently been the source of some heavy speculation. With justifiable evidence, and passionate fervor, male athletes across America are declaring that Title IX is synonymous with injustice. Title IX was necessary in 1972, but it is now outdated and hindering male athletics. Two conflicting arguments, both with substantial claim, leave room for all but one solution. Title IX, although once successful, must be tailored for today’s society.

Known as a “three-prong test” (Green, 2014) Title IX requires that a university must ...

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...ialization, Media Use and Sports Participation on Perceptions of Gender-Appropriate Sports. Journal Of Sport Behavior, 32(2), 207-226.

Richman, R. (2011). Title IX: The Trojan Horse in the Struggle for Female Athletic Coaches to Attain Equal Opportunities in Intercollegiate Sports. Virginia Sports & Entertainment Law Journal, 10(2), 376-413.

Switzer, Jo Young. "Title IX Is a Success and Should Not Be Blamed for Hurting Men's Sports." Discrimination. Ed. Jacqueline Langwith. Detroit: Greenhaven Press, 2008. Opposing Viewpoints. Rpt. from "Reflections on Title IX: A Voice from Division III." On Campus with Women 32.40606 (2003). Opposing Viewpoints in Context. Web. 6 Mar. 2014.

Cooper, C. (2008). NCAA Website Coverage: An Analysis of Similar Sport Team Gender Coverage on Athletic Department's Home Web Pages. Journal Of Intercollegiate Sport, 1(2), 227-241

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