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Gender and Sports

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Title: Gender and Sports


1
  • Gender and Sports
  • Does Equity Require Ideological Changes?

2
What is sex?
  • The biological characteristics of maleness of
    femaleness.

3
Three biological characteristics can be used to
identify a persons sex.
  • Physical Appearance
  • Genitalia are commonly used at birth, but not
    without some occasional errors.
  • Hermaphrodite
  • Physical abnormality

4
The Second Biological Characteristic
  • Hormones
  • Hormones can also be used, but hormone levels
    vary greatly between members of the same sex.
  • Hormone levels are also influenced by physical
    activity.
  • Males and females have the same hormones.
  • Estrogen
  • Testosterone

5
The Third Biological Characteristic
  • Chromosomes
  • Chromosome testing is used to measure the
    presence of either XX or XY pairs.
  • Chromosome testing is not frequently done, but
    when the test is done some errors do occur.
  • Olympic FEM-testing has been criticized for many
    years.
  • Errors are associated with all methods of
    determining individual sex.

6
Sex Category is the assigning of a person (or
self) to either male or female sex.
  • What attributes do people use to identify
    someone's sex?
  • Hair length?
  • Physique?
  • Skin complexion?
  • Voice?
  • How often are you wrong???

7
Will women ever be able to
  • Run as fast?
  • Jump as high?
  • Lift as much?

8
Sexism
  • The belief that a persons behavior is the product
    of their biological sex.

9
Participation and Equity Issues
  • Participation by girls women has increased
    dramatically since the early 1980s due to
  • New opportunities
  • Government equal rights legislation
  • Global womens rights movement
  • Expanding health fitness movement
  • Increased media coverage of womens sports

10
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11
Reasons For Caution When Predicting Future
Participation (1-4)
  • Budget cutbacks and the privatization of sport
    programs
  • Resistance to government regulations
  • Backlash among those who resent strong women
  • Under representation of women in decision-making
    positions in sport programs

12
Reasons For Caution When Predicting Future
Participation (5-7)
  • Continued emphasis on cosmetic fitness
  • Trivialization of womens sports
  • Homophobia and the threat of being labeled
    lesbian

13
Gender and Fairness Issues in Sports
  • Inequities in participation opportunities
  • Often grounded in dominant definitions of
    femininity in a culture
  • May be related to religious beliefs
  • Establishing legal definitions of equity
  • Support for athletes
  • Jobs for women in coaching and administration

14
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15
Legal Definitions Title IX in the US
  • Title IX requires compliance
    with one of these three tests
  • The proportionality test
  • A 5 percentage point deviation is okay
  • The history of progress test
  • Judged by actions progress over past 3 years
  • The accommodation of interest test
  • Programs teams meet the interests and abilities
    of the under represented sex

16
Title IX Categories of Support for Athletes
  • Access to facilities
  • Quality of facilities
  • Availability of scholarships
  • Program operating expenses
  • Recruiting budgets
  • Scheduling of games practice times
  • Travel and per diem expenses
  • Academic tutoring
  • Number of coaches
  • Salaries for all staff and administrators
  • Medical training services and facilities
  • Publicity for players, teams, and events

17
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18
Coaching and Administration Reasons for Under
Representation
  • Women have fewer established connections in elite
    programs
  • Subjective evaluative criteria used by search
    committees
  • Support systems professional development
    opportunities for women have been scarce

19
Coaching and Administration Reasons for Under
Representation
  • Many women do not see spaces for them in
    corporate cultures of sport programs
  • Sport organizations are seldom sensitive to
    family responsibilities among coaches and
    administrators
  • Women may anticipate sexual harassment and more
    demanding standards than those used to judge men

20
Strategies to Promote Gender Equity (1-4)
  • Confront discrimination and be an advocate for
    women coaches and administrators
  • Be an advocate of fair and open employment
    practices
  • Keep data on gender equity
  • Learn and educate others about the history of
    discrimination in sports and how to identify
    discrimination

21
Strategies to Promote Gender Equity (5-9)
  • Inform media of unfair and discriminatory
    policies
  • Package womens sports as revenue producers
  • Recruit women athletes into coaching
  • Use womens hiring networks
  • Create a supportive climate for women in your
    organization

22
Cheerleaders Reproducing Definitions of
Femininity?
  • Cheerleading in the late 1800s was a male
    activity it changed after World War II
  • Cheerleading today is a diverse phenomenon, but
    cheerleading sometimes is organized in ways that
    reproduce traditional gender logic
  • Be attractive, and pure wholesome
  • Support men as they work
  • Be an emotional leader without receiving material
    rewards

23
The Two-Gender Classification System
24
Girls and Women As Agents of Change
  • Sport participation can empower women
  • But this does not occur automatically
  • But personal empowerment is not necessarily
    associated with an awareness of the need for
    gender transformation in society as a whole
  • But elite athletes seldom are active agents of
    change when it comes to gender ideology

25
Why Elite Athletes Seldom Challenge Traditional
Gender Ideology
  • Women athletes often fear being tagged as
    ungrateful, man-haters, or lesbians
  • Corporation-driven celebrity-feminism focuses
    on individualism and consumption, not everyday
    struggles related to gender
  • Empowerment discourses in sports are tied to
    fitness and heterosexual attractiveness
  • Women athletes have little control or political
    voice in sports or society at large

26
Boys and Men As Agents of Change
  • Gender equity also is a mens issue
  • Equity involves creating options for men to play
    sports not based exclusively on a power and
    performance model
  • Equity emphasizes relationships based on
    cooperation rather than conquest and domination

27
Changes in Gender Ideology Prerequisites for
Gender Equity
  • Gender ideology is crucial because
  • Gender is a fundamental organizing principle of
    social life
  • Gender logic influences how we
  • Think of self and other
  • How we relate to others
  • How we present ourselves
  • How we think about and plan for our future

28
Gender Logic
  • Based on a
  • Two-category Classification System
  • Assumes two mutually exclusive categories
    heterosexual male and heterosexual female
  • These categories are perceived in terms of
    difference, and as opposites
  • System leaves no space for those who do not fit
    into either of the two categories
  • The two categories are not equal when it comes to
    access to power

29
Sports Celebrations of Masculinity
  • Gender is not fixed in nature therefore, people
    must work to maintain definitions
  • Sports are sites for preserving forms of gender
    logic that privilege men marginalize women
  • Dominant sport forms highlight and reward
    virility, power, and toughness
  • Sport images and discourse glorify a heroic
    manhood based on being a warrior

30
Gender Logic in Sports Girls and Women As
Invaders
  • Girls and women in sports often threaten the
    preservation of traditional gender logic
  • Through history, myths have been used to
    discourage participation by girls and women
  • Encouragement varies by sport, and whether the
    sport emphasizes grace or power
  • Being a tomboy is okay as long as traditional
    femininity cues are presented

31
Women Bodybuilders Expanding Definitions of
Femininity?
  • Competitive bodybuilding for women did not exist
    before the 1970s
  • Women bodybuilders often are perceived as deviant
    in terms of gender definitions
  • Women bodybuilders challenge traditional
    definitions of gender, despite commercial images
    that highlight heterosexual attractiveness
  • Femininity insignias are used to avoid social
    marginalization

32
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33
Gender-based Double StandardsDo They Exist in
Sports?
  • What would happen if
  • Mia Hamm beat up a man or a couple of women in a
    bar fight?
  • A rugby team mooned tourists in Washington, DC?
  • A basketball player had four children with four
    different men?
  • Anna Kournikova was photographed with near naked
    men ogling and hanging on her?

34
Homophobia in Sports
  • Popular discourse erases the existence of gay men
    and lesbians in sports
  • Gay men and lesbians challenge the two-category
    gender classification system
  • Being out in sports creates challenges
  • Women risk acceptance
  • Men risk acceptance and physical safety
  • Most people in sports hold a Dont ask, dont
    tell policy concerning homosexuality

35
Strategies for Changing Ideology and Culture
  • There is a need for
  • Alternative definitions of masculinity
  • Critically question violent destructive
    behavior
  • Alternative definitions of femininity
  • Becoming like men is not the goal
  • Changing the ways we talk about do sports
  • Lifetime participation, an ethic of care, gender
    equity, and bringing boys and girls and men and
    women together to share sport experiences

36
  • Race and Ethnicity
  • Are They Important in Sports?

37
Defining Race Ethnicity
  • Race refers to a category of people regarded as
    socially distinct
  • Share genetic traits believed to be important
    by those with power and influence in society
  • An ethnic group is a socially distinct population
    that shares a way of life
  • Committed to the ideas, norms, and things that
    constitute that way of life

38
Minority Group
  • Refers to a socially identified collection of
    people who
  • Experience systematic discrimination
  • Suffer social disadvantages because of
    discrimination
  • Possess a self-consciousness based on their
    shared experiences

39
The Concept of Race
  • Racial categories are social creations based on
    meanings given to selected physical traits
  • Race is not a valid biological concept
  • Verified by data from Human Genome Project
  • Racial classifications ambiguous
  • because they are based on continuous traits with
    arbitrary lines drawn to create categories
  • Racial classifications vary from culture to
    culture

40
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41
Racial Categories Drawing Lines in Society
Snow white
Midnight black
Continuous Traits skin color, height, brain
size, nose width, leg length, leg length ratio,
of fast twitch muscle fibers, etc. Discrete
Traits blood type, sickle cell trait,
etc. Racial category lines can be drawn anywhere
and everywhere! We could draw 2 or 2000 the
decision is a social one, not a biological one.
Some people draw many others draw few.
42
Race in the United States
  • A primitive but powerful classification system
    has been used in the U.S.
  • It is a two-category system based on the rule of
    hypo-descent or the one-drop rule
  • The rule was developed by white men to insure the
    purity of the white race and property control
    by white men
  • Mixed-race people challenge the validity of this
    socially influential way of defining race

43
Tiger Woods Disrupting Dominant Race Logic
  • CABLINASIAN
  • CA Caucasian
  • BL Black
  • IN Indian
  • ASIAN Asian

44
Using Critical Theory to Ask Questions About
Racial Classification Systems
  • Which classification systems are used?
  • Who uses them?
  • Why are some people so dedicated to using certain
    classification systems?
  • What are the consequences of usage?
  • Can negative consequences be minimized?
  • Can the systems be challenged?
  • What occurs when systems change?

45
Race Ideology in History
  • Racial classification systems were developed as
    Caucasian Europeans explored and colonized the
    globe
  • These systems were used to justify colonization,
    conversion, and even slavery and genocide
  • According to these systems, white skin was the
    standard, and dark skin was associated with
    intellectual inferiority and arrested development

46
Race Ideology in Sports Today
  • Race logic encourages people to
  • See sport performances in racial terms, i.e.,
    in terms of skin color
  • Use whiteness as the taken-for-granted standard
  • Explain the success or failure of people with
    dark skin in racial terms
  • Do studies to discover racial difference

47
Traditional Race Logic Used in Sports
  • Achievements of White Athletes are due to
  • Character
  • Culture
  • Organization
  • Achievements of Black Athletes are due to
  • Biology
  • Natural physical abilities

48
Searching For Jumping Genes in Black Bodies
  • Why is the search misleading?
  • Based on oversimplified ideas about genes and how
    they work
  • Assumes that jumping is a simple physical
    activity related to a single gene or interrelated
    set of genes
  • Begins with skin color and social definitions of
    race

49
A Sociological Hypothesis
  • Race logic discrimination sport opportunities
  • Beliefs about biological cultural destiny
  • Motivation to develop skills
  • OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENTS

50
The Power of Race Logic
  • Black male students often have a difficult time
    shaking athlete labels based on race logic
  • Young people from all racial backgrounds may make
    choices influenced by race logic
  • In everyday life, race logic is related to the
    cultural logic of gender and social class

51
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52
Sport Participation andAfrican Americans
  • The facts show that
  • Prior to the 1950s, African Americans faced a
    segregated sport system
  • African Americans participate in a very limited
    range of sports
  • African American men and women are under
    represented in most sports

53
Sport Participation andNative Americans
  • Native Americans comprise dozens of diverse
    cultural groups
  • Traditional Native American sports combine
    physical activities with ritual and ceremony
  • Native Americans often fear losing their culture
    when they play Anglo sports
  • Stereotypes used in sports discourage Native
    American participation

54
Images of Native Americans in Sports
  • Using stereotypes of Native Americans as a basis
    for team names, logos, and mascots is a form of
    bigotry
  • regardless of the intentions
  • Are there conditions under which a group or
    organizations could use the cultural and
    religious images of others for their own
    purposes?
  • What would happen if a school named their teams
    the Olympians and used the Olympic logo (5-Rings)
    as their logo?

55
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56
Sport Participation andLatinos Hispanics
  • The experiences of Latino athletes have been
    ignored until recently
  • Stereotypes about physical abilities have
    influenced perceptions of Latino athletes
  • Latinos now make up 25 of Major League Baseball
    players
  • Latinos often confront discrimination in school
    sports
  • Latinos have been overlooked due to faulty
    generalizations about gender and culture

57
Sport Participation andAsian Americans
  • The cultural heritage and histories of Asian
    Americans are very diverse
  • The sport participation patterns of Asian
    Americans vary with their immigration histories
  • Little is known about how the images of Asian
    American athletes are represented in the media
    and minds of people in the U.S.

58
The Dynamics of Racial Ethnic Relations in
Sports
  • Race and ethnicity remain significant in sports
    today
  • Todays challenges are not the ones faced in the
    past
  • Racial and ethnic issues DO NOT disappear when
    desegregation occurs
  • The challenge of dealing with inter-group
    relations never disappears
  • changes in terms of the issues that must be
    confronted

59
Eliminating Racial Ethnic Exclusion in Sports
(I)
  • Changes are most likely when
  • People with power and control benefit from
    progressive changes
  • Individual performances can be measured precisely
    and objectively
  • Members of an entire team benefit from the
    achievements of teammates

60
Eliminating Racial Ethnic Exclusion in Sports
(II)
  • Changes are most likely when
  • Superior performances do not lead to automatic
    promotions
  • Team success does not depend on off-the-field
    friendships

61
The Biggest Challenge Integrating Positions of
Power
  • Power in sports is not readily shared
  • Even when sport participation is racially and
    ethnically mixed
  • The movement of minorities into coaching and
    administrative positions has been very slow
  • Social and legal pressures are still needed
    before power is fully shared

62
Needed Changes
  • Regular and direct confrontation
  • of racial and ethnic issues by people in
    positions of power
  • A new vocabulary
  • dealing with new forms of racial and ethnic
    diversity
  • Training sessions dealing with practical problems
    and issues
  • Not just feelings

63
The Racially Natural Athlete?
  • There is no evidence showing that skin color is
    related to physical traits that are essential for
    athletic excellence across sports
  • or in any particular sport

64
Socially Constructing the Black Male Body Race
Ideology in Action
  • In Euro-American history there has been
  • Strong fears of the physical power and prowess of
    (oppressed) black men
  • Powerful anxieties about the sexual appetites and
    capabilities of (angry) black men
  • Deep fascination with the movement of the black
    body
  • THEREFORE, the black male body
  • valuable entertainment commodity

65
Research Summary(Genetic Factors Athletic
Performance)
  • Are there genetic differences between
    individuals? YES
  • Are genetic characteristics related to athletic
    excellence? YES
  • Could one gene account for success across a range
    of different sports? PROBABLY NOT
  • Might skin color genes physical performance
    genes be connected? NO EVIDENCE

66
Research Summary (Continued)
  • Are physical development the expression of
    skills in sports related to cultural definitions
    of skin color and race? DEFINITELY YES
  • Do cultural ideas about skin color race
    influence the interpretation of and meaning given
    to the movement and achievements of athletes?
    DEFINITELY YES

67
Social Origins of Athletic Excellence
  • A cultural emphasis on achievement in activities
    that have special cultural meaning
  • Resources to support widespread participation
    among young people
  • Opportunities to gain rewards through success
  • Access to those who can teach tactics and
    strategies

68
Consequences of Race Ideology in Sports
  • Desegregation of revenue producing sports
  • Continued racial exclusion in social sports
  • Position stacking in team sports
  • Racialized interpretations of achievements
  • Management barriers for blacks
  • Skewed distribution of African Americans in U.S.
    colleges and universities

69
Sport in SocietyIssues and Controversies
  • Chapter 12
  • Sports and the Media
  • Could They Survive
    Without Each Other?

70
Characteristics of the Media
  • Print media words images printed on paper
  • Newspapers, magazines fanzines, books,
    catalogues, event programs, trading cards
  • Electronic media words, commentary, images we
    receive through audio and/or video devices
  • Radio, television, film, video games, the
    internet and computer publications

71
The Media Provide
  • Information
  • Interpretation
  • Entertainment

72
Media Content
  • Media content is always edited and
    re-presented by those who control them
  • Editing decisions are based on one or more of
    these goals
  • Making profits
  • Shaping values
  • Providing a public service
  • Building artistic and technical reputations
  • Expressing self

73
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74
Media and Power
  • The media often serve the interests of those
    with power and wealth in society
  • As corporate control of media has increased
    become more concentrated, media content
    emphasizes
  • Consumerism
  • Individualism
  • Competition
  • Class inequality
  • as natural and necessary in society

75
What If . . .
  • All television documentaries were sponsored by
    environmental groups, or by womens
    organizations, or by labor organizations?
  • Would we ask questions about the content of those
    programs, why we see what we see, why we hear
    what we hear?
  • 99 of all sports programming in the media was
    sponsored by capitalist corporations?
  • Should we ask questions about the content of
    those programs and whose interests they might
    serve?

76
Characteristics of the Internet
  • The Internet
  • Extends and radically changes our connections
    with the world
  • Is not limited to sequential programming
  • Enables each of us to be the editors of our own
    media experiences
  • Gives us the potential to create our own
    spectator sport realities and experiences

77
Video Games Virtual Sports
  • Research is needed to
    help answer questions such as
  • Do video games replace time spent watching media
    sports?
  • What are the dynamics of playing video sport
    games and virtual sports?
  • What are the differences between playing a video
    sport game and playing in organized sports or in
    informal games?

78
Do Sports Depend on the Media?
  • No, when they exist for the players themselves
  • Yes, when they are forms of commercial
    entertainment
  • Media coverage attracts attention and provides
    news of results
  • Television has been a key factor in the growth
    and expansion of commercial sports
  • Television expands commercial value of sports

79
Have the Media Corrupted Sports?
  • This is not likely because
  • Sports are not shaped primarily by the media in
    general or TV in particular
  • Sports are social constructions that emerge in
    connection with many different social
    relationships
  • The media, including TV, do not operate in a
    political and economic vacuum
  • Government regulates the media, and economic
    factors set limits to control

80
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81
Do the Media Depend on Sports?
  • Most media do not depend on sports for content or
    sales
  • Daily newspapers have depended on sports
    sections to boost circulation and advertising
    revenues
  • Many television companies have depended on sports
    to fill program schedules, attract male viewers
    and the sponsors that want to reach them
  • Many sport events have audiences with clearly
    identifiable demographics

82
Trends in Televised Sports
  • Rights fees have escalated rapidly since the
    1960s
  • Sports programming has increased dramatically
  • As more events are covered, ratings for
    particular events have decreased
  • Audience fragmentation has occurred
  • Television companies use sports events to promote
    other programming
  • Television companies increasingly own teams and
    events

83
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85
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86
Global Economic Factors in the Sports-Media
Relationship
  • Global economic factors have intensified the
    sport-media relationship because transnational
    corporations have needed vehicles for developing
  • Global name recognition
  • Global cultural legitimacy
  • Global product familiarity
  • Global ideological support for a way of life
    based on consumption, competition, individual
    achievement, and comparisons of status and
    material possessions

87
Alcohol Tobacco Sponsorships
  • Corporations that sell alcohol and tobacco see
    sports as a key vehicle for promoting their
    products in connection with activities defined as
    healthy by most people
  • If they cannot sponsor televised events, they
    will put signage on people, equipment, and
    facilities to be seen during television coverage

88
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89
Corporate Executives Television Sports
Sponsorships
  • Many male executives of large media corporations
    love sports
  • Masculine culture is deeply embedded in these
    corporations
  • When sport emphasizes competition, domination,
    and achievement, executives feel that these are
    crucial factors in their companies
  • They will pay big money to hire coaches to
    motivate employees around these themes

90
Images and Messages in Media Sports (I)
  • Media coverage is constructed around specific
    themes and messages
  • Success themes
  • Emphasis on winners, losers, and final scores
  • Emphasis on big plays, big hits, and sacrificing
    self for team success
  • Masculinity and femininity themes
  • Coverage privileges men over women
  • Heterosexuality is assumed homosexuality is
    erased
  • Coverage reproduces dominant ideas about manhood

91
Images and Messages in Media Sports (II)
  • Race and ethnicity themes
  • Racial ideology has influenced coverage of black
    athletes
  • Whiteness is erased in coverage it is assumed as
    the standard
  • Nationalism
  • We - They distinctions are common
  • Individualism
  • Mental and physical aggression

92
Media Impact on Sport-Related Behaviors
  • Active participation in sports
  • Some negative, some positive effects
  • Attendance at sport events
  • Generally increase attendance at elite events,
    but may decrease it at local events
  • Gambling on sports
  • Media are indirectly linked to gambling
  • Internet may change this to direct link

93
Audience Experiences With Media Sports
  • Research shows that
  • Watching television sports is not a major
    activity in the lives of most adults
  • Football widows and men who just sit in front of
    the TV watching sports are not as common as many
    people think
  • Men and women who live together often share the
    experience of watching sports
  • Most partners in couples accommodate each others
    viewing habits over time

94
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95
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96
The Profession of Sports Journalism
  • The work of sports journalists does matter when
    it comes to cultural ideology and public
    consciousness
  • Tensions between players and sportswriters has
    intensified as differences in their salaries and
    backgrounds have become more pronounced
  • Ethical issues have become increasingly important
    in sports journalism because the stakes are so
    high for teams, athletes, coaches, owners, etc.

97
Comparison of Sportswriters and Announcers
  • Sportswriters
  • Work behind scenes
  • Seldom recognized
  • Low salaries paid by publications
  • Low regulation by sport management
  • Job focuses on providing information
  • Announcers
  • Celebrity status
  • Public recognition
  • High salaries often paid by management
  • Comments regulated by management
  • Job focuses on selling the sport

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100
Sport in Society Issues Controversies
  • Sports in High School and College
  • Do Varsity Sport Programs
  • Contribute to Education?

101
Arguments For and Against Interscholastic Sports
  • Arguments For
  • Involve students in activities
  • Build self-esteem
  • Enhance fitness and lifetime participation
  • Generate spirit and unity
  • Promote support
  • Develop and reward valued skills
  • Arguments Against
  • Distract attention from academics
  • Create dependence
  • Increase passivity and injuries
  • Create superficial and transitory spirit
  • Waste resources
  • Create pressure and distort status system

102
Experiences of High School Student-athletes
  • Research shows differences between those who play
    varsity sports and those who do not
  • Research suggests that these differences mostly
    are due to selection and filtering processes
  • Those who play sports often bring to sports
    characteristics that make them different from
    others who do not play sports

103
Methodological Problems
  • Research on the consequences of playing varsity
    sports is difficult to do because
  • Growth and development among students is due to
    many factors
  • Meanings given to sport participation vary by
    context and from one person to another

104
What the Research Tells Us
  • Be careful when generalizing about the
    educational value of varsity sports
  • Long term studies are needed
  • Student-athletes may be treated differently by
    significant others
  • Varsity sports exerts an influence on the larger
    student culture in high schools

105
Student Culture in High Schools
  • Being a student-athlete often is a source of
    status and popularity
  • More for men than women
  • Sports are sites for major social occasions in
    the school
  • Sports often reproduce dominant ideologies
    related to gender, social class, and race and
    ethnicity

106
Interscholastic Sports Are Valuable If They
  • Enable students to be noticed, rewarded, and
    taken seriously as human beings
  • Connect young people with adult advocates in
    their lives
  • Provide occasions to learn things that are
    applicable beyond sports

107
Do Athletes Rule U.S. High Schools?
  • Data on this issue are scarce research is
    need on the following
  • How many students have been physically and/or
    verbally mistreated by athletes?
  • How many people know of cases where athletes have
    mistreated others?
  • Are some athletes more likely than others to
    harass or intimidate other students?

108
Intercollegiate Sports and the Experiences of
College Students
  • Intercollegiate sports
    are not all the same
  • They vary by Division in the NCAA
  • They vary greatly from big-time
    entertainment-oriented programs to smaller, less
    expensive, athlete-oriented programs

109
Characteristics of Big-time Programs
  • Usually have a primary emphasis on football or
    mens basketball and their revenue generating
    potential
  • About 1 in 3 programs make money
  • Full scholarships are available to some athletes
    in nearly all of the 18-24 sports
  • Teams often travel extensively
  • Quality of skills competition is high

110
Student Athletes in Big-time Programs
  • Participants in revenue producing sports usually
    have scholarships
  • Time and energy commitments to sport are
    exceptionally high, and participants often must
    choose between
  • Working out and practicing sports
  • Doing coursework
  • Engaging in social activities
  • Academic detachment is a commonly used coping
    strategy among athletes

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The Diversity of Student-Athlete Experiences
  • Some coaches and programs give priority to
    academic involvement
  • Some student-athletes give priority to academic
    involvement. Usually if
  • Past experiences reaffirm importance of academic
    achievement
  • Social support fosters academic identities
  • Non-sport career opportunities are perceived
  • Contact experiences expand confidence apart
    from sports

113
Grades and Graduation Rates Among Student-athletes
  • Graduation data are confusing because there are
    so many ways to compute statistics
  • Graduation rates among student athletes are
    higher than for comparable students except in
    big-time revenue producing sports
  • Information on grades must acknowledge
  • Athletes often are overrepresented in certain
    courses and majors
  • Athletes in entertainment-oriented sports come to
    college with lower grades and test scores

114
Recent Reforms in Big-time Programs
  • The purpose of many new rules and standards
    passed since the mid-1980s has been to
  • Send messages to high schools students that
    academic achievement does matter in college
  • Set new guidelines for universities that had
    ignored academic issues
  • Provide college student-athletes the support they
    needed to meet academic requirements

115
Academic Support Programs
  • Research is needed on these programs because they
    are very diverse in terms of focus and philosophy
  • Recent media coverage suggests that some programs
    focus on eligibility, not learning
  • Too many programs are administered by athletic
    departments rather than faculty with academic
    appointments

116
Academic Integrity Issues
  • Restoring academic integrity to programs where
    athletic success is tied to millions of dollars
    of revenue and the emotions of boosters and
    alumni is difficult
  • Raising academic standards is important, but it
    must be done in ways that do not unfairly
    disadvantage certain students
  • Prop 16 and similar rules must be critically
    examined to test their fairness

117
Questions About the Benefits of Interscholastic
Programs
  • School spirit often is enhanced, but does this
    improve the overall academic climate?
  • Most programs lose money, but are the
    expenditures worth it in academic and
    developmental terms?
  • Are the public community relations functions of
    varsity sports worth their costs?

118
Varsity High School Sports Problems
Recommendations
  • Overemphasis on sports development and big-time
    models
  • Regular critical assessments and new sports
    focused on lifetime and co-ed participation
  • Limited participation access
  • More teams in more sports where size and strength
    are not primary
  • Gender equity and opportunities for students with
    disabilities

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120
Varsity High School Sports Problems
Recommendations
  • Emphasis on varsity sports may distort status
    system among students
  • Avoid fostering sport-based systems of privilege
  • Give equal attention and recognition to the
    achievements of students in activities other than
    sports

121
Intercollegiate Sports Problems
Recommendations
  • Focus on entertainment and commercial values
  • Impose cost containment and spending limits
    measures on athletic departments and sports make
    a financially level playing field
  • Lack of athletes rights
  • Student-athletes must be voting members of
    decision-making committee
  • University must employ an independent
    ombudsperson for appeals and advocacy
  • Drop the myth of amateurism in revenue sports

122
Intercollegiate Sports Problems
Recommendations
  • Gender inequities
  • Cut football expenses through cost containment
    and limitation rules
  • Fund womens sports on an investment basis to
    foster development
  • Distorted priorities related to race relations
    and education
  • Aggressively recruit ethnic minority students,
    faculty and administrators
  • Employ strategies to create culturally diverse
    campus cultures

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125
Sources of Isolation For Black Student-athletes
  • Racial and ethnic stereotypes used by some
    students
  • Time and emotional energy devoted to sports
  • Barriers to developing relationships with other
    students
  • Lack of campus activities representing the
    interests and experiences of black students
  • Lack of self confidence among black students
  • Cultural and experience differences between
    blacks, whites, and other ethnic minority
    students
  • Feelings of jealousy among white students who
    think black student-athletes have it made
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