Women, Sports, and Stereotypes In almost everything we have seen so far, women experience a series of changes as they grow older. They may or may not choose to keep their campaigns (although the movie may not make women actually abandon their prosperous sports career and instead be more "socially acceptable" However, when I first saw a female heroine in almost every movie, she was a young tomboy. The number of Jess included in Monica of "Beck It Like Beckham" or "Love and Basketball" is very similar to a child.
There is nothing like sports. Women's sports are more interesting than men. The woman's body is poor, and now it is very delicate and it is generally ugly, so the stereotype is like this. For example, in a professional tennis game, the game is late and the game is not fun. Women are neither strong nor motorile as men, nor have the same level of strength and skills as men. From the audience's point of view, watching Vince's games is even more exciting, and then watching Sherryl Swoops is even if they are at the top of the NBA and WNBA. The female team's funds are different from those of the men's team. This also applies to university sports where men and women are equal on the NCAA campus and girls' budget is only 30% of the administration budget. This inequality even deprives women equally opportunities to benefit from sports and even refuses to go on to college because sometimes scholarships are not being offered.
Title IX increases the opportunity for women to exercise, but rarely reduces women's stereotypes in sports. Moreover, it is rarely useful for sports governance and women to establish equal opportunities for the pressures faced by hegemonic male sports organizations. In sports and physical education, it is necessary to reduce the stereotype of inequality between women and men. Because women are given equal opportunities, they are still unlikely to be equally involved in sports or for sports governance because of gender. Opportunity discrimination and gender stereotypes