Women, title IX, and movies I remember seeing old movies with my mother every Sunday when I was young. I like watching those chic men wipe out beautiful ladies and luxurious cheesy music. Whatever you like the romantic part of the story, it always makes you feel a little funny. Because this woman is usually a very passive part of the whole relationship production model. She was waiting for him to kiss her, and (possibly, I should say, ball) in her field, she has the ability to make decisions.
Despite progress in the ninth criteria, today's women are still trying to participate in sports on an equivalent basis. TITLE IX, especially because women are involved in sports management, have many unexpected results. In the article "The story of women's exercise manipulating dreams", author Joan Hult supports this view. Hall said, "While millions of girls and women are participating in playgrounds and stadiums, thousands of female executives can establish a second position in leadership and exclude them from decision-making Women and female athletes will be areas of male and male governance structures "(Hult 96)
Article 9 gives women more opportunities. When title IX was signed in 1972, women received only 7% of all legal degrees. By 1997, this figure rose to 44%. As title IX allows more women to attend university through academic and sports scholarships, 41% of women have a medical degree, and before 1972 women have all medical degrees I received only 9%. Prior to the establishment of Title IX, only one in 27 girls participated in university sports, but today this number is one in 2.5 people. Currently, 2.8 million girls are participating in high school sports in hopes of receiving university scholarships. Prior to Article 9, only 32,000 women compete at the inter-school level, and currently there are 150,000 women competing. In addition, there are few sports scholarships before Title IX, and more than 10,000 sports scholarships are awarded annually at the university level (Carpenter and Acosta 1992).
The most common thing in chapter 9 is the increase in the number of women participating in sports through their educational career. We should not underestimate the impact of 1/9 to women's sports: NCAA said that the number of female college students reached a record high, school girls have increased to more than 3.1 from less than 300,000 in 1974. Big East Commissioner and former president of WNBA Val Ackerman says: "Whether it is a doctor, a lawyer, an engineer, a CEO, a senator, a college president, a high-tech giant - sports can open the way, the way of women will continue to loose."