Last night I was thinking about Title IX and football. As I added up the scholarships in my head, I thought...football MUST be exempt because there is no way we have the women's sports here at Arkansas to add up to the men's sports.
So I did some digging today and added up the numbers.
At the UofA, six men's sports are offered: Football, basketball, baseball, golf, tennis and track. Nine women's sports are offered: basketball, track, golf, gymnastics, soccer, softball, swimming/diving, tennis and volleyball.
The men's scholarship total (assuming that we give a the full allotment of each sport out, which I'm sure we do) is 131.3. The women's scholarship total is 97.4.
So I was wondering how this is possible, and read this:
In other words, there are no women's sports that the student body has an interest in, that aren't already there. To me this seems like a way for all schools to "get around" title IX.
So I also looked up Wichita State. I didn't count bowling because I wasn't sure that counted towards any NCAA limits, or how many scholarships were offered for that sport.
WSU offers five men's sports: basketball, baseball, track, golf and tennis. This adds up to 46.3 scholarships. You offer six women's sports: basketball, track, golf, softball, tennis and volleyball. This adds up to 71 scholarships, assuming that all are awarded, and they might not be. Which would make men the underrepresented sex. I wonder if this is common at schools without football?
Anyway, just some interesting stuff.
So I did some digging today and added up the numbers.
At the UofA, six men's sports are offered: Football, basketball, baseball, golf, tennis and track. Nine women's sports are offered: basketball, track, golf, gymnastics, soccer, softball, swimming/diving, tennis and volleyball.
The men's scholarship total (assuming that we give a the full allotment of each sport out, which I'm sure we do) is 131.3. The women's scholarship total is 97.4.
So I was wondering how this is possible, and read this:
A school can meet this requirement if it can demonstrate any one of the following:
*
that the percentages of male and female athletes are substantially proportionate to the percentages of male and female students enrolled; or
*
that it has a history and continuing practice of expanding athletic opportunities for the underrepresented sex; or
*
that its athletics program fully and effectively accommodates the interests and abilities of the underrepresented sex.
*
that the percentages of male and female athletes are substantially proportionate to the percentages of male and female students enrolled; or
*
that it has a history and continuing practice of expanding athletic opportunities for the underrepresented sex; or
*
that its athletics program fully and effectively accommodates the interests and abilities of the underrepresented sex.
In other words, there are no women's sports that the student body has an interest in, that aren't already there. To me this seems like a way for all schools to "get around" title IX.
So I also looked up Wichita State. I didn't count bowling because I wasn't sure that counted towards any NCAA limits, or how many scholarships were offered for that sport.
WSU offers five men's sports: basketball, baseball, track, golf and tennis. This adds up to 46.3 scholarships. You offer six women's sports: basketball, track, golf, softball, tennis and volleyball. This adds up to 71 scholarships, assuming that all are awarded, and they might not be. Which would make men the underrepresented sex. I wonder if this is common at schools without football?
Anyway, just some interesting stuff.
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