NCAA Certification Process and Gender Equity

Recently, the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) announced a two-year moratorium on its Certification process for member schools.
Sydney Colson #51 of the Texas A&M Aggies intercepts the final pass downcourt by Stanford as time expires during the 2011 NCAA Women's Final Four at Conseco Fieldhouse on April 3, 2011 in Indianapolis, Indiana. Texas A&M defeated Stanford 63-62. (Photo by: Jamie Sabau/Getty Images) Sydney Colson #51 of the Texas A&M Aggies intercepts the final pass downcourt by Stanford as time expires during the 2011 NCAA Women's Final Four at Conseco Fieldhouse on April 3, 2011 in Indianapolis, Indiana. Texas A&M defeated Stanford 63-62. (Photo by: Jamie Sabau/Getty Images)

 The Women's Sports Foundation sent the PDF available below to the NCAA on August 5, 2011. The letter was signed by 21 leaders in the civil rights and athletic communties.

 

Content Summary

The Certification process is particularly important to women and minorities in athletics because it requires schools complete a self-study on gender and racial every ten years, led by the institution’s president or chancellor and requiring campus-wide participation. The end product is required to include measurable goals, the steps the institution will take to achieve those goals, timelines and persons responsible.

Without the NCAA certification process, it is unlikely that the campus will engage in such a meaningful review of women’s athletics, and the task will fall to those without institutional power: coaches, the senior women athletic administrator, the Title IX coordinator or student-athletes in private litigation.

NCAA Certification Letter Regarding Gender Equity (PDF 984k)

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Published Aug 5, 2011
By Women's Sports Foundation

EXPLORE FURTHER

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The Women’s Sports Foundation’s position is that sporting organizations like the AIBA should responsibly produce research, evidence or other objective analysis to demonstrate the need for such restrictions, prior to mandating athletic apparel regulations which limit the apparel choices of athletes, as a matter of process.

Athlete Organizations - Player Associations and Unions

The Foundation neither advocates nor discourages the development of such organizations but does recognize the functionality of such groups. Learn more about our position on this topic.

Biediger et al., v. Quinnipiac University

A federal district court held that Quinnipiac discriminated against women in violation of Title IX when it limited athletic participation opportunities for its female students.

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