Womens Sports Foundation Logo
aol_keyword
 
SPORTS & FITNESS
ATHLETES
ISSUES & ACTION
     Geena Takes Aim
School
Media
Action
It Takes A Team
     Know Your Rights
     Business
     Get Involved
     Discrimination
     Media Spotlight
     Body & Mind
     Participation
     Parents & Family
     Coaching Issues
     History
     Opinion
CAREER CENTER
COMMUNITY
EVENTS
FUNDING
ABOUT US
GIVING/DONATE
SHOP
LINKS
MEDIA RELATIONS
HOW TO HELP
Educate Yourself!
Read about your rights....
home_sponsors

School Report Card

Are girls underrepresented in your school's or college's athletics program? By that, we mean: Is the percent of female athletes less than the percent of females in the general student body? If so, then this School Report Card can help you calculate a set of grades and give you a better understanding of how well your educational institution complies with Title IX.

You can use this report card to grade middle school, high school or college athletics programs, however you should make separate report cards for each level--do not combine them.

You can also grade varsity or junior varsity sport programs as long as you make a separate report card for each program. Do not combine varsity and junior varsity numbers. (N/A = Not applicable, or the item is equally unavailable for both male and female students.)

This report card is an adaptation of "Check It Out: Is the Playing Field Level for Girls at Your Elementary or Secondary School?" by L. Bunker, N. Chaudrey, P. Kellers, D. Larkin and V. Williams. You can purchase a copy of this publication from the National Women’s Law Center (202) 588-5180.

I. PARTICIPATION

1. Participation Opportunities. Females should have the same opportunities as males to play sports.

a. Number of students in my school: FEMALE

Number of students in my school: MALE

b. Number of athletes: FEMALE

Number of athletes: MALE

c. Over the last four years, how many new sports for females have been added to the sports program? (NOTE: If no new sports have been added, write in the word "none."

d. Number of sports: FEMALE (Note: Count cross country, indoor track and outdoor track as separate sports.)

Number of sports: MALE (Note: Count cross country, indoor track and outdoor track as separate sports.)

e. Has your school conducted a survey (asking all students in the school) to find out what sports they are interested in playing? Yes
No

II. BENEFITS

2. Equipment and Supplies. Athletes should have the same quality equipment and supplies. Female athletes shouldn't be given "old stuff" while the male athletes get "new and better stuff."

a. The quality and quantity of equipment for male and female teams is the same. Yes
No

b. The number of practice uniforms and their quality is the same. Yes or N/A
No

c. The number of competitive uniforms and their quality is the same. Yes
No

3. Scheduling Competitions and Practices. Male and female teams should be able to practice the same number of hours and have the same chance to play at times and days when their parents can attend games.
a. Practice time is equal (hours of practice; days per week; time of day). Yes
No

b. The number of competitions played by male and female teams are the same. Yes
No

c. The time at which competitions are held (e.g. 3 p.m. vs. evening; weekday vs weekend) allows the parents of males and females who play sports to see them play. Yes
No

d. The male and female teams get to play in the same quality (strength of competition) tournaments and league, conference and state championships. Yes
No

4. Meals. When teams travel, the same amount of meal money and quality of meals should be provided to male and female teams (e.g., female teams shouldn’t eat at fast food spots while male teams eat in restaurants).
a. Pre-game or post-game meals, snacks (or training tables for college athletes) are provided equally. Yes or N/A
No

b. Male and female teams eat in the same type of restaurants. Yes
No

5. Travel. Travel arrangements should be the same for male and female teams. (Example: Parents or coaches should not have to drive female teams while male teams get buses with professional drivers).
a. Transportation (vans, buses) is equally available and driven by qualified persons. If air travel is required, both male and female teams should be able to fly. Yes
No

b. If an athletic trip is an "overnight," housing (motels, hotels) for male and female teams is of the same quality and the number of athletes in each room is the same. Yes or N/A
No

6. Academic Help. Study halls and one-on-one tutoring for male and female athletes should be provided on the same basis.
a. If tutors are provided for athletes, tutors are provided on the same basis for male and female athletes. Yes or N/A
No

b. Study halls are equally available for male and female teams. Yes or N/A
No

7. Coaches. Schools must provide the same number and the same quality coaches for male and female teams. Ask your coach for answers to items a through f.
a. The same quality coaches are provided for male and female teams. Yes
No

b. Coaches receive equal salaries for equal work. Yes
No

c.Coaches have equal "other duties" (e.g. teaching vs. full-time coaching). Yes
No

d. If you count all the coaches of male teams and all the coaches of female teams, there are almost equal numbers of male and female coach role models available. Yes
No

e. Assistant coaches are equally available for male and female teams. Yes or N/A
No

f. Instructional equipment (video tapes, films, etc) is equally available to male and female teams. Yes or N/A
No

8. Locker Rooms, Practice and Competitive Facilities. All athletes should have access to safe and effective facilities.
a. The size, location (on-campus vs. off-campus) and quality of gyms, playing fields, outdoor and indoor courts and pools are comparable for male and female teams. Yes
No

b. The condition (clean floors, good lighting, grass cut, access to bathrooms, access to drinking water, etc.) of practice and competitive facilities for male and female teams are equally as good. Yes
No

c.The quality and size of locker rooms for male and female teams are comparable. Yes
No

d. Spectator seating and scoreboards are equally provided in the facilities used by male and female teams. Yes
No

9. Medical and Training Services. Male and female teams are provided equal training rooms, trainers and access to medical services. Ask your coach for the answer to item d.
a. Weight training and conditioning facilities are equally available (at convenient times) and are of equal quality. Yes or N/A
No

b. Medical personnel are equally available to conduct physical examinations, and physical exams are provided equally for to male and female teams. Yes or N/A
No

c. Athletic trainers are equally available to provide rehabilitation and prevention services (taping, etc.), and are present at competitive events and practices for like sports (i.e., boys’ basketball and girls’ basketball). Yes or N/A
No

d. Health, accident and injury insurance are equally available. Yes
No

10. Publicity. Schools should provide comparable publicity and sports information personnel for male and female athletes. If the school newspaper sends a reporter to cover the male tennis team, it should provide the same quality coverage for the female tennis team. If the yearbook covers sports, there should a comparable number of male and female athlete photos and stories. If the pep band and cheerleaders appear at male athletic events, they should be at female competitions too.
a. Coverage in school papers and school media is equivalent. Yes
No

b. Cheerleaders and pep rallies are equally provided for male and female sports. Yes or N/A
No

c. Pep bands are equally provided for male and female sporting events. Yes or N/A
No

d. Trophy cases are equivalent and provided for both male and female sports. Yes or N/A
No

e. Comparable language is used to describe teams and individuals (not "the basketball team" and the "girls team"). Yes
No

f. Athletic awards and recognition and/or awards banquets and ceremonies are comparable. Yes or N/A
No

g. Posters, banners, public address announcements, etc. are equally provided for male and female sport teams. Yes
No

11. Administrative and Support Services. The amount and type of support provided to coaches has a direct impact on the time and attention coaches give to athletes. Do some coaches have to "do it all," including paperwork, hiring officials, lining fields, setting up the gym, etc., while others have school staff members handle these elements? Ask your coach how he or she would answer items a through f.
a. Equipment and laundry managers are equally available to male and female sport teams. Yes or N/A
No

b. Quality officials are equally provided (referees, umpires and linespersons). Yes
No

c.Secretarial and office support is available at equal levels. Yes or N/A
No

d. Administrators and school personnel both support and attend games at comparable levels for female and male sports. Yes
No

e. Office resources are comparable (telephone, computer, FAX, copying, etc.). Yes
No

f. Managers and support personnel are equally assigned to male and female teams. Yes
No

12. Recruiting. Male and female athletes should be recruited using similar methods and resources.
a. The policies regarding recruitment and the methods used are equal for male and females athletes. Yes or N/A
No

b. The numbers of prospective student-athletes who visit the campus and the quality of their visits (meals, transportation, entertainment, etc.) are equal for male and female teams." Yes or N/A
No

III. FUNDING

13. Funding. The only equal expenditure requirements of Title IX are in the area of scholarships. Dollars expended must be proportional to the number of male and female student-athletes. However, vastly unequal budgetary allocations usually result in unequal treatment and therefore suggest inequality concerns.

a. Booster clubs exist equally for male and female sport teams or, if there is one umbrella booster club, it equally supports male and female teams. Yes or N/A
No

b. Overall budgets (including money from booster clubs) provide for equal treatment of male and female teams. Yes
No

c. Athletic awards (letters, plaques, jackets, sweaters, travel bags, rings, etc.) are provided equally to male and female athletes. Yes
No

d. High schools award college scholarships to graduating athletes and colleges award scholarships to athletes participating in their athletic programs. Ask your athletic director for information to answer the following question.
Total scholarship dollars provided to all male athletes

Total scholarship dollars provided to all female athletes

IV. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

ALL IDENTIFYING INFORMATION ENTERED BELOW WILL BE KEPT CONFIDENTIAL

The Women’s Sports Foundation will not publish your name, your school’s name, nor any other personally identifiable information. However, we do request that you provide this data for our internal use.

If the Foundation publishes data based on your responses to this questionnaire, we will not use your school’s name or your town’s name. Instead, we will use a generic description such as "a large, public high school in Illinois."

Name of school:

City:

State:

There may be an occasion where the Foundation would like to speak with you about the report card you filled out. Please give us your name and a way to reach you:
(e-mail address; and/or phone number+area code; and/or mailing address/city/state/ZIP)

The Women’s Sports Foundation has my permission to publish the results of this report card. I understand that my name, the name of my school and any other personally identifiable information will be kept confidential. Yes
No

My school is: Public
Private

My school is a: (choose one) Middle School
High School
College/University

The athletic program I want to grade is: Varsity
Junior Varsity

I am a: (check as many as apply) Student
Parent
Athletic Administrator
Coach
School Board Member
Teacher
Other
Anonymous




Great job! Make sure you have completed all answers to the best of your knowledge. For your records, you may want to print out a copy of the filled out form before submitting it.

In 1975, the first Women's Kodak All-America Basketball Team was named.

Where Does Your College Rank?
Geena Takes Aim | Grade Your School | Eye on the Media | Take Action


Why 'Geena Takes Aim?' | Title IX: What is it?

Contact Us | Privacy Policy | Home
Copyright Women's Sports Foundation ©2008-2001
All Rights Reserved