Sometimes a few
words make an enormous impact. Take the opening text of the Patsy T.
Mink Equal Opportunity in Education Act, better known as Title IX:
“No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be
excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be
subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity
receiving Federal financial assistance.”
Those 37 words opened the doors to new educational and professional
opportunities for women. And they completely changed the game for female
athletes.
In 1971, fewer than 30,000 women played sports at the collegiate level, according to a report by the Women’s Sports Foundation.
Fifty years later that number was 218,479. At the high school level,
the growth has been even more dramatic — in 1971, fewer than 295,000
women played on high school varsity teams; in 2021 the number was
3,240,000.
“Title IX is one the most important pieces of legislation that has
afforded girls and women the equal opportunity to participate in sport. I
wouldn’t be where I am today if it wasn’t for my participation in
sports and what it has taught me,” said Chrissi Rawak, the University of
Delaware’s director of athletics. Rawak joined UD as the first female
athletic director in 2016.
At a recent special event hosted by the Department of Women and
Gender Studies, players and coaches from UD’s women’s basketball and
volleyball teams discussed the changes in women’s sports they’ve seen,
areas for improvement and the impact athletics has had on their success
off the court. Volleyball head coach Kimberly Lambert and assistant
women’s basketball coach Bri Hutchen and their respective
student-athletes Eileen Gex, Lily Rogers, Savannah Seemans and Tara
Cousins talked about female players and coaches as role models for
younger athletes, the role of media and social media in promoting
women’s sports and the challenges facing female professional athletes.
Their conclusion: While women’s sports have come a long way under
Title IX, the fight for gender equity in athletics is far from over.
“Last year was the first year that our March Madness national
tournament was given the branding and name of March Madness,” said
Cousins, a member of the basketball team. “Before it was only the men’s
side being March Madness, and it was always the Women’s National
Championship. We’re all competing for a national championship.”
During the event, Savannah Seemans, a member of UD's women’s
volleyball team, explained how being a female athlete has helped her as a
civil engineering major.
"I've grown through playing my sport. I've found confidence. I've
found leadership skills," she said. "I've been in situations where I
know I can handle this, and being in those situations and understanding
that I am still powerful — I still have my worth — even though I am the
only girl here, and I'm going to show them what I have to offer and how
smart I am."