Girls still don’t participate like boys
Dramatic dropout rate in sports for females by late adolescence: report
Two-time Olympic gold-medallist Rosie MacLennan battled body-image issues as a teenager.
But the 31-year-old from Toronto stuck with her sport of trampoline, beating odds that, according to a recent report by Canadian Women & Sport, see one in three Canadian girls drop out of sports during adolescence.
“It was through sports that I went through phases where body image was a challenge, but it was also through sport that I learned to value what my body was able to do for me in that, even though it wasn’t necessarily the same as my competitor, it was part of my strength,” said MacLennan.
Canadian Women & Sport, in partnership with Canadian Tire Jumpstart Charities, released The Rally Report on Thursday, the first national study in four years on sport participation for girls aged six to 18.
The results were bleak. And, at this rate, Canada won’t see parity between girls and boys for at least the next 15 years.
The study found participation levels for Canadian girls are much lower than boys, and there is a dramatic dropout rate with one in three girls leaving sport by late adolescence — a number that has barely budged since the 2016 report, according to Allison Sandmeyer-Graves, the chief executive of Canadian Women & Sport.
By comparison, the dropout rate for teenage boys — aged 16-18 — is only one in 10.
“That is saddening to see, because, particularly for girls, whether it’s at a recreational level or competitive level, there’s a ton of skills and value that sport can bring with respect to leadership and resilience, a lot of skills that you can take off the field of play into other aspects of your life like education and careers,” said Sandmeyer-Graves.
“And (sport) can be a valuable tool ... whether it’s physical health or mental health or social health, there’s a lot of conversations that you can bridge through sport and activity, if you have the proper mechanisms in place.”
The federal government set a target last year of achieving gender equity at all levels of sport by 2035. Canada isn’t on track to hit that target, said Sandmeyer-Graves.
“I remember at the time, it was like ‘2035, gosh, that’s so far away,’ ” she said. “But, when you are talking about something that is as systemic as this, that has so many different components to it, 2035 is going to be here before we know it.”
While Canadians in general are living less-active lifestyles, Sandmeyer-Graves said, the numbers are particularly alarming for females.
Currently, as many as 62 per cent of Canadian girls aren’t participating in sport.
In 1992, just over half of women aged 15 or older were participating in sport. That dropped to 35 per cent by 2010. Only 18 per cent of women aged 16–63 are currently involved in sport.
Among the barriers that affected girls’ continuation in sport, one in three listed low confidence, negative body image, perceived lack of skill, or poor perceptions of belonging and feeling unwelcome.
“Many of the barriers to participation (boys and girls) face would be quite similar,” Sandmeyer-Graves said. “But the fact that there is such a gender difference (in dropout rates) really underscores the fact that we need to pay particular attention to how we’re designing and delivering sports for girls and for young women.”
MacLennan said she was fortunate to grow up in an active family. She was encouraged to try a variety of sports.
“So, from a young age, building out those fundamental skills, but also exposing me to sports that I wouldn’t necessarily have the chance to do in school, and so kind of giving me the chance to explore and find something that I really connected with and became passionate about,” MacLennan said. “Put me on a field with a soccer ball, and I’m not particularly strong. But put me in the air and I’m a lot more comfortable.”
Girls who aren’t introduced to sports at a young age are far less likely to be physically active as adults.
“If you are exposing kids at a younger age to those fundamental skills, I think that they become more comfortable and confident with a lot of different movement patterns,” MacLennan said. “And then try to introduce them to as many activities as possible, whether it’s through watching the Olympic Games and the variety of sports there, or local programming, that can be really important, too.”
The study found differences in participation based on different ethnicities and religions, physical abilities and socioeconomic statuses, as well. Caucasian, South Asian, Asian and Black girls are more likely to participate in sports than Indigenous girls. And girls from households with an annual income of over $100,000 are more likely to participate than households under $50,000.
Women are still under-represented in coaching ranks. Just 24 per cent of head coaches of women’s teams in Canadian universities and colleges are female. Just 18 per cent of head coaches of mixed teams are women.
Some of Canada’s biggest sports stars — Brooke Henderson, Bianca Andreescu and Kia Nurse to name just three — are women. Women captured 16 of Canada’s 22 medals at the 2016 Rio Olympics.
Sandmeyer-Graves said there is reason for optimism.
“Anecdotally, there’s more attention being paid to women’s sports,” she said. “Government commitments obviously have been quite strong over the last while. There are lots of initiatives happening in sports all across the country. People are reviewing their policies, we are seeing improvements at least at the national level of more women on the boards. So there are things happening,” she said.
She hopes the Rally Report’s take-away for people already working on achieving gender equity is to keep going.
And, for those who haven’t started paying attention, “there’s no time like the present.”