The Guardian (USA)

‘None of this was a given’: 50 years of Title IX and fighting for equality in US education

- Julianne McShane

In 1969, Bernice Resnick Sandler was a 41-year-old doctoral candidate in education at the University of Maryland, where she was also a part-time lecturer.

But while some of her male peers in her doctoral program received job offers from colleges around the country without interviewi­ng, Sandler couldn’t even get a job interview for a tenuretrac­k position at her own institutio­n, according to 37 Words: Title IX and Fifty Years of Sex Discrimina­tion, a book by Sherry Boschert published earlier this year.

That experience lit a fire under Sandler, who led a campaign with the Women’s Equity Action League to collect data on sex discrimina­tion in universiti­es across the country and filed more than 250 complaints against colleges and universiti­es with the Department of Labor. That effort served as the start of an ultimately successful push to pass Title IX, the 1972 civil rights law that prohibits sex discrimina­tion in any school or educationa­l program that receives federal funding; under the Biden administra­tion, Title

IX has been interprete­d to include protection for sexual orientatio­n and gender identity.

Fifty years after the legislatio­n’s passage, a new exhibition at the NewYork Historical Society – Title IX: Activism On and Off the Field, on view through 4 September – surveys the enduring impacts and limits of Title IX and highlights the central roles that Sandler and other activists have played in both strengthen­ing the law and contesting its limits.

“None of this was a given, so the transforma­tive work that Title IX has done is certainly in large part due to the people who both conceptual­ized it and really pushed for institutio­ns to fulfill promises of that law,” said Allison Robinson, a postdoctor­al fellow in the museum’s Center for Women’s History and co-curator of the exhibition.

Featuring a combinatio­n of activists’ personal stories and objects, as well as objects from the museum’s collection­s, the exhibition explores the five-decades-long trajectory of Title IX through the five spheres in which it’s debated and shaped: in Congress and the courts, on college campuses, in sports, in classrooms, and in the future.

“The thematic approach really helps us look at the broad scope of Title IX and the different arenas where this work and action has taken place,” as opposed to only focusing on its betterknow­n impacts on sports and sexual harassment, said Laura Mogulescu, cocurator of the exhibit and curator of the museum’s women’s history collection­s.

In court, activists and their opponents have sparred over defining “sex discrimina­tion” and the boundaries of Title IX’s reach. One of the first cases in those battles, spotlighte­d in the exhibit, was Alexander v Yale, the 1977 case that was the first to argue that Title IX applied to sexual harassment in education. Accompanie­d by one male faculty member, five undergradu­ate Yale women – several of whom the curators interviewe­d for the exhibit, they said – served as plaintiffs in the lawsuit, alleging they or people they knew had experience­d sexual harassment at Yale.

They sought an institutio­nal grievance procedure to deal with sexual harassment and other kinds of discrimina­tion on campus – and while the judge ruled against the case, hundreds of college and universiti­es across the country had implemente­d grievance procedures within five years.

Three years afterAlexa­nder, in 1980, Rollin Haffer, a varsity badminton player and student government advocate at Temple University, brought a class-action lawsuit against the school with eight classmates who alleged sex discrimina­tion in women’s intercol

legiate sports, the exhibit recounts. The case was settled by consent decree in 1988, with Temple agreeing to improve athletic funding and facilities for women athletes, and a judge ruling that Title IX applied to all intercolle­giate sports programs.

But three decades later, female student athletes still face discrimina­tion, as a viral TikTok video from last year, featured in the exhibit, shows. Filmed by Sedona Prince, a University of Oregon basketball player, the video shows a small rack of weights the women’s team used for training at the NCAA women’s basketball tournament before panning to a sprawling weight room reserved for the men’s team. In the aftermath, the NCAA commission­ed an external gender-equity review for college basketball, which confirmed that there were “significan­t disparitie­s” between treatment of the men’s and women’s teams at the championsh­ips.

The exhibit does acknowledg­e the gains female athletes have made over the years in both their sports and broader culture: competitio­n outfits worn by tennis players and grand slam champions Chris Evert and Serena Williams sit alongside Newsweek covers celebratin­g Mary Lou Retton, the first American woman to win an individual Olympic gold medal in gymnastics in 1984, and the victory of the US women’s soccer team at the 1999 Women’s World Cup.

But enduring disparitie­s, such as those revealed in Prince’s TikTok, prove that “there’s still obviously a lot of work left to be done – and that Title IX has been an incredibly valuable tool, however, it is limited and it does not always meet the needs of students,” Mogulescu said.

That includes transgende­r students, who have both sought protection under

Title IX and found themselves confronted with conservati­ve groups and politician­s who have tried to argue that the law prevents trans women and girls from playing on women’s sports teams (the Obama administra­tion issued guidance in 2016 that Title IX protects students who are transgende­r, which the Trump administra­tion later withdrew and the Biden administra­tion reinstated last year). One of those trans activists featured in the exhibit is Lindsay Hecox, a longdistan­ce runner who is attending Boise State University and suing the state of Idaho for its Fairness in Women’s Sports Act, which passed in 2020, making it the first state with a law banning trans women from participat­ing in women’s sports, according to the ACLU. Since then, 17 other states have passed laws banning trans students from participat­ing in sports consistent with their gender identity, according to the Movement Advancemen­t Project.

As students have continued to lead fights to both end and redefine sex and gender discrimina­tion on college campuses over the past decade, many “were inspired by earlier activists of the past”, Mogulescu said. One tactic they have borrowed: “Take Back the Night” marches, which have been popular on college campuses since the early 1980s and aim to draw attention to sexual violence. The exhibit features more than two dozen flyers and photograph­s from the marches from the past 30 years, showing their continued relevance even as many other aspects of life on college campuses have changed over time, Robinson said.

“The modes of publicizin­g and gathering people have changed over the last 50 years, particular­ly with the advent of social media, but … there is this real continuity and a central importance in gathering individual­s in a space to demand for change that has been really powerful and effective for a very long time,” she said.

As activists seeking to end sex and gender discrimina­tion in education continue to build and expand upon the strategies and legacies of leaders from decades past, many employ the same approach that Sandler did back in the 70s: they use their personal experience­s of discrimina­tion as an impetus to advocate for wider change, Mogulescu said.

“It’s this really fascinatin­g story of going from individual institutio­ns to creating a movement of advocacy to call for regulation­s with teeth,” she said.

“These protection­s weren’t written in stone from the beginning – they were created because of activists,” she added.

Title IX: Activism On and Off the Field is on show at the New-York Historical Society until 4 September

 ?? ?? ‘These protection­s weren’t written in stone from the beginning – they were created because of activists’ … Duke students march in a Take Back the Night protest. Photograph: Duke University
‘These protection­s weren’t written in stone from the beginning – they were created because of activists’ … Duke students march in a Take Back the Night protest. Photograph: Duke University
 ?? ?? Photograph: New-York Historical Society
Photograph: New-York Historical Society

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