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A Platform for Progress

Building a Better Future for Women and Their Families

 

 IMPROVING WOMEN’S EDUCATION
 

 Ensuring Equal Access to All Educational Opportunities
 
Far too many students across the country do not receive an equal chance at a high-quality and affordable education, and young women continue to be denied equal opportunities in many important educational programs.  For example, girls today represent only 15% of students taking classes in traditionally male, and higher-paid, fields such as carpentry, masonry and welding – a statistic virtually unchanged from their representation in trade and industrial classes in 1977.  That under-representation is mirrored in disciplines like the hard sciences and engineering; for example, women receive fewer than one-fifth of the bachelors’ degrees awarded in engineering.  Young women of color continue to lag behind white women, and men, in admissions to institutions of higher education and to face constrained educational opportunities in K-12 education.  Yet Title IX, the landmark law prohibiting sex discrimination passed in 1972, has been weakened in key respects over the years. 

Protecting Against Sexual Harassment

Sexual and other forms of harassment remain a pervasive problem in schools across the country.  Eight in ten students in kindergarten through 12th grade report having experienced sexual harassment at some point during their school lives, and girls are at particular risk.  Nearly two-thirds of college students also report being subjected to sexual harassment.  The consequences of harassment are serious and damaging.  For example, students report feeling emotional stress as a result of the harassment and not wanting to go to classes in which they have experienced it.


Leveling the Playing Field for Girls’ Athletics Participation

Despite the tremendous gains in opportunities for young women in athletics, they still lack equal opportunities to participate in sports – and lack equal treatment when they are allowed to play.  High school girls receive only 41% of the opportunities to play competitive sports in their schools, and their teams are too often subjected to inequities in facilities, fields, equipment and school support.  When they reach college, young women face similar problems, compounded by receiving only 45% of athletics scholarships and 33% of the recruiting dollars spent by colleges and universities.

Ensuring Full Enforcement of the Anti-Discrimination Laws 

Although all federal grant-making agencies are charged with the responsibility to enforce Title IX in educational programs and activities that they fund, their enforcement activity has in the past been woefully inadequate to ensure that recipients of federal aid end discrimination. 

Reducing School Dropouts

Recent research by the National Women’s Law Center has shown that an alarming number of girls are dropping out of high school and that these female dropouts are at particular economic risk compared to their male counterparts.  An estimated one in four female students does not graduate with a regular high school diploma in the standard, four-year time period.  The rates are even worse for female students of color.  Nationwide, 37% of Hispanic, 40% of Black, and 50% of American Indian or Alaskan Native female students respectively failed to graduate in four years in 2004.  While all high school dropouts pay significant costs for their lack of education, economic costs are particularly steep for women, who face especially limited employment prospects, low earnings potential, poor health status, and the need to rely on public support programs.

Ensuring Adequate Funding for Education at All Levels

All students, at every level of education, are entitled to access to a high-quality education.  And yet, funding to provide these educational opportunities has been woefully inadequate.  Local education grants under Title I of the No Child Left Behind Act have been under-funded since enactment, thus depriving low-income and at-risk students of desperately needed funds, including for programs for children before they enter kindergarten.  The purchasing power of Pell grants – the major federal program providing financial aid for students pursuing higher education – has declined substantially over the last two decades, at a time when college costs are rising dramatically. 

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