Women Making Little or No Progress in College Sports Administration

tidesThe Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport (TIDES) at the University of Central Florida recently released its annual report on gender equality in college athletics. The scorecard gave a grade of C-plus in gender equality to college’s sport programs, the same grade as the year before.

One of the most striking figures is that in 2015, women held the head coaching job for only 38.9 percent of all women’s athletic teams in Division I of the National Collegiate Athletic Association. Women did not even hold a majority of assistant coaching positions on women’s teams in either Division I or Division II.

Here are some other statistics on the status of women in college sports:

  • Women are 43.6 percent of all students athletes at NCAA institutions.
  • Less than 9 percent of all athletics directors at NCAA Division I institutions are women.
  • Less than a third of all associate athletics directors and assistant athletics directors at NCAA Division I institutions are women.
  • Women were 11.6 percent of the sports information directors at NCAA Division I institutions, down from 13 percent a year ago.

Richard Lapchick, director of TIDES and the lead author of the report, stated that “the greatest number of career prospects are in college sports rather than professional sports because of the number of jobs available. That makes it even more important for us to create expanded opportunities in college sports for women.”

The full report, The 2015 Racial and Gender Scorecard: College Sport, can be downloaded by clicking here.

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