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Bernice Sandler and the Fight for Title IX

Jen Barton

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Kinder- und Jugendbücher / Sachbücher / Sachbilderbücher

Beschreibung

​In 1969 Bernice Sandler was finishing her doctorate in Education at the University of Maryland, teaching part-time at the university, and trying to secure a full-time position. Despite her excellent credentials, it became clear she wasn’t even being considered. But why? she wondered.
 

“Let’s face it,” a male colleague said, “you come on too strong for a woman.”
 
Those fateful words brought sex discrimination home for Sandler. Facing it herself, front and center in her own workplace, meant she could no longer be ambivalent about women’s rights. She could no longer buy the media coverage of feminists as “man-hating,” “abrasive,” and “unfeminine.” But what could she do? Sandler soon discovered that none of the obvious laws prohibiting discrimination covered sex discrimination in education. Sandler's work led  to the passage of Title IX—making it illegal, once and for all, for a federally funded institution to discriminate against someone based on their sex, including in education. This had a profound effect for women in the workplace, in school, and in sports. 

Bernice Sandler and the Fight for Title IX that drives home the message that it doesn’t take a person with power to make a difference. More often, it takes determination. When confronted with injustice, regular people can effect change. Also includes extensive backmatter about  How To Be an Activist written by Know Your IX, a survivor- and youth-led project of Advocates for Youth that aims to empower students to end sexual and dating violence in their schools. 

 

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Schlagwörter

economic inequality, American Civil Liberties Union ACLU, National Women’s Hall of Fame, feminist childrens books, Sexual assault, Bernice Sandler, government, women and girls, social justice, women sports, Margaret Dunkle, gender discrimination, Department of Labor, psychological science, sexism, Title nine, activism, Patsy Mink, Advocates For Youth, University of Maryland, chilly environment, feminist movement, womens rights, Know Your IX, women in history, sexual harassment, American Psychological Assocation, gender, gender equality, womens history month, Edith Green, girls in sports, Women’s Equity Action League WEAL, biography, she persisted, Title IX of the Education Amendments Act of 1972, wage inequality, inspiring women, feminist, job discrimination, Dr. Bernice Resnick Sandler, National Association of Women in Education, women athletes, home economics class, sex discrimination, 50th Anniversary, women's rights movement, AFY, Title 9, feminism, Susan B. Anthony, equal rights movement, Bunny Sandler, Godmother of Title IX, equal pay, Women’s Equity Action League, civil rights, Title IX, Birch Bayh