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Naughton, Jim – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1997
The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Board of Directors has decided not to re-examine a rule limiting the committees on which the Division I-A football conferences are entitled to hold a majority. Critics of the rule saw inequities in committee membership that would cause major teams to be governed by decisions of members…
Descriptors: Administrative Policy, College Athletics, Committees, Football
Naughton, Jim – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1997
In its annual convention, the National Collegiate Athletic Association approved details of an organizational restructuring, granted athletes the right to work during the academic year, and offered fifth-year eligibility to students unable to compete in their freshman year. More trust was experienced by delegates than in previous years. Students…
Descriptors: Athletes, College Athletics, College Freshmen, Eligibility
Naughton, Jim – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1996
In Cohen vs. Brown University, a federal appeals court upheld a ruling favoring maintenance of college women's sports programs. The decision makes it clear that institutions should equalize athletic opportunities for men and women, but fails to resolve the debate over whether anti-discrimination statutes require numerical parity between men and…
Descriptors: College Athletics, Court Litigation, Equal Education, Higher Education
Naughton, Jim – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1998
Incidents of point-shaving and placing and accepting bets are evidence that professional gamblers are influencing college sports and campus life. Because of student athletes' competitive nature, they may be more likely to engage in gambling. The National Collegiate Athletic Association and individual colleges are examining and addressing this…
Descriptors: Administrative Policy, Athletes, College Athletics, Higher Education
Naughton, Jim – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1997
A National Collegiate Athletic Association study has found that the average athlete on a top college football or men's basketball team enters college in the bottom quarter of his class. Critics say the pursuit of success in athletics is corrupting higher education. Some attribute this pattern to racial bias in testing that skews athletes' test…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Standards, Athletes, Basketball
Selingo, Jeffrey; Naughton, Jim – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1998
The National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) will loosen its academic standards for college athletes with learning disabilities. By agreement with the Justice Department, the NCAA will certify special education classes offered to high school students with learning disabilities toward its initial-eligibility requirements, rather than…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Athletes, College Athletics, College Students
Naughton, Jim – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1997
Twenty-five years after passage of Title IX, federal legislation barring sex discrimination in athletics in federally-funded schools, females make up 37% of college athletes and receive 38% of athletic scholarships at National Collegiate Athletic Association Division I schools. Women's participation in college sports has increased four-fold.…
Descriptors: College Athletics, Compliance (Legal), Federal Legislation, Financial Support
Naughton, Jim – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1997
Controversy over limited representation of women on a key committee of the National Collegiate Athletic Association, the Division I Management Council, has renewed concerns that big-time football conferences are not committed to diverse membership on such panels. The division's board of directors rejected the first female nominees and suggested…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, College Athletics, Committees, Compliance (Legal)
Naughton, Jim – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1997
A recent study found universities pay substantially higher salaries, sometimes twice as high, to head coaches of men's athletic teams than to head coaches of women's teams. Findings raise questions about how coaches' salaries are set. Some see sex discrimination; others view salary differences as reflecting degree of coach responsibility. Most…
Descriptors: Administrator Responsibility, Athletic Coaches, College Athletics, Females
Naughton, Jim – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1997
A confidential national survey of Division I athletics departments (n=87 universities) conducted by the University of Texas (Austin) found men's basketball coaches the highest-paid, with football coaches second. The report contains blind lists of salaries and compensation packages paid to each of 70 employee categories (administrators, coaches,…
Descriptors: Athletic Coaches, College Athletics, Comparative Analysis, Compensation (Remuneration)
Naughton, Jim – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1998
Salaries of head coaches in college sports are rising, but a large salary gap remains between coaches of men's and women's teams. In a national ranking of institutions by salary averages, men's coaches at the median institution made 43% more than women's coaches. Some institutions provide more salary equity than others. The Justice Department is…
Descriptors: Athletic Coaches, College Athletics, Comparative Analysis, Females
Naughton, Jim – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1997
As colleges cut men's athletics to provide more opportunity for female athletes and comply with federal mandates, male athletes are feeling shock and frustration. Since 1982, over one-third of colleges sponsoring wrestling have dropped their programs and men's gymnastics teams have decreased by half. Still, one study indicates only 10% of…
Descriptors: Administrative Policy, Athletes, College Athletics, Compliance (Legal)
Naughton, Jim – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1998
The proportion of women in top collegiate sports programs, 38%, and women's share of athletics budgets increased slightly in 1996-1997. Men still received almost twice as much money as women for operating expenses, recruiting, and athletically related financial aid. Advocates for women's athletics find the gains too small. College football…
Descriptors: Budgets, College Athletics, Females, Financial Support
Naughton, Jim – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1997
The Supreme Court will not hear the Brown University (Rhode Island) appeal in "Brown vs. Cohen," letting stand rulings that the university had violated Title IX of the 1972 Education Amendments by cutting financial support for women's volleyball and gymnastics teams. Advocates for women's athletics see the court's refusal to intervene as…
Descriptors: College Athletics, Compliance (Legal), Court Litigation, Equal Education