How College Athletics Are Hurting Girls' Sports

How College Athletics Are Hurting Girls' Sports
Author: Rick Eckstein
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 257
Release: 2023-02-08
Genre:
ISBN: 1538177587

Featuring a new preface by the author, this book looks closely at college sports and how they shape the athletic and personal landscape for girls and young women. Filled with interviews from female athletes of all ages, this book chronicles how college and youth sports have become more corporate, to the detriment of participants.

Warrior Girls

Warrior Girls
Author: Michael Sokolove
Publisher: Simon and Schuster
Total Pages: 323
Release: 2008-06-03
Genre: Sports & Recreation
ISBN: 1416579621

Amy Steadman was destined to become one of the great women's soccer players of her generation. "The best of the best," Parade magazine called her as she left high school and headed off to the University of North Carolina. Instead, by age twenty, Amy had undergone five surgeries on her right knee. She had to give up the sport she loved. She walked with a stiff gait, like an elderly woman, and found it painful to get out of bed in the morning. Warrior Girls exposes the downside of the women's sports revolution that has evolved since Title IX: an injury epidemic that is easily ignored because we worry that it will threaten our daughters' hard-won opportunities on the field. From teenage girls playing local soccer, basketball, lacrosse, volleyball, and other sports to women competing at the elite level, female athletes are suffering serious injuries at alarming rates. The numbers are frightening and irrefutable. Young female athletes tear their ACLs, the stabilizing ligament in the knee, at rates as high as eight times greater than their male counterparts. Women's collegiate soccer players suffer concussions at the same rate as college football players. From head to toe, female athletes suffer higher rates of injury, and many of them play through constant pain. Michael Sokolove gives us the most up-to-date research on girls and sports injuries. He takes us into the homes and hearts of female athletes, into operating theaters where orthopedic surgeons reconstruct shredded knees, and onto the practice field of famed University of North Carolina soccer coach Anson Dorrance. Exhaustively researched and strongly argued, Warrior Girls is an urgent wake-up call for parents and coaches. Sokolove connects the culture of youth sports -- the demands for girls to specialize in a single sport by age ten or younger, and to play it year-round -- directly to the injury epidemic. Devoted to the ideal of team, and deeply bonded with teammates, these tough girls don't want to leave the field even when confronted with serious injury and chronic pain. Warrior Girls shows how girls can train better and smarter to decrease their risks. It makes clear that parents must come together and demand changes to a sports culture that manufactures injuries. Well-documented, opinionated, and controversial, Warrior Girls shows that all girls can safeguard themselves on the field without sacrificing their hard-won right to be there.

Girls and Sports

Girls and Sports
Author: Laura K. Egendorf
Publisher: Greenhaven Publishing LLC
Total Pages: 118
Release: 2012-05-11
Genre: Young Adult Nonfiction
ISBN: 0737756934

This must-have book explores issues related to girls and sports through a collection of personal accounts and factual articles. Using a variety of sources, this book explores whether or not sports are good for girls' health, and how girls are coached differently than boys. Readers will evaluate the impact of Title IX, and the effect of sex segregation in boys and girls sports. Essay sources include the American Association of Cheerleading Coaches and Administrators, Women's Sports Foundation, Margaret C. Duncan, Michael Sokolove, and Sarah Gibbard Cook.

Sporting Fashion

Sporting Fashion
Author: Kevin L. Jones
Publisher: National Geographic Books
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2021-03-09
Genre: Design
ISBN: 3791359436

Discover how the designers of women's sporting attire navigated the worlds of fashion, function, and propriety, from the beginning of the 19th century to 1960. This book offers a stunning visual record of the evolution of women's sporting attire over nearly two centuries. With selections from Keds, Pendleton, and Spalding and garments by Coco Chanel, Claire McCardell, and Jean Patou, among many others, it features familiar names in fashion, as well as significant rediscoveries. At the intersection of the history of fashion and feminism, Sporting Fashion highlights the extraordinary impact of new technologies and evolving social mores on women's clothing for sport. It explores how the basic forms of women's sportswear we know today--from swimsuits to sneakers--were developed during a time when women were achieving more freedom. Full color illustrations of sport and leisure ensembles are included, along with magazine spreads and archival images. In thematic sections, the authors examine the ways women entered into the sporting world--from traveling to calisthenics, motorcycling to promenading. The book looks at examples of clothing that allowed women to walk freely and compete in sports previously restricted to men. It explores how designers reacted to and encouraged the growing acceptance of exposed skin at public beaches and pools--and how cold weather fashion made its way onto the slopes and ice. Never before have the garments that defined women's roles as both spectators and athletes been presented on this scale and in such detail. Published with the American Federation of Arts and the FIDM Museum at the Fashion Institute of Design & Merchandising/Los Angeles The Costume Society of America is pleased to announce Kevin Jones and Christina Johnson as recipients of the 2022 CSA Millia Davenport Publications Award for their work titled Sporting Fashion: Outdoor Girls 1800-1960.

Winning Basketball for Girls

Winning Basketball for Girls
Author: Faye Young Miller
Publisher: Infobase Publishing
Total Pages: 189
Release: 2009
Genre: Basketball for girls
ISBN: 0816077592

Skills and strategies needed in basketball are presented with a focus for girls and women.

Girls Play Too

Girls Play Too
Author: Jacqui Hurley
Publisher: Merrion Press
Total Pages: 127
Release: 2020-09-01
Genre: Sports & Recreation
ISBN: 1785373390

Irish sportswomen have been breaking the mould for a very, very long time. In 1956, Maeve Kyle became our first female Olympian, and in 1978 rally driver Rosemary Smith broke the country’s land-speed record! Through the 1990s and 2000s we had world champions in Sonia O’Sullivan, Derval O’Rourke and Olive Loughnane, and more recently, the fantastic Katie Taylor, Kellie Harrington and Annalise Murphy have been among those who have put Irish sportswomen on the map. This book breaks the mould once more, as a first ever compendium of stories for children about our best contemporary sportswomen. With a fairytale touch, RTɒs Jacqui Hurley tells the stories of women who have proved that being a girl is not a barrier to sporting success. Each story is one of overcoming big challenges, and the role models celebrated here are sure to inspire the next generation of Irish sportswomen. Featuring twenty-five dazzling athletes, and with delightful drawings by five wonderful female Irish illustrators, Girls Play Too is a celebration of some of our brightest and best sporting stars, and of all that you can achieve if you try your best and never give up on your dreams.

The Smart Girl's Guide to Sports

The Smart Girl's Guide to Sports
Author: Liz Hartman Musiker
Publisher: Penguin
Total Pages: 356
Release: 2008-07-29
Genre: Sports & Recreation
ISBN: 1440641676

A fun and accessible introduction to the wide world of sports For every woman who feels out of her league when her signifi cant other spends nights glued to ESPN or when “the guys” talk sports at work, The Smart Girl’s Guide to Sports is here to level the playing field. A crash course in football, baseball, basketball, hockey, golf, boxing, soccer, and car racing, this couch-side companion explains the basics of each game, profiles who’s who, defines key terms, and arms readers with enough trivia to talk sports through extra innings. With this female-friendly handbook, sports-shy women everywhere can step off the sidelines and get into the game.

Developing Sport for Women and Girls

Developing Sport for Women and Girls
Author: Emma Sherry
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2020
Genre: Sports administration
ISBN: 9780367426552

Women and girls are often excluded from organised sport or face challenges in accessing sport or developing within sport. This is the first book to focus on sport development for women and girls. It provides a theoretical and practical framework for readers in the emerging field of sport development. Developing Sport for Women and Girls examines both the development of sport, and development through sport with expert contributions from Australasia, North America, and Europe. It offers critical analysis of contemporary sport development, from high performance pathways to engaging diverse communities to the use of sport to empower women and girls. Each chapter explores various contexts of sport development and sport for development theory with a specific focus on women and girls. It covers key topics such as health, education, sexual orientation and participation across the lifecourse, and features international case studies in every chapter. This is essential reading for students, academics, researchers and practitioners working in the area of sport development or sport management.

Sporty Girls

Sporty Girls
Author: Sheryl Clark
Publisher: Springer Nature
Total Pages: 196
Release: 2021-03-01
Genre: Sports & Recreation
ISBN: 3030672492

This book engages with the ongoing question of why many girls stop doing sport and physical activity in their teenage years. Previous research has found that many girls’ disengagement from sport takes place despite their childhood enjoyment and that frequently these same women take up sport again as adults. Within these chapters, Sheryl Clark explores what it is about this period of time that persuades many girls to disengage from sports when their male peers continue to take part; why some girls continue to take part; and most importantly how girls understand this participation. She suggests that girls’ participation in sport should be viewed as part of their ongoing constructions of ‘successful girlhood’ within a competitive schooling system and broader socioeconomic context.

Winning Field Hockey for Girls

Winning Field Hockey for Girls
Author: Becky Swissler
Publisher:
Total Pages: 201
Release: 2003
Genre: Juvenile Nonfiction
ISBN: 9780816047246

Presents all aspects of the game of field hockey for players and coaches, including rules of the game, training techniques, equipment, conditioning exercises, and offensive and defensive strategies.