Getting urban girls into the game: Dance first?
By Lauren Taylor It is the quiet story behind the high-profile victories of women’s athletics: After thirty years of Title IX, after the superstardom of Mia Hamm, Michelle Wie, and Venus Williams, even after the advocacy of groups like the Women’s Sports Foundation, girls – especially in urban communities – are playing sports in lower numbers than boys. There are many reasons for this and we heard about some in the Sunday New York Times and, more poignantly, in a short video on the NYT website. As an athlete and a recent Yale School of Public Health graduate who just completed a research project in which I focused on this very issue, I can tell you it’s frustrating and disappointing. Why do so many sit on the sidelines – or in public health terms, why do so many girls express feelings of low self-efficacy towards sports? The problem is particularly prevalent in urban and African American communities where residents have below average health, are low-income, and come |
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