奇泽姆大学的公平竞赛

Y. Grushka-Cockayne, Jared D. Harris, Jenny Mead, Meera Shankar, J. Adams
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摘要

奇泽姆大学(Chisholm University)新任体育主任必须全面重新分配体育预算,平衡法律义务与更广泛的教育和财务目标。一个被任命来处理这个问题的委员会未能达成共识,原因是在如何遵守第九条的问题上存在分歧。第九条规定,在包括体育项目在内的所有教育项目中,性别平等。体育主管将这些事实组织成一个优化问题,这样她就可以系统地平衡权衡,管理系统需求或约束。奇泽姆大学的公平竞争2011年10月,在担任奇泽姆大学新任体育主管(AD)几周后,朱丽叶·伯克收到了该校校长查尔斯·威德莫尔的一封电子邮件。伯克要为系里确定一个新的方向,并重新分配整个体育预算。Widmore向Burke提出了一个明确的目标:优化预算,平衡法律义务与更广泛的教育和财务目标。每个项目都有自己的创收机会和相关成本。然而,性别平等的问题加剧了不和谐的可能性——通常指的是1972年《教育机会均等法》的相关段落:第九条。20年前,伯克还是一名学生运动员,从那时起,她就很清楚在体育运动中的性别问题上存在着相互矛盾的观点,但她对这个问题仍然存在争议感到惊讶,正如Widmore的电子邮件所表明的那样。由于对遵守规定的意见相互矛盾,被任命处理这一问题的一个委员会未能就是否需要改变供资达成协商一致意见。一些成员认为,鉴于目前的经济条件,男子体育项目——尤其是足球项目——提供的收入是最优先考虑的,往好了说,第九条是一个不幸的限制,往坏了说,它是对边缘妇女项目的无资金授权。其他成员敦促说,不能本末倒置,教育目标和学校长期以来的性别平等精神应该更多地推动决策,而不是利润丰厚的项目或富有的校友. . . .
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Fair Play at Chisholm University
Chisholm University's new athletics director must reallocate the athletics budget in its entirety, balancing legal obligations with broader educational and financial goals. A committee appointed to work on this issue had failed to reach consensus due to disagreements about how to comply with Title IX, the law mandating gender parity in all educational offerings, including athletics. The athletics director has the facts organized into an optimization problem so she can systematically balance the tradeoffs and manage system demands or constraints. Excerpt UVA-QA-0789 Aug. 23, 2012 FAIR PLAY AT CHISHOLM UNIVERSITY In October 2011, a few weeks into her tenure as Chisholm University's new athletic director (AD), Juliet Burke received an e-mail from Charles Widmore, the university president. Burke was to determine a new direction for the department and to reallocate the athletics budget in its entirety. Widmore presented Burke with one clear objective: in optimizing the budget, to balance legal obligations with broader educational and financial goals. Each program came with its own mix of revenue-generating opportunities and associated costs. The potential for discord was heightened, however, by the issue of gender parity—commonly referred to by the relevant passage of the Equal Opportunity in Education Act of 1972: Title IX. Since her own days as a student-athlete 20 years prior, Burke had been well aware of the conflicting opinions on gender issues in athletics, but she was surprised that the issue remained controversial, as Widmore's e-mail made clear. Because of conflicting views about compliance requirements, a committee appointed to work on this issue had failed to reach consensus on whether funding changes were indicated. Some members argued that, given current economic conditions, income provided by men's athletic events—football in particular—was the top priority, that at best Title IX was an unfortunate constraint and at worst an unfunded mandate for marginal women's programs. Other members urged that the cart must not come before the horse, that educational goals and the school's long-standing spirit of gender equity should drive decisions more than lucrative programs or wealthy alumni. . . .
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