Raising Our Athletic Daughters
How Sports Can Build Self-Esteem and Save Girls' Lives
by Jean Zimmerman and Gail Reavill
List Price: $14.00
Pages: 256
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 0385489609
Publisher: Main Street Books

As parents, as educators, as a society we are searching for answers in
the late 1990s, when the cultural environment we provide for our children,
and especially for our daughters, seems increasingly threatening and malignant.
We've been troubled by a picture painted of adolescent girls today which
indicates that our daughters lose something of themselves as they cross
the threshold to adulthood, an essential part of the self that a leading
theorist of female adolescence, Carol Gilligan, has labeled "voice."
A wake-up call for many parents came with the widespread dissemination
of a survey report by the American Association of University Women (AAUW)
in 1992. "Shortchanging Girls, Shortchanging America" is only one of a
series of studies that have painted a dark picture of the way our society
treats its daughters. The survey found a troubling downward arc to related
aspects of girls' lives as they continue through secondary school. They
experience a larger drop in self-esteem than do boys, and as a result
are "more likely to lose interest in activities that challenge them, less
likely to believe in their own abilities, and less likely to question
teachers even when they believe the teachers are wrong."
Other research has reinforced the findings of the AAUW report. Most recently,
the Commonwealth Fund's Survey of the Health of Adolescent Girls, conducted
in 1996-97 by Louis Harris and associates, recorded the responses of 6,748
boys and girls in grades five through twelve. Two of the survey's key
findings were that girls are at a significantly higher risk than boys
for suffering depressive symptoms and that girls lose their self-confidence
as they mature, in contrast to boys, who gain in self-confidence as they
grow older.
Clearly, there is a pronounced difference in the way young girls and young
boys respond to modern life. The life choices of too many of our daughters
are compromised by drug and alcohol abuse, early pregnancy, sexually transmitted
diseases, eating disorders, self-mutilation, depression, and suicide.
For many, concerns about body image become almost an obsession. We give
radically different messages to our daughters and our sons, with often
tragic results. We are raising a nation of Ophelias, to use a metaphor
made popular by clinical psychologist and author Mary Pipher, who describes
our culture as "girl poisoning."
But one source of optimism registers against this bleak background. Our
daughters are pouring onto the playing fields of this country in unprecedented
numbers. There is a growing awareness that girls enjoy sports and that
sports are good for girls. New evidence is developing which indicates
that girls who play sports tend to avoid the physical, psychological,
and social pitfalls of modern adolescence. For a number of reasons, playing
sports empowers girls.
But something is still not right. For girls today, the desire and the
readiness to play are there, but the way is often blocked. Raising an
athletic daughter--even in this era of ferocious WNBA court pounders and
the triumph of female athletes at both the 1996 Atlanta and 1998 Nagano
Olympic Games--parents may experience and observe situations that are
disconcerting, if not disturbing. Twenty-five years after the passage
of Title IX, the law that mandates equal resources for girls' and boys'
athletic programs, stubborn disparities still exist. It can be as simple
as the number of sports available for girls in your area, either in the
school system or outside of school. Boys might be able to participate
in soccer, baseball, football, basketball, swimming, hockey, martial arts,
while for girls there may be only basketball, gymnastics, swimming, and
soccer. Girls' locker rooms always seem to be smaller, their practice
times less convenient, and their games likely to be scheduled on school
nights, when attendance is sparse, rather than on crowd-friendly weekends.
The girls' teams carpool, the boys' teams get the hired bus.
The national media offer only minimal news coverage of our daughters'
sports heroines or of the women's teams they follow. Studies reveal that
more than 95 percent of national sports coverage pertains to male athletes.
Athletic girls lack female role models. Even if your daughter loves sports
and gets a chance to play, her coaches might be all men.
Our daughters drop out of sports at much higher rates than our sons, and
it tends to happen right on the cusp of adolescence, when girls most need
the benefits athletics can provide. Too many parents have the experience
of seeing their child get involved with some kind of activity--soccer,
say, or gymnastics--when she is in elementary school, only to have her
announce her intention to quit when she reaches junior high. While a third
of high school freshman girls play sports, that percentage drops to 17
percent in their senior year.
Some parents may be surprised by the characterization of American girls
today as eager to play sports. They might see their daughters spending
much more time loafing around the house watching TV than engaging in any
kind of physical exertion. This is the source of a contemporary paradox:
at a time of spiraling interest in sports for girls and women, physical
activity among our children is dropping precipitously. Since 1982, there
has been a 21 percent plunge in the number of teenagers who exercise regularly.
It's as if our society is made up of two cultures, playing-field culture
and television-watching culture, and the two of them are drifting inexorably
apart.
This book represents the fruit of our efforts to talk to those people
most intimately involved with these concerns--girls who play sports. We
spoke to athletes all over the country who are participating in a wide
range of sports, as well as some girls who have dropped out of sports
entirely. We also interviewed professional athletes, parents, educators,
coaches, trainers, program directors, and academics. We talked with girls
in grade school, high school, and college, with their friends and relatives.
Our own friends and family members gave us opportunity for interviews.
The community we live in furnished a rich ground for investigation. We
sifted through studies and reports and delved into the "secret history"
of the female athlete.
We were looking for ways in which the world of sports can benefit our
daughters as well as ways to open that world as much as possible for them.
We found considerable cause for optimism. The girls we met impressed us
with their energy, poise, and confidence. These are young women who actively
and intelligently make their own choices and shape their own lives. They
help communicate the message that sports, at their best, can be an expression
of the human yearning for excellence. And they provide reason for us to
believe that in raising our athletic daughters, we are raising girls to
be strong, self-determined women.
Excerpted from Raising
Our Athletic Daughters by Jean Zimmerman. Copyright© 1999 by
Jean Zimmerman. Excerpted by permission of Main Street Books, a division
of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may
be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpted from Raising Our Athletic Daughters © Copyright 2012 by Jean Zimmerman and Gail Reavill. Reprinted with permission by Main Street Books. All rights reserved.
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