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How College Athletics Are Hurting Girls' Sports

The Pay-to-Play Pipeline, with a New Preface
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More girls are playing sports than ever before-which, on the surface, is great for girls because sports offer positive and empowering fun for young women. In reality, though, few young athletes report "fun" as a reason they play sports. The rates of concussions and repetitive-use injuries are on the rise, and kids are encouraged to specialize in a single sport at earlier and earlier ages, even at the expense of friends, other activities, and health. Through years of extensive research, Rick Eckstein discovered that college athletics have had an alarming impact on this trend in youth sports, particularly for girls. How College Athletics Are Hurting Girls' Sports looks closely at college sports and how they shape the athletic-and personal-landscape for girls and young women. Filled with powerful interview excerpts from women athletes of all ages, as well as coaches, league officials, and others, the book chronicles how college and youth sports have become more commercialized, to the detriment of participants. The book looks at a range of sports, with case studies including soccer, field hockey, ice hockey, figure skating, and Ultimate Frisbee. Featuring a new introduction to bring this evergreen topic up to the present, How College Athletics Are Hurting Girls' Sports is an important and timely reminder that even as we celebrate sports' potential to have a positive impact on a girl's life, changes need to be made in college and youth athletics to improve the experiences of young athletes so that sports become fun once again.
Rick Eckstein is professor of sociology at Villanova University and the author of Public Dollars, Private Stadiums and Nuclear Power and Social Power. His research on sports is cited widely in media such as the New York Times, Christian Science Monitor, Philadelphia Inquirer, and many others. He has received awards for both his teaching and his writing. He was a volunteer youth sports coach for over fifteen years.
Acknowledgments Preface to the Paperback Edition Introduction Chapter One: The Female Youth Sports to College Pipeline Chapter Two: Higher Education and the Youth Sports to College Pipeline Chapter Three: The Commercialized Youth Sports to College Pipeline Chapter Four: Creating Demand for the Youth Sports to College Pipeline Chapter Five: Female Sports on Male Terms Chapter Six: Saving Girls' Youth Sports by Changing Higher Education Appendix: The Challenges of Ethnography Notes Index
Combining sport business and sociology, Eckstein explores what he calls the 'pay-to-play pipeline' from girls' youth sports to women's intercollegiate athletics. Organized thematically, he employs a ''mixed-methods' approach' with quantitative primary and secondary sources, interviews with individuals involved with youth and college sports, and ethnographic observations. Eckstein focuses on five US female sports (soccer, field hockey, figure skating, ice hockey, and ultimate Frisbee), their pipelines, and intercollegiate varsity footprints. Eckstein's primary argument is that the pipeline is based on the embellished promise of a college scholarship or admissions advantage and includes increased commercialism, consumption, and commodification of girls' youth sports. The author critiques several aspects of the supply and demand of the youth sports industry, evaluates marketing strategies, and explores the 'masculinization' of female sports. Although implicating several groups, Eckstein reserves most of the blame (repeatedly so) for institutions of higher education and offers several suggestions for higher education to eliminate the pipeline. This is an academically grounded yet accessible work that both scholars and parents will benefit from reading. Summing Up: Recommended. All readers. * Choice Reviews * The book is very readable[.] * Cincinnati Reds Blog * How College Athletics are Hurting Girls' Sports is a timely and important challenge to the popularly accepted wisdom that sports always benefit girls' development. Rick Eckstein shows how the single-minded pursuit of the "next level" in the commercialized youth-to-college sports pipeline often does harm that outlasts girls' time on the field. This book is a must-read for players of all ages, parents whose daughters play sports, and college sports coaches and administrators. -- Rachel Allison, Mississippi State University With the tenacity of an investigative journalist, Rick Eckstein uses the methods of sociology to collect data on the sport experiences of girls and young women in the United States. His analysis and insights make this a must-read for parents of daughters, athletic directors, school principals, university presidents, and coaches of youth, high school, and college sports. They provide a basis for making informed personal and policy decisions that will improve the health, happiness, and well-being of girls who choose to play organized sports. -- Jay Coakley, University of Colorado at Colorado Springs, author of Sports in Society: Issues and Controversies Having coached on a prominent stage in both youth and collegiate soccer, I can clearly understand the concerns that are portrayed in Eckstein's book. I only wish I had this as a reference before I retired from the college ranks. I might have been more sensitive to each player's needs and trepidations. -- Glenn Crooks, former head coach, Rutgers Women's Soccer Eckstein takes a broad look at a contentious topic-how our love for playing a game becomes deeply embedded in structural quagmires well beyond our individual passions. Sociologically grounded, his ethnographic approach, data driven analysis, and provocative queries force us to ask questions that the increasingly commodified complex of higher education often prefers to side-step. How College Athletics Are Hurting Girls' Sports offers both depth and mainstream normalcy, but Eckstein's fundamental plea is at the base of a long history of girls and women in sport-validate the experiences of the female athlete, yet beware, exploitation isn't far from the next level. -- Jane M. Stangl, Smith College, past president of the North American Society for the Sociology of Sport Every youth sports organization should hand out this important book. Rick Eckstein identifies and goes deep into important issues, with parents thinking college scholarships are some holy grail, while the fun gets sucked right out of the game at a young age. He shows that the dollars don't even add up, with youth sports usually costing more than most scholarships provide. -- Mike Jensen, Philadelphia Inquirer
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