Education
and Research
The
Foundation's increased involvement in women's programs came at a
propitious moment in education. In June 1972 Congress passed Title
IX of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, which prohibited
discrimination on the basis of sex in all federally funded
education programs. Further legislative steps
followed—notably the 1974 Women's Educational Equity Act and
the 1976 Vocational Education Amendments—both of which
dramatically exposed the nature and extent of discrimination in
U.S. schools, colleges, and universities. Because education plays
such a critical role in shaping women's aspirations and skills, the
Education and Public Policy Division initiated a program to promote
equal access to schooling at all levels and jobs in education, and
to eliminate sex discrimination in both educational materials and
the teaching process itself.
From 1972 on,
substantial Foundation resources went to organizations that
monitored public agencies charged with enforcing laws against sex
discrimination in education. Foundation support also enabled these
groups to offer technical assistance to the many schools, colleges,
and state departments of education trying to conform with the law.
When monitoring and assistance was ineffective, the Foundation
supported litigation to promote sex equity. Chief grantees included
the Association of American Colleges' Project on the Status and
Education of Women, the Lawyer's Committee for Civil Rights Under
Law, the Center for Law and Social Policy, the NOW Legal Defense
and Education Fund's Project on Equal Education Rights (PEER), the
Women's Equity Action League (WEAL) Educational and Legal Defense
Fund, the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, the American
Friends Service Committee, and the ACLU Foundation of Georgia. The
work of these groups, like that of groups concerned with women's
employment, brought new learning opportunities to millions of
students and inspired others to challenge restrictive
practices.