The Supreme Court, Title IX, and Gender Equality
by Roberta McCutcheon
Background:
The Supreme Court of the United States is the highest court in the federal
judicial system and has both original and appellate jurisdiction. Historically,
the Supreme Court's most influential role has been through the exercise
of judicial review. The Court's power to declare acts of the legislative
and the executive branches unconstitutional and therefore null and void
has enabled Supreme Court Justices to act as policy makers.
Title IX is a United States law enacted on June 23, 1972 that states:
"No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded
from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination
under any education program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance."
Looking at the issues and concerns that prompted Congress to pass gender
equity legislation will enable students to debate the significance of
judicial review and the Supreme Court on interpreting and reinterpreting
the meaning of the Constitution and the laws of the United States.
Objectives:
- Students will be able to identify terms associated with the appellate
jurisdiction of the Supreme Court of the United States.
- Students will be to analyze landmark Supreme Court decisions and
identify the impact of the Supreme Court on the Constitution and law
in the United States as the Justices exercise the power of judicial
review.
- Students will research and gain an understanding the history of the
gender assumptions and issues that led to passage of Title IX of the
Educational Amendments in 1972.
- Students will be able to identify the arguments (pro and con) related
gender equity, and the substance of the challenges to the law after
its enactment.
- Students will participate in the legislative and judicial process
through a mock Congressional hearing and a mock appeal before the Supreme
Court.
Student Exercise One: Understanding the Supreme Court's
Appellate Jurisdiction
- Have the students define the following terms: jurisdiction (original
and appellate), plaintiff, standing, civil law, criminal law, class-action
suit, writ of certiorari, brief, amicus curiae, per curiam opinion,
opinion of the Court, concurring opinion, dissenting opinion, stare
decisis, remedy, judicial review, activist approach, strict-constructionist
approach. An understanding of these terms will help students understand
the appellate role of the Supreme Court. This issue of History Now
has several articles that put these terms in context.
- Using one or more of the following landmark decision(s), outline
and discuss the appellate jurisdiction and the power of judicial review
of the Supreme Court. For a good overview of landmark Supreme Court
decisions, see the interactive feature in this issue of History Now
-- 15 Supreme Court Cases Every
High School Student Should Know.
- Marbury v. Madison
- McCulloch v. Maryland
- Plessy v. Ferguson
- Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas
- Heart of Atlanta Motel v. United States
Student Exercise Two: Mock Congress
- Identify the historical context in which Congress enacted Title IX
of the Education Amendments of 1972. Have the class research both gender
assumptions and experience in the United States from the end of WWII
to 1970. Look at primary documents and secondary accounts in order to
create an accurate and inclusive context for legislation defining and
protecting gender equity. Identify arguments that are both for and against
such legislation. This is challenging research and may take some time.
The following sites provide basic information and some good references
for continued research. Other sites are also available.
The following are Supreme Court decisions on Title IX:
North Haven Bd. Of Education v. Bell (1982/ employment)
Grove City College v. Bell (1984)
Franklin v Gwinette Public Schools Et Al (1992)
Jackson v. Birmingham Board of Education (2005)
Cohen v. Brown (1995-96)
- Mock Congressional Hearing
- Divide the class into Representatives and those expected to give
testimony and/or answer questions on gender equity issues.
- Those acting as Representatives need to be prepared to ask pertinent
questions on issues that will facilitate writing future legislation.
These students have the advantage of the law (Title IX, Educational
Amendments and subsequent legislation) to help them formulate probing
questions.
- Those giving testimony need to be prepared as experts on gender
equity issues -- some should be prepared to give evidence of the need
for legislation and some should be prepared to identify the problems
that such legislation could create.

Extension Activities:
Mock Supreme Court Hearing (Appeal)
- Create a scenario that includes a violation of one or more parts of
Title IX. The class may wish to use the facts of an already existing
civil suit. Cohen v. Brown University is an interesting case.
It was denied a hearing before the Supreme Court but students could
proceed as though the Supreme Court agreed to hear the case. The class
could use the facts of the case. There has been a lot written about
this particular case.
- Assign the following roles to class members: Counsel (s) for the
Plaintiff; Counsel (s) for the Defendant; Nine Justices
- Counsels on both sides will prepare their briefs and present their
arguments to the Justices
- Justices will be prepared to ask questions spontaneously during the
hearing
- Justices will confer after the hearing and decide the case.
- The class will write the opinion -- the written opinion may be a per
curium opinion, or may include a concurring opinion and a dissenting
opinion along with the court opinion. This will generate a discussion
about the effect the Supreme Court on the law and on the interpretation
of the Constitution.
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