Coaches Who Prey: Unregulated World of Private Coaching Ripe for.... Maureen O'Hagan and Christine Willmsen.
by O'Hagan, Maureen; ProQuest Information and Learning Company.
Series: SIRS Enduring Issues 2004Article 308Institutions. Publisher: The Seattle Times, 2003ISSN: 1522-3256;.DDC classification: 050 Summary: "A Seattle Times investigation has found the increasingly competitive world of women's sports offers a new landscape of opportunity for the unscrupulous minority of predatory coaches.... Hundreds of elite private teams...have sprung up across the country to meet girls' growing demands for better training, yet the coaches in this private world have no bosses and no regulations." (THE SEATTLE TIMES) This article reveals how coaches who were reprimanded or resigned due to sexual misconduct "can easily slip into this unregulated world of private coaching."Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due |
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REF SIRS 2005 Institutions Article 43 Coaches Who Prey: The Abuse of Girls and the System That Allows It. | REF SIRS 2005 Institutions Article 43 Coaches Who Prey: Districts Often Make Deals or Look the Other Way. | REF SIRS 2005 Institutions Article 43 Coaches Who Prey: State System Failing to Weed Out the Unfit. | REF SIRS 2005 Institutions Article 43 Coaches Who Prey: Unregulated World of Private Coaching Ripe for.... | REF SIRS 2005 Institutions Article 44 The Agony of Victory. | REF SIRS 2005 Institutions Article 44 A Call to Arms. | REF SIRS 2005 Institutions Article 45 The Lab Animal. |
Articles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2004.
Originally Published: Coaches Who Prey: Unregulated World of Private Coaching Ripe for..., Dec. 17, 2003; pp. A1+.
"A Seattle Times investigation has found the increasingly competitive world of women's sports offers a new landscape of opportunity for the unscrupulous minority of predatory coaches.... Hundreds of elite private teams...have sprung up across the country to meet girls' growing demands for better training, yet the coaches in this private world have no bosses and no regulations." (THE SEATTLE TIMES) This article reveals how coaches who were reprimanded or resigned due to sexual misconduct "can easily slip into this unregulated world of private coaching."
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