Social Class and Sport - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Social Class and Sport

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Title: Social Class and Sport


1
chapter 13
  • Social Class and Sport

2
Chapter Outline
  • Social Classes
  • Social Class and Sport Activity
  • Control of Sport
  • Class Mobility in Sport
  • Summary

3
Economic Class Divisions
  • Social class The categories of people who share
    similar positions in society based on their
    economic level, education, occupation, and social
    interaction.
  • Social stratification The assignment of class
    based on inequalities in society such as power,
    prestige, and wealth.

4
Key Point
  • Individual opportunities in life are affected by
    class status.

5
Developing Capital
  • Economic capital The financial resources that one
    has or controls. These resources affect how we
    see the world and opportunities available to us.
  • Social capital Resources available to a person
    based on memberships, relationships, and both
    social and business networks. Social capital is
    affected by family and friends.
  • Cultural capital The skills and abilities we have
    based on our education and life experiences.

6
Key Point
  • Capital affects the sports we watch, play, and
    succeed in.

7
  • How does social class affect sport involvement,
    sport opportunities, and leadership or
    decision-making opportunities in sport?

8
Social Class
  • Social class status affects sport opportunities.
  • Upper class
  • Wealthy (with disposable income)
  • Exclusive memberships, used to build social
    capital
  • Can afford exceptional coaching and sport
    experiences
  • Have the highest rates of sport participation
  • Play exclusive sports such as golf, tennis, polo
  • More likely to use health and fitness equipment

(continued)
9
Social Class (continued)
  • Upper-middle class
  • Professionals such as lawyers, managers,
    physicians
  • Many sport experiences and opportunities such as
    gymnastics, swimming, and archery
  • Middle class
  • Make careful decisions about expenses
  • Many sport opportunities in community
  • Lower class
  • Low annual income (18,810 U.S.)
  • Play team sports available and subsidized in the
    community
  • Play strength, speed, and daring sports such as
    boxing wrestling, racing

10
Access and Barriers to Sport
  • Cost of high-performance training
  • Requires economic, social, and cultural capital
  • Top coaching and training can run as high as
    75,000 U.S. each year in some individual sports
  • Must pay for coaching, facilities, physical
    training, travel, equipment
  • Team sports
  • Often run and subsidized by community
  • Allows most kids to play
  • Coaching is much more affordable

(continued)
11
Access and Barriers to Sport (continued)
  • High school sports
  • Affluent schools win more championships
  • Afford better facilities, equipment, and coaches
  • Participants start sports earlier and receive
    more training
  • Affluent schools win more female championships
    than male championships
  • Community leagues
  • Serve more children at a modest expense
  • Provide training even in traditionally
    upper-class sports

12
Who Controls Sport?
  • Local communities Power is in the hands of
    administrators and boards of directors (parents,
    politicians).
  • National level Power is in the hands of the
    people who control the money for the
    organization.
  • Often from upper class or upper-middle class
  • Media moguls (Rupert Murdoch), league
    commissioners, and superstar athletes
  • Often White males

13
Key Point
  • People with power in sport have the ability to
    promote or prevent change in the game.

14
Social Mobility Through Sport
  • Educational opportunities
  • Need to stay academically eligible to play
  • Possibility for athletic scholarships (sport
    helps build social and cultural capital)
  • College athletes may have more opportunities than
    nonathletes
  • Leaders in business often attribute success to
    lessons learned through sport
  • Is class mobility through sport possible?
  • Unrealistic expectation
  • Only 0.2 of high school athletes play
    professionally
  • Best opportunity is to advance is through
    education

15
Summary
  • Opportunities in life are affected by social
    class.
  • Social class affects the sports that we play.
  • Money allows access to elite competition in many
    sports.
  • Power in sport lies with those who have the
    ability to make changes. Often these people are
    White males.
  • Sport can provide some opportunities for social
    mobility, but it also provides some false hope.

16
On Deck
  • Questions and comments
  • Assignments and readings
  • Next chapter Special Populations and Sport
  • People with disabilities
  • Aging adults
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