"Institutions can continue to receive federal funding, even if programs within the institutions that do not receive federal funds discriminate on the basis of sex."
In this supreme court case, Title IX was limited in a sense that only particular programs that receive federal funds at school had to treat men and women equally as opposed to treating the school as a whole, and not all athletic departments were covered. In order to fully restore the effectiveness of Title IX, the "Civil Rights Restoration Act" was passed by Congress four years later. This act stated that if you were receiving federal funding, you had to follow all Civil Rights Laws, not just the ones that are for the particular program that is being funded.
In this supreme court case, Title IX was limited in a sense that only particular programs that receive federal funds at school had to treat men and women equally as opposed to treating the school as a whole, and not all athletic departments were covered. In order to fully restore the effectiveness of Title IX, the "Civil Rights Restoration Act" was passed by Congress four years later. This act stated that if you were receiving federal funding, you had to follow all Civil Rights Laws, not just the ones that are for the particular program that is being funded.