The landmark Title IX law turns 40 this week. While for most it probably conjures up images of women in sports gear, it also bars discrimination against pregnant teens and student parents.
Under the rule, schools must provide equal access to school and extracurricular activities for teen parents, and if separate programs are offered they must be voluntary. It also provides for a “pregnancy leave,” as deemed medically necessary and requires schools to “treat pregnancy as they treat other medical conditions.”
These protections should make it easier for determined teens to graduate from high school even when faced with the challenges of sleepless nights, finding and paying for daycare, or even being allowed the time to breastfeed during the school day. Unfortunately, this is not always the case.
The National Women’s Law Center (NWLC) has ranked each state according to its efforts to improve the outcomes of pregnant or parenting students based on state laws and policies, including whether dropout prevention efforts are offered and whether the state requires school districts to offer the programs.
Policies vary widely state to state, NWLC found. Less than half of the states offer specific instruction services to homebound or hospitalized parents, and almost half did not offer a definition of excused absences or exemptions from school that were broad enough to encompass student parents. Only six states address teen parents in their attendance policies and 11 states maintain easily accessible directories of local teen-parent programs.
“The majority of states have little or no laws, policies, or programs specifically designed to protect and support pregnant and parenting students,” NWLC wrote in its report, “A Pregnancy Test for Schools.”
California, Florida, and Oregon garner the most points from NWLC, with California coming in first. Idaho takes last with a negative score, while Wyoming, South Dakota, Nevada, and Nebraska all score an abysmal 1 at the bottom of the ranking.
(Click on the full chart above to find your state.)
NWLC points to Cal-SAFE, which offers an integrated community- and school-based program to teen parents, as part of the reason for California’s high ranking. An impressive 73% of students that participated in the program completed high school and another 63% said they planned to pursue further education or employment.
Graduation is the goal








