Her obituary in the Washington Post described how she came to make advocacy for gender equality in education her life's work:
In 1969, her newly earned doctorate in hand, Bernice Sandler was hoping to land one of seven open teaching positions in her department at the University of Maryland. When she learned she had been considered for none of them, she asked a male colleague about the oversight. “Let’s face it,” was his reply. “You come on too strong for a woman.”
When she applied for another academic position, the hiring researcher remarked that he didn’t hire women because they too often stayed home with sick children. Later, an employment agency reviewed her résumé and dismissed her as “just a housewife who went back to school.”
Dr. Sandler had run head first into a problem that had only recently been given a name: sex discrimination. Knowing she was not alone, she embarked on a campaign that would change the culture on college campuses — and eventually the law with the passage in 1972 of Title IX, the landmark legislation that banned sex discrimination in federally funded educational institutions.
Sandler's efforts did not end with Title IX's passage. She continued to research and challenge sexist practices in higher education, including sexual harassment and the "chilly" campus climate. She was also a strong supporter of Title IX's application to athletics.
RIP Dr. Sandler.