Marty Gossett brought this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and 20 U.S.C. § 1681(a) (Title IX) against the Board of Regents of Langston University, and the University President and Dean of the University School of Nursing. Mr. Gossett alleged that his involuntary withdrawal from the University’s nursing program was caused by gender discrimination that violated his right to equal protection, substantive and procedural due process, and Title IX. The district court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment, ruling that Mr. Gossett had failed to present sufficient evidence to raise a jury question on his claims. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.
I
We review the grant of summary judgment de novo, applying the same legal standard employed by the district court under Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c).
See Henderson v. Inter-Chem Coal Co.,
Viewed under these standards, the record reveals the following background facts. Mr. Gossett successfully completed his first semester in the Nursing School and enrolled as a second semester student in *1176 the Fall of 1994. He did well in all of his classes that semester except for a Process II course taught by nursing instructors Kathleen Clarke and Pamela DiVito-Thomas. When Mr. Gossett began experiencing difficulty in the Process II course, he sought help and counseling from the instructors. In response to defendants’ motion for summary judgment, Mr. Gos-sett offered evidence, which the district court rejected and which we discuss in detail below, to support his allegation that the instructors discriminated against the male students in the class and that as a result he was not given the same help, counseling, and opportunities to improve his performance as provided to women nursing students. He ultimately received a D in the class, which under Nursing School policy required his dismissal from the nursing program. His administrative grade appeal was denied, and his numerous attempts to obtain readmission were also unsuccessful.
II
A. Title IX
Mr. Gossett brought a claim
for
gender discrimination under Title IX, which provides that “[n]o person ... shall, on the basis of sex, ... be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance.” 20 U.S.C. § 1681(a). Title IX thus prohibits gender discrimination against students enrolled in federally supported educational programs and has been construed to provide an implied cause of action to an aggrieved individual.
See Murray v. New York Univ. College of Dentistry,
In this case, the district court assessed Mr. Gossett’s Title IX claim under the three-part framework established for Title VII claims in
McDonnell Douglas Corp. v. Green,
The creation of a prima facie case gives rise to the presumption that the challenged action was the result of unlawful discrimination.
See Greene v. Safeway Stores, Inc.,
A plaintiff demonstrates pretext either by showing that a discriminatory reason more likely motivated the defendant’s decision or that the employer’s proffered explanation is unworthy of belief.
See Marx,
We review evidentiary rulings at the summary judgment stage for an abuse of discretion.
See In re Durability Inc.,
Mr. Gossett argued in opposition to defendants’ motion for summary judgment that the Nursing School had a policy of allowing instructors to give failing students a grade of “Incomplete” and providing those students extra time in which to improve their grades, and that the School applied this policy in a sexually discriminatory manner. In support of his contention, he offered undisputed evidence that the class in which he received a D was made up of twenty-four students, five of whom were men. Three of the five men failed the course, while all of the women passed. See App. at 200. In addition, Mr. Gossett presented the affidavit of Anita Leforce, a female nursing student enrolled during the Fall 1994 semester in a Practieum I class. She stated that at the end of the semester she was informed by her instructor that she had not successfully completed the class and would be given a D on her transcript. Ms. Leforce, however, was given the opportunity to complete seven additional weeks of work in the course, and received a C rather that a D. The district court held the probative value of this affidavit negligible because Ms. Leforce was enrolled in a different course taught by a different instructor. We disagree.
It is true that in the context of allegations of discriminatory discipline, this court has looked to whether the plaintiff and others with whom he seeks to compare himself worked under the same supervisor.
See, e.g., Aramburu v. Boeing Co.,
Mr. Gossett also presented the affidavit of Deborah Guy, who taught a variety of classes at the Nursing School from 1993 to 1997 and served as a member of the Admissions Committee. Her affidavit, which is set out in its entirety in the margin, 2 described a pattern of diserimina *1179 tion at the school directed at male students in general and Mr. Gossett in particular. In her affidavit Ms. Guy offers her opinion, based on her observations and experiences while teaching at the Nursing School, that Mr. Gossett’s involuntary withdrawal from the nursing program, and the denial of his readmission, was the result of school-wide gender discrimination.
The district court rejected Ms. Guy’s affidavit, concluding it failed to establish that her observations and opinions were based on personal knowledge. Again we disagree. Under Fed.R.Evid. 701, the testimony of a lay witness “in the form of opinions or inferences” is admissible if those opinions or inferences “are (a) rationally based on the perception of the witness and (b) helpful to a clear understanding of the witness’ testimony or the determination of a fact in issue.” Courts generally hold admissible under Rule 701 evidence in the form of lay opinion testimony in discrimination cases when given by a person whose position with the defendant entity provides the opportunity to personally observe and experience the defendant’s policies and practices.
See, e.g., Hansard v. Pepsi-Cola Metro. Bottling Co.,
Such opinion testimony was allowed in
Hansard
on the issue of age discrimination even though the witness had no firsthand knowledge of the termination at issue because the testimony was based on the witness’ own experience as an employee with the defendant company and his familiarity with its hiring policy.
See id.
at 1465. In
Lightfoot v. Union Carbide Corp.,
In the present case, Ms. Guy’s affidavit demonstrates that her position as an instructor in the Nursing School and on the Admissions Committee provided her with the opportunity to observe firsthand for several years the School’s policies and practices with respect to its treatment of male students. Her opinion was a means of conveying her impression based on what she had herself perceived, and it was predicated upon concrete facts within her own observation and recollection. Consequently, her affidavit was admissible under Rule 701, and the district court abused its discretion in refusing to consider it. 4
Upon consideration of the affidavits of Ms. Leforce and Ms. Guy, and the other evidence discussed above, we conclude that summary judgment for defendants on the Title IX claim must be reversed and remanded for further proceedings.
B. Section 1983
Mr. Gossett also brought a claim under section 1983 asserting that the alleged gender discrimination denied him his constitutional right to equal protection. Our holding that he has created a fact issue on gender discrimination under Title IX requires that we reverse the grant of summary judgment on his section 1983 claim as well. Given the viability of the section 1983 claim, which can proceed against defendants individually, we need not consider defendants’ argument that the Title IX suit cannot proceed against the individual defendants.
Defendants also contend that the individual defendants are entitled to qualified immunity. Although the parties addressed the issue in the summary judg *1181 ment proceedings below, the district court did not rule on the matter per se, concluding instead that Mr. Gossett had not prevailed on the merits of his claims. On appeal, appellees rely on the district court’s ruling and argue the qualified immunity issue on the merits. In view of our decision that fact disputes on the merits in this case require a remand for further proceedings, we remand the qualified immunity issue for further proceedings as well. 5
C. Procedural and Substantive Due Process
Mr. Gossett claimed that he was deprived of his right to both procedural and substantive due process in connection with his involuntary dismissal from the Nursing School. The district court granted summary judgment to defendants on these claims, holding that Mr. Gossett received prior notice of the possibility of dismissal, and that the decision to require his withdrawal was careful and deliberate, not arbitrary and capricious. As discussed below, we are persuaded the record contains a factual dispute as to whether the decision was in fact based on gender discrimination rather than a careful evaluation of Mr. Gossett’s academic performance.
As an initial matter, we note that Mr. Gossett had a property interest in his place in the Nursing School program that is entitled to due process protection under the Constitution.
See Harris v. Blake,
We turn first to Mr. Gossett’s claim that the manner in which he was required to involuntarily withdraw from the nursing program denied him procedural due process. When a school makes an ostensibly academic judgment about a student, the procedural requirements of the Due Process Clause are satisfied if the student is given prior notice of the deficiencies in his academic performance and if the challenged decision is “careful and deliberate.”
Horowitz,
Under Supreme Court authority, a plaintiff asserting a substantive due process claim based on an academic decision must show that the decision was the product of arbitrary state action rather than a conscientious, careful and deliberate exercise of professional judgment.
See Ewing,
The judgment of the district court is REVERSED and REMANDED for further proceedings in light of this opinion.
Notes
. Although defendants agree that Title VII standards apply to proper cases brought under Title IX, they appear to argue on appeal that Title IX does not provide a private cause of action to a student like Mr. Gossett who alleges that his involuntary withdrawal from an academic program was caused by gender discrimination. Defendants did not make this argument to the district court in their brief in support of summary judgment. Even if we were to consider this issue for the first time on appeal, we have found no argument or authority to support the notion that Title IX, which bars sexual discrimination in any federally assisted education program, does not apply when a student alleges he was forced to withdraw from a program due to gender discrimination.
.
1. I taught a variety of classes at the Lang-ston University School of Nursing from 1993 to January 1997 at the Langston campus, and served as a member of the Admissions Committee.
2. While employed for the University I witnessed routine mistreatment of the male nursing students at the Langston University School of Nursing by the University faculty and Dr. Carolyn Kornegay, the Dean and Director of the School of Nursing.
3. The female faculty is very hard on the male students in the Nursing program, and while I was employed at the Langston University School of Nursing, I witnessed only four male students graduate from the program.
4. I have personal knowledge that Marty Gossett was ridiculed, belittled, and mocked by the female faculty at Langston University School of Nursing, during numerous faculty meetings I attended.
5. I have personal knowledge that Kathy Clark, Marty’s instructor in Process II, verbalized on numerous occasions, in many different ways, that she did not like Marty Gossett.
6. Dr. Carolyn Kornegay's treatment of male students at the Langston University School of Nursing could best be described as tyrannical and discriminatory.
7. Dr. Carolyn Kornegay acts as if she is untouchable in her position, and maintains "delusions of grandeur”; and because of her reputation it has been very difficult to find qualified faculty for the Nursing School.
8. Dr. Carolyn Kornegay's position as Dean of the Langston University School of Nursing, combined with her openly discriminatory behavior toward male nursing students appears to affect the way her faculty and employees treat the male students as well, i.e., it causes a "trickle down” of the disparate and unequal treatment of males, beginning with Dr. Carolyn Kornegay and continuing with most of her faculty, and condoned by Dr. Kornegay when it occurs.
9. I have personal knowledge that "incomplete” grades were given to students for courses that they were failing at the time. These students were allowed to remediate these grades in some form. Decisions as to which students received these incompletes were arbitrary and capricious in nature.
10. I have personal knowledge of nine students that were given special favors and consideration in Nursing Process II at the Lang-ston University School of Nursing. These students were given "Incompletes” for Process II while they were contemporaneously failing the course, providing them with the opportunity to remediated Process II, and advance to their third level without completing their second level. Process II was the course in which Marty Gossett was unsuccessful, preventing him from advancing to his third level. Marty Gossett was denied this opportunity to receive an "Incomplete.”
11. I have personal knowledge that the female faculty involved in the readmission process at the Langston University School of Nursing did not want Marty Gossett to be readmitted to the Nursing Program, and took both affirmative and passive steps to ensure that Marty was not allowed back in the school, even though he had a solid academic record and was qualified as a student.
12. I have personal knowledge that the faculty knew exactly who the students were that they were evaluating for readmission, *1179 and that there is no anonymity to the readmission process.
13. Certain members of the faculty at both the Langston and Tulsa campuses are known to be "male-bashers," and I believe Marty encountered some of these professors.
14. I feel that there is a definite pattern of discrimination toward male nursing students at Langston University School of Nursing, based on their gender, and I have witnessed specific instances and accounts of this abuse and discriminatory treatment.
15. It is my opinion that Marty Gossett was discriminated against based upon his gender, and that he was mistreated inside and outside of the classroom at the Tulsa campus of the Langston University School of Nursing. It is also my opinion that this discriminatory treatment was the cause of Marty’s -lack of success in his Process II course, and also the reason he was purposefully excluded from readmission the Langston University School of Nursing. App., vol. I at pp. 411-13 (emphasis added).
. In support of their argument that the district court correctly refused to consider the affidavits discussed above, defendants cite several cases holding that statements cannot be considered for summary judgment purposes unless they are based on personal knowledge. Most of these cases are readily distinguishable because they do not address the admissibility of lay opinion testimony under Fed.R.Evid. 701. The few cases that do may be distinguished on the ground that the lay opinions offered in those cases were not accompanied by the requisite showing that the witness was in a position to obtain personal knowledge or firsthand observation of the matters upon which the proffered opinion was based.
See Alexis v. McDonald’s Restaurants of Mass., Inc.,
. Mr. Gossett offered other material in opposition to defendants' motion for summary judgment. Because we conclude that the items of evidence discussed above are a sufficient ground for reversing the grant of summary judgment for defendants on the Title IX claim, we do not address the district court’s refusal to consider the other material. We note, however, that if this material is again offered by Mr. Gossett in further proceedings, the district court may wish to reassess its admissibility in light of this opinion.
. A defendant who has lost his right not to stand trial "can ‘reassert [his] qualified immunity claims at and after trial when the factual disputes have been resolved.’ ”
Guffey v. Wyatt,
. It is undisputed that Mr. Gossett received constitutionally adequate notice that his performance was not satisfactory.
. The district court did not address Mr. Gos-sett's claim that illegal discrimination played a role in his unsuccessful grade contest proceedings and in his failure to be readmitted. Given our holding reversing and remanding Mr. Gossett’s claim based on the D grade he received, which in turn necessitated his grade contest and his requests for readmission, we do not specifically address these claims. The parties are free to pursue them further on remand.
