o
to explore how social, historical, cultural, and psychological
forces have shaped them as individual, gendered beings;
o
to become more aware of the diversity of social experience by
exploring how the interactions of race, ethnicity, class, age, disability,
religion, national origin, and sexuality inform our knowledge of history and
culture;
o
to develop critical and analytical thinking skills, and to
transfer these to other classes, to off-campus activities, and eventually into
their professional careers.
Students
may take Women?s Studies Courses to fulfill Minorities or other Program
Requirements, or as electives. Students may also elect to pursue a Concentration
in Women?s Studies by Completing 9 hours of any combination of Women?s
Studies courses.*
Women?s
Studies courses complement and enhance the training that students receive in
the liberal arts and in such fields as Education, Law, Social Work, and
Management. Specializations in Women?s Studies are therefore of increasing
social, political and vocational relevance. Prospective employers welcome
employees who are sensitive to issues of gender and cultural diversity, and
students with Women?s Studies training have been employed in a wide range of
fields: from non-profit organizing to business, journalism to counseling,
health-care to marketing. Students interested in Women?s Studies have also gone
on to complete graduate degrees either in Women?s Studies or in one of several
fields associated with Women?s Studies (for example: Art, Anthropology,
Education, History, Humanities, International Studies, Law, Library Sciences,
Literature, Philosophy, Psychology, Public Policy, Sociology).
*If you are
interested in completing a concentration in Women?s Studies, you must
contact either your advisor or the Program Convener for Women?s Studies, to
complete the requisite paperwork. See http://hsh.uhcl.edu/womensstudies for further information.
REDDY/ March 5,
2003