The WOMEN'S STUDIES Program will provide high quality, well respected interdisciplinary, student centered undergraduate education with the following desired outcomes:
To ensure continuous improvement of our programs, WOMEN'S STUDIES will implement assessment plans and will modify programs on the basis of the findings.
The WOMEN'S STUDIES PROGRAM will provide its professional expertise to the university region and the state with particular focus on expanding collaborations with local, state, and regional organizations, including K-12 institutions for mutual benefits to students, faculty, and our communities.
The WOMEN'S STUDIES PROGRAM will provide curricular and extracurricular activities that promote students' personal and professional growth and their commitment to social responsibilities.
WOMEN'S STUDIES will provide leadership for university programs that address gender issues and women's roles.
WOMEN'S STUDIES will encourage the University community to think critically and sensitively about gender, sexual orientation/identity; race, class and ethnicity; age and cultural background; and issues of size and diverse abilities.
WOMEN'S STUDIES will provide resources for colleagues and students who seek resources relating to gender and women.
WOMEN'S STUDIES will cooperate with campus groups which serve culturally diverse populations (e.g., Association of Nontraditional Students, GLBT Clubs, Women’s Initiatives Committee, Collegiate Association for Women, American Indian Cultural Association, African-American Union, OLLA, etc.) in planning and delivery of programs
and services.
The UW Colleges Women’s Studies Program addresses three areas of learning: curriculum, research, and civic and community engagement. Part of our mission is to extend learning from the classroom to research, service learning, and community outreach. We strive to balance traditional approaches to academic disciplines with a gender-focused perspective and to help students develop a general understanding of patriarchy and how it has affected, and continues to affect, women’s and men’s lives.
Curriculum
An interdisciplinary program
of study, Women’s Studies introduces students to the scholarship, literature,
and creative works by and about women that are transforming the liberal
arts and the professions. As an interdisciplinary, multicultural, and global
course of study, women’s studies courses will prepare students to use both
traditional and feminist perspectives to analyze gender, sex, and sexuality
as biological, psychological, social, and cultural phenomena. This might
include the study of social change movements, politics and government,
fine arts, literature, and the social sciences, with one possible goal
being the creation of an understanding that interrelated factors—e.g.,
race, ethnicity, class, age, disability, religion, national origin, and
sexual orientation—inform knowledge of women’s history, culture, and social
roles. Students should also gain knowledge of feminist movements
for social change globally and in the US.
Through the use of feminist pedagogical methods, the UW Colleges Women’s Studies Program will develop and sustain a learning environment, curricula, and a trained faculty to provide a complex, informed, and thorough learning experience.
On a broader scope, Women’s Studies has several overall goals for students:
Civic and Community Engagement
Activism and advocacy are
central components in the field of Women’s Studies. Consequently, the Women’s
Studies curriculum should respond to issues of concern relevant to the
lives of women on our university campus, in our local areas, across the
Americas, and around the globe. Further, the empowerment of a diverse population
of women, both in the academy and in society, within local, regional, and
global contexts remains a significant objective of Women’s Studies as an
academic discipline as well as a foundation for activism.
The Women’s Studies Program aims to increase the solidarity among women on campus and to improve the campus climate for women. The Women’s Studies Program can accomplish this goal through several initiatives: