The Department of Gender and Sexuality Studies offers students an opportunity to engage in two important and interrelated areas of study. Students in the concentration will examine those aspects of experience — e.g., the lives and works of women, the experiences of gays and lesbians — that have traditionally been underrepresented (if not invisible) in academic studies.

Students will also examine gender as a cultural phenomenon: as a system of ideas defining "masculinity" and "femininity," delineating differences between "the sexes," as well as "normal" expressions of sexuality. In the process, students will encounter some fundamental methodologies of gender and sexuality studies, and work toward an increasingly rich understanding of gender as a social construction, one that intersects with class, race, age, ethnicity, nationality, sexual orientation, and sexual identity. In addition, students will explore the methods and concepts of gender and sexuality studies in a variety of academic disciplines, integrating, for instance, sociology, psychology, literature, the biological sciences and art history.

From the debates between Wollstonecraft and Rousseau to the homosocial worlds of Walker's "Color Purple" and Melville's "Moby Dick," from Barbara McClintock's work in genetics to the gendered symbolism of Mozart's "Magic Flute," students will come to understand how questions of gender are deeply embedded in the liberal arts tradition.

The Department of Gender and Sexuality Studies encourages and enables students to take responsibility for their own learning. Toward this end, courses in the program will invite students to participate in a range of collaborative work. This culminates in the senior seminar, where students determine the content and intellectual direction of the course as a whole. Ultimately, students are encouraged to acquire a sophisticated insight into the consequences of the social construction of gender for both women and men, an insight that empowers them to engage and question the pervasive role of gender in their own lives and communities.

Learning Goals 

  1. Both in speech and writing, students should demonstrate an understanding of gender as a pervasive social construction and of how it intersects with other social and cultural identities, such as class, race, age, ethnicity, nationality and sexuality.
  2. Students should be able to apply this gender analysis to questions raised in disciplines across the liberal arts curriculum.
  3. Students should be able to use a gender analysis to integrate seemingly disparate elements (disciplines) across the liberal arts curriculum.
  4. Students should increasingly take more responsibility for their own learning. 
  5. Students should demonstrate an ability to collaborate with others in learning.
  6. Students should be able to effect change both in their own lives and in their communities.

Measures

  1. Senior Capstone annotated bibliography on subject chosen from student’s cluster. We use a rubric to assess student performance on various primary traits.
  2. Assessment of senior colloquium project enables us to assess goals 4-6, which are harder to assess individually.
  3. Beginning 08-09, we will assess non-majors through a common assignment used in a select number of both core and departmental courses. Again we use a rubric to compare student performance on traits associated with our learning goals.

Feedback

The program director will collect the data and analyze it, presenting the results to the advisory board, which will determine recommendations based on the findings.