May 02, 2024  
Undergraduate Catalog | 2019-2020 
    
Undergraduate Catalog | 2019-2020 Previous Edition

Course Descriptions


Courses below are listed alphabetically by prefix.  To narrow your search, use the Course Filter box.  Additionally, when searching courses by Code or Number, an asterisk (*) can be used to return mass results.  For example, a Code search of 2* can be entered, returning all 2000-level courses.  Click on a course to read its description.  Click on the link again to close the description box.

Pre-Sorted Lists of Courses

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University College

  
  • UCOL 1205 - Enrichment Seminar


    A seminar-style learning experience designed to enrich the education experience of one or more courses taken concurrently. The enrichment seminar is focused around a particular theme defined by the companion course(s) and provides opportunities to explore the topics of the course(s) in more detail and with additional materials, experiences, and assignments. The enrichment seminar will also address the college transition experience by enhancing students’ involvement with and knowledge of the campus and its resources and promoting problem solving and oral and written communication skills. Open to new first-year students only; requires co-registration in designated companion section(s) as indicated.

    Credit Hours: (1 to 3)
    Repeatability: May be repeated for credit with change of topic one time.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • UCOL 1206 - Enrichment Seminar


    A seminar-style learning experience designed to enrich the education experience of one or more courses taken concurrently. The enrichment seminar is focused around a particular theme defined by the companion course(s) and provides opportunities to explore the topics of the course(s) in more detail and with additional materials, experiences, and assignments. The enrichment seminar also addresses the college transition experience by enhancing students’ involvement with and knowledge of the campus and its resources and promoting problem solving and oral and written communication skills. Open to new first-year students only; requires co-registration in designated companion section(s) as indicated.

    Credit Hours: (1 to 3)
    Grading Method: Graded on a Pass/No Credit basis.
    Repeatability: May be repeated for credit one time with change of topic.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • UCOL 1210 - Transfer Seminar


    A seminar-style learning experience focused around a particular theme that is designed to assist with the intellectual and social transition to UNC Charlotte for transfer students by increasing the involvement of students in the intellectual life of the campus; providing an orientation to resources available to students; and promoting problem solving and writing skills. Students who have previously taken any UCOL 1000-level course may not receive credit for this course.

    Credit Hours: (3) (W)
    General Education Requirement(s) Satisfied: Writing in the Disciplines (W)
    Repeatability: May not be repeated for grade replacement.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • UCOL 1211 - Transfer Seminar


    A seminar-style learning experience focused around a particular theme that is designed to assist with the intellectual and social transition to UNC Charlotte for transfer students by increasing the involvement of students in the intellectual life of the campus; providing an orientation to resources available to students; and promoting problem solving and oral communication skills. Students who have previously taken any UCOL 1000-level course may not receive credit for this course.

    Credit Hours: (3) (O)
    General Education Requirement(s) Satisfied: Oral Communication (O)
    Repeatability: May not be repeated for grade replacement.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • UCOL 1300 - Academic Success Seminar


    Designed to assist continuing university students with the development of study and problem solving skills. Emphasizes using academic support resources, engaging in campus life, and enhancing academic performance.

    Credit Hours: (2)
    Restriction(s): Permission of department.
    Repeatability: May not be repeated for grade replacement.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, Spring 2019, Fall 2018
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Spring 2016


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • UCOL 1305 - 49er Focus


    An academic seminar designed to help students find greater success in college and in life. The focus is on maximizing effective study strategies, locating and utilizing resources, and identifying learning preferences to enhance academic performance. 

    Credit Hours: (0 to 1)
    Restriction(s): Permission of department.
    Grading Method: Graded on a Pass/No Credit basis.
    Repeatability: May not be repeated for grade replacement.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Spring 2019, Spring 2018
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • UCOL 2000 - Topics in General Education


    Topics chosen from the fields covered by General Education in order to demonstrate relationships and interdisciplinary influences. Can be used toward general degree requirements as indicated each time the course is offered.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Restriction(s): Sophomore, Junior, or Senior standing, and permission of the sponsoring department.
    Repeatability: May be repeated for credit with change of topic and permission of student’s major department.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, Spring 2019, Fall 2018
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • UCOL 2200 - University Learning Seminar


    Provides instruction in digital literacy, critical thinking, problem solving, and written and oral communication skills. Each section will be developed around a content theme selected from instructor’s discipline. Designed to reinforce and augment students’ intellectual and social transition to the University learning environment. Students who have previously taken a UCOL 1000-level course may receive credit for this course if registering with permission.

    Credit Hours: (1 to 3)
    Restriction(s): Permission of University College.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Spring 2019, Spring 2018, Spring 2017
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Spring 2019, Spring 2017, Spring 2016


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • UCOL 2400 - University Professional Internship Program Practicum


    All students with a UPIP internship are required to register for the UPIP practicum in each term in which they have an internship. The UPIP practicum coordinates the professional and career development reflections and assignments that are an integral part of the University’s Professional Internship Program.  Students must apply and be selected for a UPIP internship in order to register; eligibility restrictions apply.  For information, contact the University Career Center. 

    Credit Hours: (0)
    Restriction(s): Sophomore, Junior, or Senior standing; not open to second degree students
    Repeatability: May be repeated for credit.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, Spring 2019, Fall 2018
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • UCOL 3400 - Preceptor Training Seminar


    Students enrolled in the seminar learn how to support faculty in the classroom. Topics include: enriching learning engagement, supporting undergraduate student success, enhancing academic enrichment, and monitoring the classroom. Students also develop teaching-related skills and learn to provide mentorship to first-year students.

    Credit Hours: (1)
    Restriction(s): Permission of University College.
    Grading Method: Graded on a Pass/No Credit basis.
    Repeatability: May not be repeated.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • UCOL 3401 - Graduate Education Opportunities


    An introductory course designed to provide talented undergraduate students, particularly from under-represented groups, opportunities to explore various aspects of graduate education.  Students participate in instructional sessions designed to provide an overview of graduate education while exploring academic disciplines of interest in more detail.  Students develop an admissions application and statement of purpose.

    Credit Hours: (1)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, Fall 2016
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • UCOL 3410 - Career Development Internship


    Designed to allow students to take advantage of a workplace experiential learning opportunity when other options are not available.  Completing this internship requires at least 50 hours of supervised employment per registered credit hour.  The internship must provide a meaningful work experience in which the student uses the competencies gained from their academic program.  An internship proposal form must be completed and approved by the University Career Center in consultation with the student’s major department prior to registration and the commencement of the work experience.  Students cannot normally count the Career Development Internship towards their major or minor requirements (it counts as elective hours only); exceptions may be possible at the program’s discretion.

    Credit Hours: (1 to 3)
    Restriction(s): Junior or Senior standing, and permission of University Career Center
    Grading Method: Graded on a Pass/No Credit basis.
    Repeatability: May be repeated for credit up to 3 credit hours.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, First Summer 2019, Spring 2019
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • UCOL 3450 - Teaching Internship


    A structured opportunity for students to develop teaching-related skills by providing assistance to faculty in the classroom and/or working in a structured mentoring role in support units such as the University Center for Academic Excellence. Duties vary depending upon the assignment but may include: conducting review sessions, facilitating study skills sessions, lecturing, and assisting faculty member with exams.  Honors course.

    Credit Hours: (1 to 3)
    Restriction(s): Permission of the sponsoring unit and supervising instructor.
    Pre- or Corequisite(s): UCOL 3400 .
    Repeatability: May be repeated for credit up to 6 credits.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, Spring 2019, Fall 2018
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Fall 2017


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • UCOL 3800 - Independent Study


    Individual research, research, or filed-based experience in a topic under the supervision of a faculty member.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Restriction(s): Permission of instructor and Dean of University College.
    Repeatability: May be repeated for credit with permission.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, Spring 2019, Fall 2018
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes



Urban Studies

  
  • URBS 2200 - Introduction to Urban Studies


    A survey course exploring the diverse perspectives and experience of North American Cities. Lectures and discussions focus on the development, organization, function, and meaning of urban areas, as well as the multiple and complex relationships that exist between cities and the people who live and work within them. 

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Cross-listed Course(s): GEOG 2200  
    General Education Requirement(s) Satisfied: Western Tradition
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Spring 2019, Fall 2017, Fall 2016
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • URBS 3050 - Topics in Urban Studies


    Timely and important areas of scholarship and application relevant to urban studies.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Repeatability: May be repeated for credit with change of topic and permission of Director of the Minor in Urban Studies program.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Spring 2018, Spring 2016
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Fall 2018, Fall 2017, Spring 2017


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • URBS 3801 - Independent Study in Urban Studies


    Area of study beyond the scope of current offerings to be devised by student and faculty member. Three hours of URBS 3801  may be used toward the URBS minor with prior approval of the Director of the Minor in Urban Studies.

    Credit Hours: (1 to 3)
    Restriction(s): Urban Studies minor; Junior or Senior standing; minimum 2.0 GPA; permission of supervising instructor and Director of Minor in Urban Studies program.
    Prerequisite(s): URBS 2200 
    Repeatability: May be repeated for credit.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Spring 2018, Spring 2017
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • URBS 4401 - Internship in Urban Studies


    Students work 8-10 hours per week (total 120 hours per semester) for 3 credit hours in an approved research or in-service placement relevant to urban studies. Specific content of internship based on a contract between the student, supervising professor, and community/corporate organization.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Restriction(s): Urban Studies minor; Junior or Senior standing; minimum 2.0 GPA; permission of Director of Minor in Urban Studies program.
    Prerequisite(s): URBS 2200 
    Grading Method: Graded on a Pass/No Credit basis.
    Repeatability: May not be repeated for credit.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Spring 2018, Spring 2017
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes



Urban Youth and Communities

  
  • CUYC 3600 - Community Engagement Capstone Seminar


    Provides a culminating and comprehensive experience for students in the Minor in Urban Youth and Communities. Students synthesize the interdisciplinary theory and experiential learning around urban youth and education, communities, and social justice into a comprehensive community and school-based project lead by the student using practices of participatory action research.

    Credit Hours: (3) (SL)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, Spring 2019, Fall 2018
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Spring 2019, Spring 2018, Spring 2017


    Schedule of Classes



Writing, Rhetoric, and Digital Studies

  
  • WRDS 3140 - Arguing With Images


    Visual rhetoric and culture teaches students to become proficient and thoughtful users of visual argumentation and to understand how visual rhetoric operates within specific sociocultural and political contexts. Through attention to particular examples of controversies involving images, students learn why and how images matter, and how to leverage the power of images in both an effective and a sensitive way.  Assignments require students both to analyze particular controversies involving images, and to create their own images that make controversial arguments.

    Credit Hours: (3) (W)
    Restriction(s): Successful completion of the First-Year writing requirement or equivalent transfer credit.
    General Education Requirement(s) Satisfied: Writing in the Disciplines (W)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WRDS 3211 - Online Writing: Ethics, Appropriation, and Social Media


    Focuses on issues of responsibility, ownership, and access. Students research and write multimodal, online content, exploring the ethics and accessibility of texts in technological cultures that both facilitate and prevent access. 

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Restriction(s): Successful completion of the First-Year writing requirement or equivalent transfer credit
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, Spring 2019
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WRDS 3215 - Information Literacy and Digital Composing


    Provides highly transferable digital composition and rhetorical skills students can use to compose across many different curricular, academic, professional, and personal contexts. Students learn methods used to cultivate research from digitally enabled social networks and adapt traditional rhetorical skills  to account for digital cultures, accessibility, and portability in an update culture that participates in the critique and composition of online knowledge.

    Credit Hours: (3) (W)
    Restriction(s): Successful completion of the First-Year writing requirement or equivalent transfer credit
    General Education Requirement(s) Satisfied: Writing in the Disciplines (W)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WRDS 3220 - Current Theories and Applications of Writing


    Building on historical approaches in composition and rhetorical theories, this activity-based class engages students in a variety of tasks that help them enact the main principles of the discipline. Learning how theories in writing are processes in the making, students learn to use theories to interrogate writing challenges, adapt theories when new tasks present, and develop flexible approaches to communicating in traditional and emerging contexts. 

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Restriction(s): Successful completion of the First-Year writing requirement or equivalent transfer credit
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WRDS 4011 - Topics in Writing Technologies


    Examination of how various technologies (e.g., sound, gesture, movement, video) complement, forward, or replace print formats in digital spaces.  Students also see how these same technologies are accounted for in print, learning to adapt from one medium to another to produce the most effective text for an audience and message. 

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Restriction(s): Successful completion of the First-Year writing requirement or equivalent transfer credit
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WRDS 4021 - Topics in Writing and Reading


    Focuses on how meaning is constructed through particular mediums.  Students learn how various types of “writing” inform, create, and are repurposed within a genre and activity system by examining the multiple representations of an idea, perspective, or representation in order to develop strategies for reading and writing efficiently and effectively within and across complex contexts.  Students understand how meaning changes throughout the history and presentation of a genre, and how to effectively read and use those shifts in their own presentations.

     

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Restriction(s): Successful completion of the First-Year writing requirement or equivalent transfer credit
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WRDS 4201 - Composing Across Borders: Transnational Digital Composition


    Explores composing as cultural and political work with a specific focus on what it means to read, write, and research as a global writer in digital settings.  In this reading- and writing-intensive hands-on course, students participate and compose in a variety of digital ecosystems, examining how texts create, construct, and reinforce our identity and language use. 

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Restriction(s): Successful completion of the First-Year writing requirement or equivalent transfer credit
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WRDS 4210 - Contemporary Rhetorical Theory


    Familiarizes students with some of the contemporary conversations that highlight current debates and trends in writing studies that draw from and influence how we write in multiple contexts.  Readings focus on rhetorical theory from the mid-20th century through the early 21st century, with a focus on the last twenty-five years.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Restriction(s): Successful completion of the First-Year writing requirement or equivalent transfer credit
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WRDS 4225 - Writing Research Methods


    Explores a broad range of theories and methods for engaging in and reading various aspects of power, organizations, and communication through the lens of qualitative, quantitative, and mixed method writing studies research. Students analyze and apply these methods to any article, research site, or professional setting to answer questions about how people use, create, distribute, and create what stands for evidence-based knowledge.

    Credit Hours: (3) (O)
    Restriction(s): Writing, Rhetoric, and Digital Studies najor or minor, or permission of instructor
    General Education Requirement(s) Satisfied: Oral Communication (O)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WRDS 4330 - Reading, Writing, and Archiving: Charlotte


    Researchers who work with the public have a particular need to be comfortable with digital tools. Using the city of Charlotte as its subject, this course offers students a basic grounding in the technological skills needed to conduct online historical research and to present the results online, emphasizing how the Internet changes the relationship between researchers and their audience.

    Credit Hours: (3) (W)
    Restriction(s): Successful completion of the First-Year writing requirement or equivalent transfer credit
    General Education Requirement(s) Satisfied: Writing in the Disciplines (W)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WRDS 4400 - Writing, Rhetoric, and Digital Studies Internship Practicum


    Internships are off-campus experiential learning activities designed to provide students with opportunities to make connections between the theory and practice of academic study and the practical application of that study in a professional work environment. Internships are completed under the guidance of an on-site supervisor and a faculty sponsor who, in combination with the student, creates a framework for learning and reflection. This internship asks that students use the range of theories and methods from previous courses to study various aspects of power, organizations, and communication flows. Students work 8-10 hours per week and are assisted in finding placements that extend their learning experience.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Restriction(s): Junior or Senior standing; Writing, Rhetoric, and Digital Studies major or minor; and 2.0 GPA in all major or minor coursework.
    Pre- or Corequisite(s): WRDS 4225  
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WRDS 4900 - Senior Research Capstone


    Students complete an article-length research paper under the supervision of a member of the faculty (typically the instructor-of-record for the course). The paper must involve quantitative or other methods of writing research. Students propose and research a topic that builds on their previous coursework for the Writing, Rhetoric, and Digital Studies major. 

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Restriction(s): Junior or Senior standing; Writing, Rhetoric, and Digital Studies major or minor; and minimum 2.0 GPA in all major or minor coursework.
    Pre- or Corequisite(s): WRDS 4225  
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes



Women’s and Gender Studies

  
  • WGST 1101 - Introduction to Women’s Studies


    Introduction to values associated with gender and basic issues confronting women in society, from a variety of cultural and feminist perspectives.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, Spring 2019, Fall 2018
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Spring 2019, Spring 2018, Spring 2017


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 2050 - Topics in Women’s Studies


    Credit hours vary with topics. Special topics in Women’s Studies.

    Credit Hours: (1 to 3)
    Repeatability: May be repeated for credit with change of topic.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, Second Summer 2019, First Summer 2019
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Fall 2019, Fall 2018, Spring 2018


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 2051 - Topics in Women’s Studies


    Special topics in Women’s Studies.

    Credit Hours: (3) (W)
    General Education Requirement(s) Satisfied: Writing in the Disciplines (W)
    Repeatability: May be repeated for credit with change of topic.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 2110 - Women and the Media


    Examination of messages about women as conveyed in contemporary media (magazines, newspapers, videos, the Internet, video games, television, and movies.) The role of gender in the power structures of the media producers is also analyzed.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Cross-listed Course(s): COMM 2110 .
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 2120 - African American Women


    Explores how cultural, political, historical and economic factors shape African American women’s positions and opportunities in society today.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Cross-listed Course(s): AFRS 4120.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2016
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 2123 - Women in Cross-Cultural Perspective


    A cross-cultural survey of the lives of women and the dynamics of gender throughout the world. Uses anthropological research to examine how gender influences evolution, social stratification, work, kinship, and perceptions of the body.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Cross-listed Course(s): ANTH 2123 .
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Spring 2019, Fall 2017, Spring 2016
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 2130 - Masculinity and Manhood


    This course examines the construction of masculinity in sports, family, work and other social relationships, showing how it shapes and is shaped by people, institutions and society.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, Spring 2018, Spring 2017
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 2140 - Gender and Sport


    Explores the gendered nature of sports and the impact of feminist theory on the study of sport. Areas of focus include historical developments, media and representation, race and ethnicity, masculinity, sexuality, and physicality and power.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): First Summer 2019, Spring 2019, First Summer 2018
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 2150 - U. S. Women’s History to 1877


    A survey of women’s experience in the U. S. from colonization through the civil war and reconstruction. Special emphasis on the evolution of women’s public roles and the impact of class, race, and region in shaping women’s lives.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Cross-listed Course(s): HIST 2150 .
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 2160 - Introduction to Lesbian and Gay Studies


    Provides an overview of historical, sociopolitical, and psychological influences on the development of current day lesbian and gay social movements and cultures.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): First Summer 2019, First Summer 2018, First Summer 2016
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Fall 2019, Fall 2018, Fall 2017


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 2170 - Gender and Globalization


    Examines how globalization interacts with and influences gender roles around the world. Specific Topics include: the effect of globalization on the gendered divisions of power, violence, labor, and resources.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): First Summer 2017, Spring 2017, First Summer 2016
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 2251 - U.S. Women’s History since 1877


    A survey of women’s experience in the U.S. from reconstruction to the present. Special emphasis on work, family, and feminism, and the impact of class, race, and region in shaping women’s lives.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Cross-listed Course(s): HIST 2151 .
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 2252 - European Women’s and Gender History


    An exploration of women’s experiences in western Europe and Russia, covering topics of religion, work, family, and politics.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Cross-listed Course(s): HIST 2152 .
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 2310 - Gender, Activism, and Leadership


    Students select and complete a community activism project focusing on a gender issue. Key issues and controversies of past and present feminist/social movements, and what activists are doing today. While exploring the components of ethical leadership, students learn how to apply classroom theory to the real world around them.

    Credit Hours: (3) (W)
    General Education Requirement(s) Satisfied: Writing in the Disciplines (W)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, Fall 2018, Fall 2017
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3019 - Hispanic Women Writers in English Translation


    Examination of prose and poetry by women writers from Spain and the Americas to understand women’s voices and other cultures. Conducted in English; knowledge of Spanish not required.  Not applicable toward Spanish major or minor.

    Credit Hours: (3) (W)
    Restriction(s): Sophomore, Junior, or Senior standing.
    Prerequisite(s): UWRT 1103  or UWRT 1104  with a grade of C or above; or permission of instructor.
    Cross-listed Course(s): LTAM 3319  and SPAN 3019 
    General Education Requirement(s) Satisfied: Writing in the Disciplines (W)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3050 - Topics in Women’s Studies


    Special topics in Women’s Studies.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Repeatability: May be repeated for credit with change of topic.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, Second Summer 2019, First Summer 2019
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Fall 2019, Spring 2019, Fall 2018


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3051 - Topics in Women’s Studies


    Special topics in Women’s Studies.

    Credit Hours: (3) (W)
    General Education Requirement(s) Satisfied: Writing in the Disciplines (W)
    Repeatability: May be repeated for credit with change of topic.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3100 - Research Methods in Women’s and Gender Studies


    An overview of qualitative and quantitative research methods.  Covers the fundamentals of qualitative research by exploring the epistemological issues that shape qualitative research design, multiple ways of knowing, the relationship between theory and qualitative research methods, as well as the significance of critical methods in the study of marginalized groups and the “other.”  Matters of subjectivity, positionality, reflexivity, and trustworthiness of qualitative data collection and analysis are addressed.  Additionally, the following data collection strategies are discussed: focus groups, interviews, narratives, and ethnographies.  Examines the fundamentals of quantitative research, by covering the philosophical tenets and basic assumptions of quantitative research, formulation of research questions and hypothesis testing; data collection, basic descriptive statistics, and issues of reliability and validity. Lastly, addresses: (1) the advantages and disadvantages of both qualitative and qualitative research methods and (2) when it is appropriate to use qualitative versus quantitative, or both.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Repeatability: May be repeated for credit one time.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3102 - Changing Realities of Women’s Lives


    Influence of gender, race and class stereotypes on women’s identities and choices. Examination of women’s individual circumstances through writing.

    Credit Hours: (3) (W)
    General Education Requirement(s) Satisfied: Writing in the Disciplines (W)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, Second Summer 2019, First Summer 2019
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Spring 2017, Fall 2016, Spring 2016


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3110 - Gender and Communication


    Examination of the relationship between language and gender. Topics covered include how language shapes perceptions of men/women; gender differences in verbal and nonverbal communication; and gendered communication in relationships, friendships, and the workplace.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Cross-listed Course(s): COMM 3110 .
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2018, Fall 2017, Spring 2016
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3111 - Women in Judaism


    A survey of the roles and activities of Jewish women throughout Jewish history, as it is portrayed in a diverse sampling of Jewish religious literature and practice.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Cross-listed Course(s): RELS 3111 .
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3112 - Women’s Diaries and Women’s Experience


    This course examines why women keep diaries, how diaries provide an understanding of women’s experiences, and how diaries may be read as literature.

    Credit Hours: (3) (W)
    General Education Requirement(s) Satisfied: Writing in the Disciplines (W)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3130 - Perspectives on Motherhood


    Examination of the social, political, and economic conditions surrounding motherhood in the U.S.; explores the history and representations of motherhood, contraceptive/abortion issues, pregnancy and birthing practices, gender-neutral, same-sex, and bi-racial parenting.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3131 - History of Sexuality


    An exploration of the origins and evolution of our modern attitudes toward sexuality, sexual orientation, and gendering in societal context.  Discussion of sexual and gender identification, relationship and marriage, family planning and policy, prostitution and vice, and expressions or depictions of sexuality.  Case studies may draw from multiple cultures through time.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Cross-listed Course(s): HIST 3131 .
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3140 - Domestic Violence


    A survey of domestic violence in the US focusing on female experience as both victim and survivor of partner abuse. We will evaluate theories of partner violence, examine types of abuse across diverse female lifespans, and discuss multicultural and gender expectations, treatment, modalities, and social policy implications.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, Spring 2019, Fall 2018
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3150 - Body Image


    Discussion of body image through varying perspectives: size discrimination, advertising and consumerism, eating disorders, cosmetic surgery, self-image/male gaze, health vs. beauty, etc. All perspectives are examined as they are projected across the intersection of sexism, racism, classism, ageism and sexuality.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Spring 2018, Fall 2017, Spring 2017
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3152 - Modern Gay America


    Focuses on the emergence of the LGBT community in 20th century American Culture. Interdisciplinary methods and topics examine intersections of science, religion, popular culture, politics, geography, and other factors as they affect LGBT people in their heterogeneity. This course is designed to be an introduction to the study of LGBT culture, and students at all levels are invited to participate in the discussion of where this community has been and where it will go in the 21st century.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Spring 2019, Spring 2018
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3155 - Disney: Gender, Race, and Empire


    Focuses on how ideologies of gender, race, class, and sexuality are constructed in early and recent animated films of Walt Disney.  By examining the content of these films created within particular historical and cultural contexts, students develop an understanding of the cultural productions, meanings, and intersections of racism, sexism, colonialism, and imperialism.  A close analysis of these films also introduces concepts in feminist film theory and criticism. 

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, Spring 2019, Fall 2018
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3156 - From Girl to Goddess: Quests of the Female/Feminine


    Explores female protagonists’ quests through careful analysis of literature and film through a comparison of the universal mythic structure of the Hero and Heroine journeys and archetypes. Focus is placed on how gender expectations and experiences impact the characters’ rites of passages. Themes examined are the quests for identity, personal sacrifice, relationships, and how cultural stories reflect deeper patterns in society.

     

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, Fall 2018, Fall 2017
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3157 - Women and Activism


    Examines current and historical women’s activist movements across the globe. Special focus on methods and strategies for creating change and the social and cultural factors that shape specific activist movements.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Spring 2018
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3158 - Third Wave Feminism


    A review of the theoretical perspectives reflective of third-wave feminism, with a specific focus on work published in the past twenty years. Such third-wave feminism concepts as cyberfeminism, individualist feminism, new feminist theory, girl power, and transgender politics are addressed. New work by prominent third-wave feminists such as Naomi Wolf, Jessical Valenti, Elizabeth Wurtzel, Jennifer Baumgardner, bell hooks, and Judith Butler is discussed, while also emphasizing the importance of activism for contemporary feminists. 

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3160 - Gender and Education


    Explores the relationship between gender and education, primarily in the context of formalized schooling. Topics include: the history of women’s education; gender identity and socialization; gender discrimination and biases in curriculum and classroom teaching; gender gaps in academic performance; and the relationship between educational choices and gender.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, Spring 2019, Fall 2018
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3170 - Female Adolescence in Film


    Study of mainstream and independent films that focus on adolescent girls (or the lack thereof) and the sometimes symbiotic relationship between these films and society.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3180 - Gender in Hip Hop Culture


    Examines the roles of gender during the Black Power Movement to the ascendancy of Hip Hop culture in the twenty-first century. Designed to introduce students to the patterns of converging and cross cutting racism, nationalism, and feminism that are vitally important to the hip hop generation.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, Second Summer 2019, Fall 2018
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3212 - Women and Peacebuilding


    Exploration of the contributions women can make and have made to peacebuilding and conflict-resolution.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3215 - Religion and Sexuality


    An examination of the role of religious discourses and practices in shaping, understand and evaluating sexual practices, desires and identities.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Cross-listed Course(s): RELS 3215 .
    Repeatability: Although the focus of this course may vary, it may only be taken once for credit.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2018, Spring 2017
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3216 - Religion and Masculinity


    An examination of the role of religious discourses and practices in shaping, regulating and evaluating masculine identities and practices.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Cross-listed Course(s): RELS 3220 .
    Repeatability: Although the focus of this course may vary, it may only be taken once for credit.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3217 - The Bible and Homosexuality


    Considers a wide range of biblical texts that are referenced in political, cultural, and theological arguments concerning homosexuality, lesbian and gay civil rights, and same-sex marriage. Examines how both pro-gay and anti-gay interpreters have engaged biblical texts and invoked biblical authority across time, rather than determining which views are “right” or “wrong.” 

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Cross-listed Course(s): RELS 3217  
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3220 - Feminist Thought


    Cross-cultural and interdisciplinary survey of the main traditions of feminist theory in the context of their historical and philosophical roots.

    Credit Hours: (3) (W)
    Prerequisite(s): WGST 1101  or permission of instructor.
    General Education Requirement(s) Satisfied: Writing in the Disciplines (W)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, Second Summer 2019, First Summer 2019
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Fall 2018


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3221 - Feminist Thought


    Cross-cultural and interdisciplinary survey of the main traditions of feminist theory in the context of their historical and philosophical roots.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Prerequisite(s): WGST 1101  or permission of instructor.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3226 - Introduction to the Psychology of Women and Gender


    Application of research in developmental, experimental, and clinical psychology to issues regarding women and gender. Includes such topics as gender-role development, gender differences in cognitive abilities and performance, psychological perspectives on women’s physical and mental health, and violence toward women.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Prerequisite(s): PSYC 1101  with grade of C or above.
    Cross-listed Course(s): PSYC 2126 .
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3230 - Women, Work, and Money


    Explores the relationship of American women to money - as workers, consumers, caregivers, etc. Examines the dynamics of wealth, poverty, care-giving, mothering, gendering and occupational segregation on the lives of all women, young and old.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): First Summer 2019, Fall 2018, First Summer 2018
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3231 - Working Women/Women in Business


    Historical, sociological, legal, personal, and cross-cultural issues affecting working women.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3310 - Gender and Sexuality


    An interdisciplinary introduction to gender and sexuality studies. Its primary focus is critical perspectives on the social construction of gender and sexuality, inequalities based on gender and sexuality, activism around issues of gender and sexuality, and how gender and sexuality shape and are shaped by other systems of inequality.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, Second Summer 2019, Spring 2019
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3803 - Independent Study


    Supervised individual study and/or field-based experience in a topic or area of Women’s and Gender Studies of particular interest to the student.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Restriction(s): Permission of instructor and Director of Women’s and Gender Studies.
    Repeatability: May be repeated for credit.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, Spring 2019, Fall 2018
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 3820 - Feminist Philosophy


    Views of contemporary feminist and female philosophers on traditional philosophical issues such as ethics, human nature, the construction of knowledge, modes of social and political organization, the relationship between the mind and the body, and the nature of God.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Cross-listed Course(s): PHIL 3820 .
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 4050 - Topics in Women’s Studies


    Special topics in Women’s Studies.

    Credit Hours: (1 to 3)
    Repeatability: May be repeated for credit with change of topic.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, Second Summer 2019, Spring 2019
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Spring 2019, Spring 2018, Spring 2017


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 4051 - Topics in Women’s Studies


    Special topics in Women’s Studies.

    Credit Hours: (3) (W)
    General Education Requirement(s) Satisfied: Writing in the Disciplines (W)
    Repeatability: May be repeated for credit with change of topic.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 4120 - Women’s Studies International


    Explores policies affecting women’s lives across international borders and will look at a range of topics from divorce, marriage, violence against women and abortion to work and poverty.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Cross-listed Course(s): INTL 3120 .
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 4130 - Female Adolescence in America


    Explores the modern cultural, social and personal experience of young females in America. The central focus of the course will be the social construction of femininity and how it impacts female adolescents. We will examine the influence of race/ethnicity, class, and sexuality upon the lives of female adolescents.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, First Summer 2019, Fall 2018
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 4131 - Culture, Pregnancy, and Birth


    Explores how culture shapes the experience and practice of pregnancy and birth. Topics include: the birthing experience, midwifery, infertility, new reproductive technologies, and surrogate motherhood.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Cross-listed Course(s): ANTH 4131 .
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2016, Spring 2016
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 4140 - African American Feminism


    Examines the foundations, ideas, concerns and implications of African American feminism within historical and contemporary United States. Centers on fostering dialogues and critical discussions about African American feminism as a site of theory and practice emphasizing social, political, and personal transformation.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, Spring 2019, Fall 2018
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Spring 2017, Fall 2016, Spring 2016


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 4150 - Gender, Science, and Technology


    Examines select issues related to women and gender in science and technology.  Topics include: the role of women in science, the impact of science and technology on women, and feminist critiques of science and technology.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 4151 - Women, Biology, and Health


    An understanding of the structure and functions of women’s bodies and examines the social, economic, environmental, behavioral, and political factors associated with women’s health.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 4152 - Ecological Feminism


    Examines the cultural conditions that make possible the marginalization of both women and nature, the connections between feminism and environmentalism, and the relation between the norms and practices that inform developmental and environmental policies.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 4153 - Virginity: Power, Politics, and Pleasure


    Examines female virginity from an interdisciplinary perspective - all challenging and re-theorizing our modern conceptions of virginity. Course texts and discussion explore the history, myths, biology, politics, and personal definitions of female virginity and first-time sex across identities of gender, race, sexual orientation, age, and more.   A key question considered by the course: why is the initiation into female heterosexuality defined as a “loss” and what has been the consequence?

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Second Summer 2019, Spring 2019, Second Summer 2018
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 4160 - Race, Sexuality, and the Body


    Examines how biological, historical, and cultural interpretations of race and gender influenced and characterized definitions of sexuality and body image among persons of color.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, Fall 2018, Fall 2017
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 4165 - Sociology of Women


    Examines how the social world of women is influenced by their race, ethnicity, and class. Attention is given to changing roles of women in public and private spheres, and to the role conflict that arises as women attempt to meet obligation in families, communities, and the workplace.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Restriction(s): Junior or Senior standing.
    Prerequisite(s): SOCY 1101  or WGST 1101 ; permission of instructor.
    Cross-listed Course(s): SOCY 4165 .
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 4170 - Queer Theory


    Introduction to key issues in queer theory, a field of studies that questions and redefines the identity politics of early lesbian and gay studies. Queer theory investigates the socially constructed nature of identity and sexuality and critiques normalizing ways of knowing and being.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Fall 2017, Spring 2016


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 4191 - Women’s Health Issues


    Exploration of contemporary issues in women’s health from the feminist and women’s health movement perspectives.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Restriction(s): Permission of instructor.
    Cross-listed Course(s): NURS 4191 
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 4228 - French Women Writers in Translation


    Advanced studies of literature and criticism by French women writers in English translation, with a focus on women’s issues from a cross-cultural perspective. Course conducted in English.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Restriction(s): Junior or Senior standing.
    Prerequisite(s): UWRT 1103  or UWRT 1104  with a grade of C or above
    Repeatability: May be repeated for credit with change of topic.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Spring 2017, Spring 2016


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 4260 - Women: Middle Age and Beyond


    Position of older women in society and the particular problems of and issues for women as they age.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Cross-listed Course(s): GRNT 4260  and HLTH 4260 .
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 4401 - Internship in Women’s Studies


    Research and in-service training in cooperative community organizations that provide services to women and their families. Specific content based on a contract between the student, supervising professor, and community organization.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Restriction(s): Women’s and Gender Studies minor and permission from the Director of Women’s and Gender Studies.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Fall 2019, Spring 2019, First Summer 2016
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


  
  • WGST 4601 - Senior Colloquium


    Critical examination of selected issues.

    Credit Hours: (3)
    Restriction(s): 15 credit hours in Women’s and Gender Studies or permission of instructor.
    Most Recently Offered (Day): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years
    Most Recently Offered (Evening): Course has not been offered at this time in the past 3 years


    Schedule of Classes


 

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