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Nov 23, 2024
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WOST 302 - Women and Families Units: 3 ; Breadth Area: Diversity Gender and unpaid family care-work. Covered topics may include family formation and dissolution, parent-child relations, interaction and power, the diversity of families, heteronormativity, domestic violence, reproductive rights, and family policy.
Prerequisites: Junior, senior or post-baccalaureate standing. Possible Instructional Methods: On-ground, or Hybrid or Online-Asynchronous. Grading: A-F or CR/NC (student choice). Breadth Area(s) Satisfied: Overlay - Diversity Course Typically Offered: Fall & Spring
Student Learning Outcomes - Upon successful completion of this course students will be able to:
- Identify and examine contemporary U.S. families, the division of labor within the household, domestic violence, heteronormativity, and changing social and economic roles for women.
- Analyze historical and contemporary research on marriage as a political institution that creates alliances between groups, systems of inequality between men and women, exclusive boundaries by law, and perpetuates social inequality.
- Examine issues of class, race, ethnicity, immigrant status and gender and the ways these identity markers impact power in contemporary U.S. families.
- Explore the social construction of motherhood in the U.S. with particular attention paid to marginalized mothers.
- Discuss theoretical and empirical studies on the family and its impact on gender and human development in the U.S.
- Examine how an analysis of gender, power, and inequality in the contemporary U.S. family necessitates a broader focus on how the categories of race, class, sexuality, immigration status, and nationality impact family members. Examine feminist critiques of marriage, social welfare, and work/family balance.
- Analyze contemporary and diverse U.S. families and examine the ways in which gender, race, class, sexuality, disability and immigration status impact contemporary family life a feminist perspective.
Diversity Overlay Learning Outcomes
- describe the histories and/or experiences of one or more U. S. cultural groups and the resilience and agency of group members;
- identify structures of oppression and the diverse efforts and strategies used by groups to combat the effects of oppressive structures;
- analyze the intersection of the categories of race and gender as they affect cultural group members’ lived realities and/or as they are embodied in personal and collective identities;
- recognize the way that multiple differences (including, for example, gender, class, sexuality, religion, disability, immigration status, gender expression, color/phenotype, racial mixture, linguistic expression, and/or age) within cultural groups complicate individual and group identities.
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