Nov 09, 2024  
2010-2011 Catalog 
    
2010-2011 Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Liberal Arts – Women & Gender Studies Option, Associate of Arts


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The Women and Gender Studies Option within the Liberal Arts major analyzes the category of gender and explores how gender shapes the lives of both women and men. Students in this option will become better equipped to analyze and respond to messages about masculinity and femininity, and perhaps even create new ones. Students will explore how women and men learn their gender roles, how they rebel against these roles, and how these roles intersect globally with race, ethnicity, class, sexual orientation, and religion. Interdisciplinary in nature, this program will foster students’ analysis of gender by weaving together the tools of history, philosophy, psychology, sociology, cultural studies, and literary studies. Graduates of this Option can go on to major in Women and/or Gender Studies at fouryear institutions, they can major in a variety of other fields (Psychology, Sociology, English, Communications, etc.), or they can go directly into the workplace.

Graduates are able to:

  • understand the relationship between gender and society, making them more competitive in a workplace
  • think critically and communicate effectively, orally and in writing
  • examine how gender impacts all aspects of our culture
  • understand gender as it relates to race, class, and sexual orientation

Curriculum – A.A. Degree


First Semester


Second Semester


Third Semester


Fourth Semester


  • Mathematics or
  • Science 0-4 Credits 2,9

  • History 3 Credits 6
  • Appreciation of the Arts 3 Credits 7
  • Option Elective 3 Credits 5
  • Free Elective 3 Credits 8

Total Credits 61 - 65


1 Mathematics by official Placement Test. Students may not take courses below placement level. Exceptions by permission of department chairperson.

2 Select a course from the appropriate category of the General Education list. For the Math, Science and Technological Competency General Education requirements, students must take a minimum of 12 credits. This must include one lab science course, one math course, and satisfaction of the technological competency requirement by either passing the technological competency test (no credit) or taking a technological competency general education course. If a student passes the technological competency test, another course must be selected from Math, Science or Technological Competency General Education, so that the student has earned at least 12 credits in those categories.

3 A two semester sequence is required. Placement by examination is required for students who wish to continue studying a language previously studied. Students may not take courses below their placement level. For more information, see Foreign Language Placement Testing & Degree Requirements in the College Catalog.

4 Elements of Physical Fitness (FITN 142 ) or Exercise Physiology (FITN 146 ) may be substituted.

5 Option electives include: Women in Literature (ENGL 290 ), Masculinity in Literature (ENGL 291 ), Psychology of Women and Gender (PSYC 203 ), Feminist Philosophy (PHIL 210 ), Marriage and Family (SOCI 202 ), and Women and Minorities in the Criminal Justice System (CRMJ 204 ).

6 Choose from the following History Courses: World Civilization I (HIST 101 ), World Civilization II (HIST 102 ), US History: Beginnings to 1877 (HIST 201 ), US History: 1877 to Present (HIST 202 ).

7 Select a course from the appropriate category of the General Education list.

8 Any college level course.

9 If the student has already completed 12 credits in the Math, Science and Technological Competency categories, no course is needed here. 

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