Department of Women's Studies

Faculty

Distinguished Teaching Professor Emerita
 Judith Fetterley, Ph.D. (Collins Fellow)
  Indiana University

Professors Emeritae
 Judith E. Barlow, Ph.D. (Collins Fellow)
  University of Pennsylvania
 Roberta M. Bernstein, Ph.D. (Collins Fellow)
  Columbia University
 Francine W. Frank, Ph.D. (Collins Fellow)
  University of Illinois
 June Hahner, Ph.D.
  Cornell University
 Judith E. Johnson, B.A.
  Barnard College

Distinguished Professor
 Edna Acosta-Belén, Ph.D. (Collins Fellow, O'Leary Professor)
  Columbia University

Distinguished Service Professor
 Glenna Spitze, Ph.D. (Collins Fellow)
  University of Illinois

Professors
 Iris Berger, Ph.D. (Collins Fellow)
  University of Wisconsin
 Christine E. Bose, Ph.D. (Collins Fellow)
  John Hopkins University
 Sarah R. Cohen, Ph.D.
  Yale University
 Julie Novkov, Ph.D.
  University of Michigan

Associate Professors Emeritae
 Bonnie Spanier, Ph.D.
  Harvard University
 Joan E. Schulz, Ph.D. (Collins Fellow)
  University of Illinois

Associate Professors
 Virginia Eubanks, Ph.D.
  Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
 Janell C. Hobson, Ph.D.
  Emory University
 Vivien W. Ng, Ph.D.
  University of Hawaii

Assistant Professor
 Barbara Sutton, Ph.D.
  University of Oregon

Senior Assistant Librarian
 Deborah LaFond, M.L.I.S.
  University of California, Berkeley

Affiliated Faculty (estimated): 30
Adjuncts (estimated): 1
Graduate Assistants: 4



Women’s Studies encourages students to reexamine their own lives and the world around them in relation to gender, race, class, and sexuality. The curriculum reflects new subjects, theories, and methodologies based on a cross-cultural, multidisciplinary approach to the study of women. In the creation of new knowledge, Women’s Studies provides a critique of social, cultural, and institutional structures that include the traditional disciplines. Women’s Studies sees itself as connected to the social and political environment outside the university. Opportunities are available for internships, independent study, and innovative teaching for undergraduates. Students may take a major or minor in Women’s Studies or may enroll in individual courses.

Careers
A concentration in Women’s Studies prepares students for graduate and professional training in a variety of fields. Like other B.A. graduates, Women’s Studies majors may enroll in professional study at the graduate level in law, social welfare, education, public administration, and health care; they also find employment and continue on-the-job training in business, social services, public affairs, publishing, and private nonprofit organizations. Experience in critical thinking and writing and intensive reflection concerning issues of diversity and multiculturalism prepare Women’s Studies graduates with qualities that employers actively seek. Some Women’s Studies graduates find employment with community agencies (women’s centers, counseling centers, battered women’s shelters, rape crisis centers, women’s health centers, women’s vocational agencies), in affirmative action and diversity education (in schools, government agencies, and business), and with campus-based women’s programs.

Courses that are required for students who entered the program under previous Bulletins will continue to be offered on a regular basis.

Degree Requirements for the Major in Women’s Studies

General Program B.A.: A minimum of 36 credits in Women's Studies including:

Required core courses (15 credits)
a. Gateway: A WSS 100 Women Creating Change (3)
b. Intersections: A WSS 240 Classism, Racism, and Sexism: Issues (3)
c. Theory: A WSS 360 Feminist Social and Political Thought (3); or A WSS 399 Topics
    in Women's Studies (1-3) ; or A WSS 498 Topics in Women's Studies (3)
d. Research Methods: A WSS 490Z Research Seminar in Women's Studies (3)
e. Internship: A WSS 492Y Internship in Women's Studies; or A WSS 322Y Feminist Pedagogy in Practice (3)

Electives (21 credits)
A total of 21 additional credits in Women's Studies courses, 9 credits of which must be at the 300 or 400 level.

Honors Program 

Students may file an application for admission to the honors program in the department office in the second semester of the sophomore year or in the junior year. Junior transfers may apply at the time of their admission to the University.

The minimum requirements for admission include completion of at least 12 credits of course work applicable to the major, a minimum overall grade point average of 3.25, and a minimum 3.50 grade point average for all courses applicable toward the major.

Students in the program are required to complete all of the requirements for the major in Women’s Studies. As part of their elective credits for the major, students must also complete 3 credits of intensive work culminating in an independent research or creative honors project.

Typically the project begins as a paper the student writes for an upper-division Women’s Studies course no later than spring of the junior year. During the senior year, honors students fulfill the requirements for the honors program by enrolling in A WSS 495 Honors Project during the fall semester concurrently with A WSS 490Z, Research Seminar in Women’s Studies. Alternatively, students who have been admitted into the honors program during their sophomore year may enroll in A WSS 490Z in the fall semester of their junior year in preparation for completion of the honors sequence during the subsequent two semesters.

Students in the honors program are required to maintain overall grade point averages of 3.25 or higher during the junior and senior years and overall grade point averages of 3.50 or higher for all courses applicable toward the major. Students not meeting the above standards may be unable to complete the honors program.

After completion of the above requirements, the records of the candidate will be reviewed by the department, which will recommend candidates for the degree with honors in Women’s Studies.

Combined Bachelor's/Master's in Women's Studies

The combined B.A./M.A. program provides an opportunity for students with outstanding academic abilities to receive both a B.A. and an M.A. degree in five years (ten semesters).

The combined program demands a minimum of 142 credits, of which 32 must be graduate credits. Students must fulfill all university, college, and department requirements for both the undergraduate major and the M.A. in Women’s Studies.

Students accepted into the combined B.A./M.A. program apply up to 10 credits of graduate work toward both their undergraduate and graduate degree requirements. Students take two 4-credit graduate courses in addition to A WSS 510 (2 credits), “Advanced Feminist Pedagogy and Theory,” to fulfill this requirement.

Undergraduate students who have completed a minimum of 60 credits with a GPA of 3.20 or above are eligible to apply. Students submit applications for the B.A./M.A. program in Women’s Studies directly to the Office of Graduate Admissions. Students will be admitted upon the recommendation of the department’s Graduate Admissions Committee, whose decision will be based on the student’s grade point average, statement of purpose, writing sample, and supportive letters of recommendation from faculty.