Gender Studies Minor

 

The AUA’s Gender Studies minor aims to provide students with a transdisciplinary program to explore the meaning of gender and how gender intersects with ability, age, class, race, ethnicity, sexuality, and cultural practices. Students will examine how gender influences human experiences, knowledge construction, and power relations.  The Gender Studies minor will help students prepare for further studies or careers in fields such as education, public relations, human resources, social work, law, journalism, business, non-profit management, public health, medicine, artificial intelligence, and politics.

The Gender Studies Minor (GS) consists of 15 credits (5 courses)

Required courses (2 courses)

At least 3 additional courses (at least two of which must be upper division)

1. CHSS 189 Gender Perspectives

2. CHSS 294 Advanced Studies in Gender 

or

   CHSS 297 Research Projects in Gender Studies 

 

LAW 142 Introduction to Human RightsCHSS 205 Learning, Activism and Social MovementsCHSS 235 Women/Gender and the Visual ArtsCHSS 238 Psychology of GenderCHSS 201 Comparative EducationCHSS 292 Gender & Social ChangeEC 295 Special Topics: History of Western Armenian Feminist LiteratureCHSS 296 Special Topics in Social Sciences (as relevant and determined and announced ahead of time, for instance, Gender and Genocide)CHSS 295 Special Topics in the Arts (as relevant and determined and announced ahead of time)

 

Upon completion of the minor students will be able to:

Critically engage with key concepts and theoretical frameworks central to Gender Studies.

Recognize the significance of gender in the ways in which social life is organized.

Analyze diverse individual and collective experiences and critically examine how they have shaped, and been shaped by, local and global hierarchies.

Discuss how gender intersects with other axes of power such as ability, sexuality, faith, race, class, and ethnicity.

Develop individually-tailored projects related to their intellectual interests.

Identify career paths and further studies in which the various aspects of the minor can be applied.