The Department of Women's & Gender Studies (WGS) offers students an opportunity to learn about the past and present achievements and experiences of women and to understand more clearly the decisive role that gender has played and continues to play in human societies.
WGS is administered by a committee of faculty members appointed by the Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. WGS is interdisciplinary, and courses are taught in many areas of study: Anthropology, Architecture, Arts & Administration, Education, English, History, International Studies, Journalism, Literature, Philosophy, Planning & Public Policy, Political Science, Psychology, and Sociology, among others.
Any student may take WGS courses. Some students take a few courses to complement the curriculum in another major. Others choose to fulfill the requirements for a major or minor in WGS.
Many WGS courses satisfy group and multicultural requirements. For courses approved to fulfill these requirements, see the current list on the registrar’s website.
No specific high school preparation is necessary. Students who transfer to the University from other colleges may apply up to 8 credits of WGS courses to the major or minor program.
Since women comprise more than half of the world's population, an understanding of their experiences, abilities, and needs is an asset to careers in such fields as education, social service, government, business, law, medicine, the ministry, journalism, counseling, and childcare. In addition, a Women's & Gender Studies background can be used as a basis for entering a growing number of graduate programs that emphasize the study of women or gender.
The Department of Women's & Gender Studies offers an undergraduate major in Women's & Gender Studies leading to a Bachelor of Arts (BA) or Bachelor of Science (BS) degree. Students may major in Women's & Gender Studies alone or as one of two or more majors. Majors must construct their programs in consultation with WGS advisors.
* These 48 SCH in WGS are in addition to the requirements of the second major.
To graduate with honors in Women's & Gender Studies, a student must:
(1) have an overall grade point average for UO and transfer credits of at least 3.50 through the winter term prior to graduation;
(2) gain approval for a research proposal from the Department Head during fall term of the academic year in which the thesis is completed;
(3) successfully complete Reading and Conference (WGS 405) for thesis research during the academic year in which it is completed; and
(4) register for a minimum of 4 credits in Thesis (WGS 403) during the quarter in which the student intends to graduate.
The thesis must be completed and approved by the advisor and a second reader, chosen from the Women's & Gender Studies' faculty by the student, by Monday of the fifth week of the term in which the student intends to graduate with honors. The student's performance on the thesis and on courses taken during the senior year will be reviewed before the honors distinction is granted. Obtain complete instructions and required forms from the Department of Women's & Gender Studies office (315 Hendricks Hall).
Students must apply for the WGS or QS minor in the Women's & Gender Studies office well in advance of graduation for transcript evaluation. In order to be eligible for the minor, students must complete all degree requirements and a major in another academic department.
WGS Minor Requirements |
24 SCH |
|
| WGS 101 | Women, Difference, and Power | 4 |
| WGS Elective Courses | 8 |
|
| Approved upper-division courses with WGS or other subject code | 12 |
|
The Queer Studies (QS) minor is a multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary program whose goal is the study of sexuality as a complex historical and cultural formation. Rather than understand sexuality as merely a feature of private intimacy or as a result of unchanging biological forces, the QS minor approaches the study of sexuality in relation to the social construction of gender, race, ability, class, and citizenship.
As a program committed to critical thinking and social analysis, the QS minor introduces students not only to the complex histories, cultures, political activities, and expressions of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender people, but it also raises questions about larger social and institutional formations. For instance, QS is particularly interested in the assumptions, language, and power of science, medicine, law, and religion to explain and regulate sexuality and the social relations based on it. In this way, QS places emphasis on the knowledge and activism generated by sexual minorities, as it explores the social construction of sexual identities and their connections to practices and discourses accepted as normal. Queer Studies focuses on the social and political forces shaping norms (particularly those pertaining to sexuality, gender expression, and family formation) and conversely how these norms come to be challenged either through their own internal contradictions or through pointed interventions of activists seeking social justice.
Requirements |
24 SCH |
|
| WGS 201 | Introduction to Queer Studies | 4 |
| WGS/QS | Lower or Upper Division | 4 |
| Approved upper-division courses with WGS or other subject code | 16 |
|
| A minimum of 16 of the 24 credit hours must be graded. | ||
All students will be required to satisfactorily complete (grade of C-/P or better) 24 credit hours of course work in Queer Studies approved by the Queer Studies Steering Committee. A minimum of 16 credit hours must be graded. 16 credit hours must be earned at the University of Oregon.
Students may have up to 8 credit hours from pre-approved courses from another University or approved overseas programs. Transfer credits from other universities will be considered on an individual basis, following existing procedures in appropriate departments for determining their equivalence to University of Oregon courses.