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The Women’s and Gender Studies Program is an interdisciplinary
program encompassing feminist studies, masculinity
studies and sexuality studies. The program is committed to a multicultural
curriculum that sustains and integrates diverse perspectives. WGS
courses emphasize participatory education in which student involvement,
critical thinking, and personal insight are encouraged and made relevant
in the learning process. Many faculty members with national
and international reputations for their scholarly work on women’s/gender/sexuality
issues regularly teach WGS courses as well as courses in other departments
and programs that count toward the WGS major/minor.
Students who major or minor in WGS gain experience off-campus in the
nation’s capital through an internship
placement in
an organization or agency whose mission embraces some aspect of women’s/gender/sexuality
studies. Student interns are actively sought by organizations
focused on the arts, advocacy of all kinds, communication, employment
and training issues, law and policy, reproductive rights and health,
social research in a wide range of fields, support services for survivors
of violence and abuse, and U.S. politics. Students have access
to powerful networks that can give substantial support in career development
at organizations in Washington, D.C., such as the Institute for Women’s
Policy Research, Amnesty International, the National Partnership for
Women and Families, the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force Policy Institute,
Advocates for Youth, EMILY’s List, and the National Museum of Women
in the Arts.
A degree in WGS leads to challenging careers in a wide spectrum of occupations. An
undergraduate education in WGS also equips students with a range of skills which
are highly valued in the 21st century labor force. And the curriculum
prepares students for graduate study in the fields
of women’s / gender / sexuality studies or for advanced study in
traditional disciplines and professional fields. AU students can
combine graduate-level coursework on women’s/gender/sexuality theory
and current issues/research in WGS with the program of study in a traditional
discipline leading to the MA or PhD degree. Participating graduate
programs include anthropology, art, communication, economics, education,
government, history, international relations, literature, philosophy, psychology,
and sociology.
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