Undergrad Learning Initiative
The Undergraduate Student Learning Initiative
GWS students get significant personalized attention. Our department is known for its investment in the well-being of our students, and its smaller size means that it is somewhat easier to cultivate a community among undergraduate and graduate students, faculty and staff. We offer all graduating seniors a capstone experience, the Senior Seminar, GWS195. In this course, students have an opportunity to culminate their undergraduate learning experience by focusing their developed skills on a single extensive research and writing project. Students choose a topic about which they are passionately interested, perform advanced research appropriate to the question, and compose an extensive written thesis. Another course, GWS101, Doing Feminist Research, leads directly into the Senior Seminar, training students in advanced research methods, and preparing them by prompting them to dream about final research projects. The guidance students receive is personalized to their interests and research, and our faculty work to establish a common basis for guiding students through the program.
All departments on campus have worked collectively with the UC-wide Undergraduate Student Learning Initiative to establish department-specific learning goals as well as means for assessing students’ progress in reaching those goals. Such a program enables us to provide concrete information in advance to students considering the major or minor about what skills they will acquire, as well as shared guidelines for students and instructors for what kinds of course pathways involve a specific skills development.
The Department of Gender and Women’s Studies has a two-part set of goals:
- ones characteristic of general learning outcomes expected of a social sciences and/or liberal arts major at the University of California, Berkeley;
- ones specific to our pedagogical priorities as a department.
Below is a list of our current Learning Goals, followed by a chart demonstrating how given learning goals are addressed by specific courses.
Critical Thinking
Critical analysis: Identify and evaluate arguments, rhetorical styles, synthesize ideas, and develop well-substantiated, coherent, and concise arguments
Logical reasoning: Identify and follow a logical sequence or argument through to its end; recognize faulty reasoning or premature closure
Abstract thinking: Generalize for a specific purpose and/or in a way that clarifies and heightens understanding of major issues at stake; identify the essential or most relevant elements of a concept, event, object, text, etc.
Argumentation: Marshal appropriate and relevant evidence in order to develop a clear claim or stance using specific rhetorical approaches
Doing Research
Problem solving: Identify important historical and contemporary issues relating to gender and women’s studies, evaluate various responses to them, and adapt the knowledge gained through this process to everyday situations
Research Skills: Produce or locate resources and learn to build a research agenda. Read broadly in order to develop well-focused projects, using primary and secondary sources. Delineate key points in scholarly articles and respond to them. Use different modes of research, including empirical methods, scholarly literature, and theoretical and artistic engagement. Develop advanced library skills tailored to specific research projects, including facility with electronic databases, bibliographic reference materials, archival documents, and image and sound repositories
Interdisciplinarity: Draw from multiple fields of study or define new fields; grasp means and significance of expanding, crossing, transgressing, or bridging disciplinary boundaries
Ways of Communicating
Visual Media and New Technologies: Evaluate, interpret, and generate information from a variety of sources, including print and electronic media, film and video, and internet technologies
Written and Verbal Communication: Express ideas effectively, both verbally and in written form, tailoring arguments and presentation styles to audience and context
GWS-specific Learning Goals
Knowledge About the Field
Intersectionality: Analyze gender as it intersects with other relations of power, such as race, ethnicity, sexuality, class, nationality, religion, geography, ability, and age; distinguish universalist understandings of gender, women and sexuality from multi-dimensional analyses that recognize interconnectivity and mutual constitution of categories
Gender issues: Recognize the social, political, economic, national, and cultural dimensions of gender as these relate to disparities in power and privilege. Become familiar with a range of past and present major issues pertaining to gender, such as race and citizenship, reproductive and sexual politics, media representation, understandings of masculinities and femininities, racialization of gender and sexuality, women’s enfranchisement, gender and violence, identity politics, immigration, sex discrimination, changing families, gender and environment, labor, language, health disparities, gender and science, histories of colonialism, nation-state formations
Feminisms, Feminist Theories and Feminist Research: Describe and distinguish a broad range of feminist theories and practices in their specific cultural and historical contexts both nationally and internationally; identify the contributions and limits of disciplinary, interdisciplinary and transdiciplinary feminist research and scholarship
Historicization and contextualization: Articulate differences in sociopolitical contexts that inform opinions, theories, identities, subcultures and politics pertaining to gender and sexuality. Discuss issues of gender and sexuality in the context of their specific histories, knowledge frames, and politics. Work flexibly with a variety of epistemological approaches, recognizing each as culturally specific and inherently limited.
Critical Practice
Creativity: Bring together a variety of texts, ideas, theoretical, political, empirical, aesthetic and rhetorical approaches in order to respond imaginatively to social, political and intellectual issues
Collaboration: Work collectively, take initiative, offer and receive constructive criticism, exchange ideas and creatively work together toward a common endeavor
Engaged Practices: Engage in a variety of feminist approaches, linking theory with practice. Learn how to be an effective advocate informed by transnational, political, sociocultural, and philosophical contexts
Knowledge production: Understand that social, cultural, and scientific knowledges are rarely pre-given, but produced. Demonstrate ways in which various cultural practices, including cultural traditions, academic practices, and information genres participate in and shape specific productions of knowledge, considering roles played by aesthetic forms, scientific journals, popular fiction, news media, the Internet, and practices of citation.
Ethics: Articulate ethical positions of scholarly and activist theories of gender; that is, consider what approaches inform value judgments on specific gendered or feminist practices. Understand other ethical research concerns such as human subjects and plagiarism
Critical self-awareness: Demonstrate self-reflexivity about one’s ideas and social and political positions
Gender and Women’s Studies Undergradguate Learning Goals | Prerequisite | Core Courses | Elective Courses | |||||
Learning Goals | GWS10, Intro to Gender and Women’s Studies | GWS20, Introduction to Feminist Theory | GWS101, Doing Feminist Research | GWS102, Transnational Feminisms | GWS103, Identities Across Difference | GWS104, Feminist Theory | GWS195, Senior Seminar | |
GWS-specific: | ||||||||
Knowledge about the field | ||||||||
Intersectionality: Analyze gender as it intersects with other relations of power, such as race, ethnicity, sexuality, class, nationality, religion, geography, ability, and age; distinguish universalist understandings of gender, women and sexuality from multi-dimensional analyses that recognize interconnectivity and mutual constitution of categories | Begin | Begin | Extend | Extend | Extend | Extend | Full | Extend |
Gender issues: Recognize the social, political, economic, national, and cultural dimensions of gender as these relate to disparities in power and privilege. Become familiar with a range of past and present major issues pertaining to gender, such as race and citizenship, reproductive and sexual politics, media representation, understandings of masculinities and femininities, racialization of gender and sexuality, women’s enfranchisement, gender and violence, identity politics, immigration, sex discrimination, changing families, gender and environment, labor, language, health disparities, gender and science, histories of colonialism, nation-state formations | Begin | Begin | Extend | Extend | Extend | Extend | Full | Extend |
Feminisms, Feminist Theories and Feminist Research: Describe and distinguish a broad range of feminist theories and practices in their specific cultural and historical contexts both nationally and internationally; identify the contributions and limits of disciplinary, interdisciplinary and transdiciplinary feminist research and scholarship | Begin | Extend | Extend | Extend | Extend | Full | Extend | |
Historicization and contextualization:Articulate differences in sociopolitical contexts that inform opinions, theories, identities, subcultures and politics pertaining to gender and sexuality. Discuss issues of gender and sexuality in the context of their specific histories, knowledge frames, and politics. Work flexibly with a variety of epistemological approaches, recognizing each as culturally specific and inherently limited | Begin | Extend | Extend | Extend | Extend | Full | Extend | |
Critical Practice | ||||||||
Creativity: Bring together a variety of texts, ideas, theoretical, political, empirical, aesthetic and rhetorical approaches in order to respond imaginatively to social, political and intellectual issues | Begin | Begin | Extend | Extend | Extend | Extend | Full | Extend |
Collaboration: Work collectively, take initiative, offer and receive constructive criticism, exchange ideas and creatively work together toward a common endeavor | Begin | Begin | Extend | Extend | Extend | Extend | Full | Extend |
Engaged Practices: Engage in a variety of feminist approaches, linking theory with practice. Learn how to be an effective advocate informed by transnational, political, sociocultural, and philosophical contexts | Begin | Extend | ||||||
Knowledge production: Understand that social, cultural, and scientific knowledges are rarely pre-given, but produced. Demonstrate ways in which various cultural practices, including cultural traditions, academic practices, and information genres participate in and shape specific productions of knowledge, considering roles played by aesthetic forms, scientific journals, popular fiction, news media, the Internet, and practices of citation. | Begin | Begin | Extend | Extend | Extend | Extend | Full | Extend |
Ethics: Articulate ethical positions of scholarly and activist theories of gender; that is, consider what approaches inform value judgments on specific gendered or feminist practices. Understand other ethical research concerns such as human subjects and plagiarism. | Begin | Begin | Extend | Extend | Extend | Extend | Full | Extend |
Critical self-awareness: Demonstrate self-reflexivity about one’s ideas and social and political positions | Begin | Begin | Extend | Extend | Extend | Extend | Full | Extend |
General: | ||||||||
Critical Thinking | ||||||||
Critical analysis: Identify and evaluate arguments, rhetorical styles, synthesize ideas, and develop well-substantiated, coherent, and concise arguments | Begin | Extend | Extend | Extend | Extend | Full | Extend | |
Logical reasoning: Identify and follow a logical sequence or argument through to its end; recognize faulty reasoning or premature closure | Begin | Begin | Extend | Extend | Extend | Extend | Full | Extend |
Abstract thinking: Generalize for a specific purpose and/or in a way that clarifies and heightens understanding of major issues at stake; identify the essential or most relevant elements of a concept, event, object, text, etc. | Begin | Begin | Extend | Extend | Extend | Extend | Full | Extend |
Argumentation: Marshal appropriate and relevant evidence in order to develop a clear claim or stance using specific rhetorical approaches | Begin | Extend | Extend | Extend | Extend | Full | Extend | |
Doing Research | ||||||||
Problem solving: Identify important historical and contemporary issues relating to gender and women’s studies, evaluate various responses to them, and adapt the knowledge gained through this process to everyday situations | Begin | Begin | Extend | Extend | Extend | Extend | Full | Extend |
Research Skills: Produce or locate resources and learn to build a research agenda. Read broadly in order to develop well-focused projects, using primary and secondary sources. Delineate key points in scholarly articles and respond to them. Use different modes of research, including empirical methods, scholarly literature, and theoretical and artistic engagement. Develop advanced library skills tailored to specific research projects, including facility with electronic databases, bibliographic reference materials, archival documents, and image and sound repositories | Begin | Extend | Extend | Extend | Full | Extend | ||
Interdisciplinarity: Draw from multiple fields of study or define new fields; grasp means and significance of expanding, crossing, transgressing, or bridging disciplinary boundaries | Begin | Begin | Extend | Extend | Extend | Extend | Full | Extend |
Ways of Communicating | ||||||||
Visual Media and New Technologies:Evaluate, interpret, and generate information from a variety of sources, including print and electronic media, film and video, and internet technologies | Begin | Extend | Extend | Extend | ||||
Communication: Express ideas effectively, both verbally and in written form, tailoring arguments and presentation styles to audience and context | Begin | Extend | Extend | Extend | Extend | Full | Extend |