2013-2014 Academic Catalog [Archived Catalog]
Department of Sociology, Gerontology, and Gender Studies
|
|
Paul W. O’Brien, Ph.D., Chair
Professors: Doraz, Macdonald, O’Brien, Payne, Riedmann, Schoenthaler
Associate Professor: Sniezek, T.
Assistant Professor: Strahm, Rodriguez
Lecturer: Wong, Kohler, Strangfeld
Office: Bizzini Hall 213
Phone: (209) 667-3408
View Sociology/Gerontology
View Gender Studies
Sociology/Gerontology
Bachelor of Arts in Sociology with concentrations in General Major; Human Services; Drug and Alcohol Studies; Social Deviance and Criminology; Social Inequality; and The Body, Culture, and Society
Minor in Gerontology
Minor in Sociology
Liberal Studies degree concentration in Sociology
Social Sciences degree concentration in Sociology
Graduate Certificate in Gerontology/Geriatrics
Liberal Studies Concentration in Sociology
Please refer to the Liberal Studies section of the catalog.
Social Sciences Concentration in Sociology
Please refer to the Social Sciences program section of the catalog.
Teaching Credentials
Majors in Sociology interested in a Social Sciences Subject Matter Preparation Program credential should review the Social Sciences waiver described in the Social Sciences section of this catalog. Please refer to the Teacher Education section of the Graduate Catalog for a description of other requirements to be completed for the Single Subject Credential.
Program Learning Outcomes
- Achieve knowledge competency in sociology.
- Achieve an awareness of the diversity of social institutions, social forces, and structural forms found in contemporary societies both locally, regionally, nationally and global
- Understand the sociohistorical and theoretical groundings of sociology as a field of study and practice.
- Understand the reasoning process involved in theoretical construction.
- Develop facility for critical thinking, with the ability to separate fact from fallacy, myth from reality.
- Learn to methodologically analyze the complexity of society and social structure, particularly questions of social control and power relations.
- Learn analytical skills and research methodologies, including statistical computer applications, appropriate to the practice of sociology methodologically.
- Develop and apply a sociological perspective professionally and as an active participant in society.
- Develop the capacity to apply concepts and theories of sociology to relevant social policy.
- Communicate effectively in both written and oral form.
- Develop an increased appreciation for human diversity.
- Develop the ability to apply a sociological imagination to one’s personal life.
Gender Studies
Betsy Eudey, Ph.D., Director
Associate Professor: Eudey, Cotten
Office: Bizzini Hall 107B
Phone: (209) 664-6673
Bachelor of Arts in Gender Studies with concentrations in History, Society, and Inequality; Culture, Ideology, and Representation; and Ethnicity, Nationality, and Sexuality.
Minor in Gender Studies
Social Sciences degree concentration in Gender Studies
Social Sciences Concentration in Gender Studies.
Please refer to the Social Sciences program section of the catalog.
Program Learning Outcomes
- Identify major contemporary social, economic, political, and psychological issues facing the sexes.
- Discuss major topics and approaches in the history of feminist theory, queer theory, and masculinity theory.
- Explore how social constructions of gender, sex, and sexual identity intersect with institutions, society, cultural practices, careers, and work environments.
- Identify how differences in sex, sexual identity and orientation, race/ ethnicity, class, age, ablebodiedness, religion, geographic identification, and other identities structure the nature of gender-based inequality, justice, and oppression.
- Analyze the variations in gender systems across cultures and time.
- Explore strategies for transforming coercive and unequal gender systems and enhancing individual choice and our common humanity.
- Connect scholarly inquiry to practical applications.
- Engage in cultural critique of representations of sex, gender, and sexuality as they intersect with other identity and cultural factors.
|