POLICIES RE: CROSSLISTING COURSES WITH WOMEN'S STUDIES What follows are a query that appeared on WMST-L in March 1992 about criteria for crosslisting courses with Women's Studies, and seven responses offered to that query and to a later call for crosslisting policies. If you wish to add to this file, please send your crosslisting policy via e-mail to KORENMAN@UMBC (Bitnet) or KORENMAN@UMBC2.UMBC.EDU (Internet). ******************************************************* Date: Fri, 27 Mar 1992 09:21:32 EDT From: PHILDON@MOREKYPR.BITNET Subject: We are new at this! I am an assistant professor of sociology at Morehead State University in eastern Kentucky. Currently, MSU faculty and staff (or a small group of them) are designing a minor program in Women's Studies. It is our first attempt at constructing a program outside the mainstream. We are experienceing some concern about how to decide which courses will be crosslisted in the Women's Studies program. Some members of the committee advocate including any course which currently has "woman" in the title. Others are more concerned about content and want to decided whether a course will be included on the basis of the instructor submitting a syllabus and course outline for committee approval. There is also some concern about alienating those faculty whose courses are *not* included. ("I don't want to be in the business of excluding") There has to be a solution with which we will all be comfortable. How have other institutions solved this problem? Please reply privately to Donna Phillips BITNET PHILDON@MOREKY VOICE (606)783-2153 SURFACE UPO 946 Morehead State University Morehead, KY 40351 ======================================================================= Date: Fri, 27 Mar 1992 15:04:57 EST From: jpotuche@CC.GETTYSBURG.EDU Subject: RE:We are new at this! This is a response to Donna Phillips's query. I'm posting it to the list rather than sending it to Donna privately, because I think this is a common tension in women's studies programs and attempts at solution are of general interest: At Gettysburg College, we went through quite a lot of struggle within our Women's Studies committee over this issue. On the one hand, we wanted to choose courses in a way that protected the scholarly quality of the women's studies program; on the other hand, we were well aware of the political risks we ran by excluding some courses. We finally set up two classifications for courses -- core and affiliated -- with stricter standards for the core courses than for the affiliated, but with a limit on how many affiliated courses a student could count toward the women's studies minor (no more than 2 out of 6). When a faculty member proposes that a course count for credit toward the minor in women's studies (we don't have a major yet), we send that faculty member a copy of the criteria and then send a member of our women's studies committee to meet with the faculty member. Together, the instructor and the committee member go over the course syllabus or proposal and discuss how it fits the criteria. On the basis of that discussion, the committee member makes a recommendation to the entire committee, which makes the final decision. In practice, we tend to be tough in applying the core course criteria and relatively easy in applying the affiliated course criteria. (In other words, when there is doubt, the course usually ends up being "affiliated.") Here are the criteria we use: CRITERIA FOR CORE WOMEN'S STUDIES COURSES 1. The course's principal focus must clearly be the roles, contributions, perspectives, and experiences of women. 2. The course must equip students to identify and analyze stereotyped assumptions and biases about women. 3. The course content must reflect the latest scholarship on women and the syllabus should be composed primarily of works by and about women. 4. Ideally, course pedagogy should correspond to course content. That is to say, whenever and however appropriate the instructor should use teaching techniques which encourage student participation and, thus, active learning. Exchange would be key to both the student/student relation- ship and that of student and instructor. CRITERIA FOR AFFILIATED WOMEN'S STUDIES COURSES 1. One of the course's principal areas of focus must clearly be the roles, perspectives, experiences, contributions or representations of women. (The intent of this criterion is to be sure that women's issues are integrated into, not merely added on to the course; we want to avoid tokenism.) 2. The course must equip students to identify systems of domi- nation and subordination and analyze stereotyped assumptions and biases about women. 3. The course content must clearly reflect recent feminist scholarship on women and gender. 4. Ideally, course pedagogy should correspond to course content. That is to say, whenever and however appropriate the instructor should use teaching techniques which encourage student participation and, thus, active learning. Exchange would be key to both the student/student relation- ship and that of student and instructor. --------------- Jean L. Potuchek Women's Studies Bitnet: jpotuche@gburg Gettysburg College Internet:jpotuche@cc.gettysburg.edu ======================================================================= Date: Fri, 27 Mar 1992 17:09:44 CST From: Stephanie RigerSubject: Re: We are new at this! Lynne Goldsmith of Penn State has written an excellent paper on this topic. The title of the paper is "When is a women's studies course a "women's studies" course? Issues of "quality control" of cross-listed courses." Her address is Women's STudies Program, 13 Sparks Building, Penn State U, University Park, PA 16802. I haven't checked with her about posting this, and I am concerned about her being deluged with 400-some requests for reprints, so if you can, perhaps you might offer to pay the cost of duplicating and mailing the paper. Stephanie Riger ======================================================================= Date: Fri, 27 Mar 1992 18:34:00 EST From: Joan Korenman Subject: RE: We are new at this! In response to Donna Phillips' question about how other Women's Studies programs decide which courses to cross-list, I'd like to re-post a message I sent to the list last September on this topic. My apologies to those who have seen it before (the list has more than doubled in size since then). ********************************************************* The Women's Studies Program at UMBC (University of Maryland Baltimore County) has a course approval procedure that must be followed in order for a course to receive a WMST crosslisting (and only courses with a WMST designation can be counted for Women's Studies credit). We ask that the instructor of the course supply a syllabus or other detailed description, briefly discuss her/his teaching methods, and answer three questions. Here is a copy of the sheet we give the instructor: ************* COURSE APPROVAL FOR THE WOMEN'S STUDIES MINOR Univ. of Maryland - Baltimore County Baltimore, Maryland 21228-5398 In order for your course to be approved for inclusion in the Women's Studies minor, the Women's Studies Coordinating Committee needs the following pieces of information: 1) a detailed course description or syllabus, including the list of readings and a description of your teaching method 2) your responses to the following three questions: a) is the central focus of the course gender roles, women's issues, and/or the status of or portrayal of women in history, the arts, or the sciences? Please explain. b) how does the course material reflect knowledge of contemporary feminist scholarship about women? c) why do you feel that this is a Women's Studies course rather than just a course about women? The committee would also welcome any additional materials that might help in assessing the course's suitability for inclusion in the Women's Studies minor. *********** NOTE: Though at present the above questions do not directly address issues of diversity (race, class, sexual preference, etc.), the Women's Studies Coordinating Committee always looks for evidence of diversity in the syllabus and, where necessary, raises the issue with the instructor as part of the approval process. We have never had to reject a course because of this issue, but we are certainly prepared to do so. Probably in the future we will revise the questions to include consideration of diversity. The Women's Studies Coordinating Committee members all receive copies of the instructor's response, and we then meet and discuss whether to crosslist the course. Usually, we approve the course; instructors who seek WMST crosslisting are usually self-selecting. Occasionally, we ask for more information, or we ask to meet with the instructor to discuss questions that we have. Every now and then, we decide that the course should not be crosslisted, either because not enough of the focus is on women or because the instructor seems insufficiently familiar with contemporary Women's Studies scholarship and perspectives. We do not ask or even desire that faculty toe a narrow ideological line; we do ask that courses designated WMST be informed by contemporary Women's Studies scholarship and provide students with an understanding of feminist perspectives. Joan Korenman Internet: korenman@umbc2.umbc.edu Bitnet: korenman@umbc ************************************************************************** Date: 22 Nov 1992 15:14:14 CST Here is the official statement we (at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign) send to people who want to cross-list courses with us: "The Women's studies Advisory Committee believes that those courses listed by the Women's Studies Program should be consonant with the stated purpose of the program. This includes a feminist perspective. We ask that any course listed as a Women's Studies course be taught in this spirit. For this purpose the Women's Studies Advisory Committee has defined a feminist perspective as one which recognizes women's roles and contribu- tions to society. The ability of women as leaders, scholars, critics, and theo ry-builders needs to be recognized. Serious consideration should also be given to the concepts, tools and techniques of recent feminist scholarship with special attention to the relatioship of this inquiry to the women's movement." Megan McLaughlin, Dept. of History, U. of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Bitnet: megmclau@uiuc.vmd Internet: megmclau@vmd.cso.uiuc.edu *************************************************************************** Date: Tue, 24 Nov 92 12:12:04 EDT From: PHILDON@morekypr PROPOSAL TO CROSSLIST COURSE IN WOMEN'S STUDIES (Morehead State University) To: Members of the Women's Studies Advisory Committee From: _____________________________________ (name) _____________________________________ (dept.) I would like to submit the following course for consideration as an elective in the Women's Studies minor. ______ _______ _______________________ _________________________________________ (term to be offered) (pref) (#) (title) This course already exists in the curriculum and has passed criteria used by the university's curriculum committee. In addition, it meets the following criteria, which were stated in the proposal creating the minor in Women's Studies. 1. The principle focus of the course as it relates to women is: ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ 2. The course addresses the following stereotyped assumptions and biases about women: ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ 3. The course encourages students to analyze the above mentioned stereotypes and biases in the following manner: ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ 4. The course content reflects the latest scholarship on women in my discipline and the syllabus is composed primarily of works by and for women, as exemplified by the attached syllabus or detailed course description (include course readings and descriptions of reading materials. 5. I understand that the committee encourages participating faculty to use innovative teaching techniques which encourage student participation and, thus, active learning. I encourage participation in the following manner: ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ 6. I understand that the Women's Studies minor program encourages exchange of information both in student/student and student/faculty relationships. This course promotes such activities in the following manner: ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ 7. I believe that this course deserves to be included in the Women's Studies minor because: ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ 8. In addition to the foregoing materials, I would like to add information which I believe will assist the committee in reviewing my proposal (optional): ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ ________________________________________________________________ 9. Please get the signature of your department chairperson: ________________________________ (Name) (Date) Please send the completed form with supporting materials to: Judy Rogers, Dean of Undergraduate Programs 201 Ginger Hall ***************************************************************************** Date: 24 Nov 1992 10:11:24 -0800 (PST) From: SMANSFIELD@BENSON.CLAREMONT.EDU Below is the policy used by the Intercollegiate Women's Studies Program of the Claremont Colleges. It is send to anyone interested in having a course accredited as a Women's Studies course. If a course is taught by more than one faculty, each faculty must submit the course individually. Women's Studies invites submission of proposals for courses in its interdisciplinary program devoted to the study of the roles, contributions, and scholarship of women. Courses in Women's Studies explore issued of race, class, sexual preference, and gender as they affect the devlopment of women in a variety of cultural contexts. They examine paradigms based upon recent women's scholarship that contast with and question androcentric assumptions in traditional methodologies, theories, and research. When submitting a proposal for a primary course in Women's Studies, the curriculum committee suggests that the professor use the following guidelines for the inclusion of a course in the Women's Studies curriculum. Introductory level courses generally should focus on women's experience and should use, to the extent possible, new data, methods, theories and analytic frameworks that help to correct previous oversights and ethnocentric biases inherent in the traditional interpretation of most course content, as well as contrast these biases with perspectives emerging from the new feminist scholarship in women's studies. More advanced courses might incorporate feminist methodology of gender analysis as their foundation. The committee encourages courses which foster a climate of mutual inquiry in the classroom, and exchange of ideas among faculty and students in group discussions, and an opportunity for writing as an integral part of the on-going process of learning and self-expression. These concerns should be reflected in the course description and readings. We continue to invite the submission of proposals for related courses in which there is a substantial portion on women, gender, or sex roles, or in which a student may emphasize by prior arrangement with the instructor an aspect of the course pertinent to Womeen's Studies. Please include the following with either your primary or related Women's Studies course proposal: 1. Course title and description, 2. Course objectives, 3. List of proposed readings for class assignments, 4. Prerequisites, if any, 5. Indication of appropriate course strategy - i.e., primary or related. Your brief proposal can be submitted either as an essay or on a form provided by the Women's Studies Office. SMANSFIELD@BENSON.CLAREMONT.EDU (for internet) or GINNIE@GROVER.CLAREMONT.EDU **************************************************************************** Date: Tue, 01 Dec 92 08:50 EST From: WPSADGV@WMMVS.BITNET Joan--I hope I have responded in time to become part of your file on crosslisting. The College of William and Mary has a policy that only interdisciplinary courses receive interdisci- plinary labels. Therefore, crosslisting for Women's Studies occurs only for an interdisciplinary course in Women's Studies that could also be considered an interdiisciplinary course for another program (our only crosslisted course thus far is one titled "Feminist Writings and Women's Movements" which is "a study of fictional and theoretical works produced by European and Middle-Eastern women writers of the twentieth century"--this course is cross-listed with International Studies). The advantage of this system is that we can choose to offer credit in Women's Studies to any courses in depart- ments that we wish--but we don't have to offer credit for anything (or anyone) we don't want to. Another advantage is that I am often asked to evaluate courses for transfer credit that are clearly departmental courses ("19th Century Women Writers") and can insist that they be evaluated by the department. The advantage here is that I have seen a tendency for departments who think a course is marginal to try to "dump" it on Women's Studies for credit rather than award credit in their department. This way they face the fact that there is scholarship in their discipline that is being taught in the discipline in other universities--or in the case where a course does seem below reasonable standards for the discipline they make the decision that credit cannot be awarded. I realize this rambles on; hope you can get the gist of it. Debbie Ventis WPSADGV@WMMVS College of William & Mary