Unit 9 – Stratification by GenderChapter 12 – pages 255 – 2651. Differentiate between Sex and Gender.2. Influence of Socialization on Gender RolesWatch: Gender Stratification: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0GtwNW4oca8Watch: Lifting the Veil, Women in Afghanistan: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=64Z2HFeshvkWatch: Why Afghan Women Set Themselves on Fire: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yjw7IFirXuM3. Class Discussion: Review definition and examples of social institutions. How is gender stratification embedded in social institutions in Afghanistan?4. What is meant by the “Feminization of Poverty”?Watch: Meet the Press: The Shriver Report Female Poverty in America: http://www.nbcnews.com/video/meet-the-press/5047098#540470985. What does the “Glass Ceiling” refer to?Watch: In US Women Still Face Glass Ceiling: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SiQnDtjrBcE
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This subject examines the role scientists have played as activists in social movements in the U.S. following World War II. Themes include scientific responsibility and social justice, the roles of gender, race, and power, the motivation of individual scientists, strategies for organizing, and scientists’ impact within social movements. Case studies include atmospheric testing of nuclear weapons and the nuclear freeze campaign, climate science and environmental justice, the civil rights movement, Vietnam War protests, the March 4 movement at MIT, concerns about genetic engineering, gender equality, intersectional feminism, and student activism at MIT.
Read a profile of the class “Scientists as Engaged Citizens” by the MIT School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences.
- Subject:
- Atmospheric Science
- Gender and Sexuality Studies
- Physical Science
- Social Science
- Material Type:
- Full Course
- Provider:
- MIT
- Provider Set:
- MIT OpenCourseWare
- Author:
- Bertschinger, Edmund
- Date Added:
- 09/01/2019
Using film and related popular media as our texts, this course will examine how screen “embodiments” of the woman visualize ideologies of discipline and desire in a culture in which her body has become a representation of the ability to control appetites, size and shape while investing personal and social capital in its rehabilitation as a project of endless reconstruction, redesign and maintenance. Throughout the course we will draw from feminist film theory, clinical psychology, as well as women’s, gender, and cultural studies, to better understand how filmic representations of the woman’s body first emerge from contemporary psychosocial contexts and then in turn shape the body ideals and internalizations, as well as the behavioral practices of the film spectator.
The Graduate Consortium in Women’s Studies (GCWS)
This course is part of the Graduate Consortium in Women’s Studies. The GCWS at MIT brings together scholars and teachers at nine degree-granting institutions in the Boston area who are devoted to graduate teaching and research in Women’s Studies and to advancing interdisciplinary Women’s Studies scholarship. Learn more about the GCWS.
- Subject:
- Arts and Humanities
- Career and Technical Education
- Film and Music Production
- Gender and Sexuality Studies
- Literature
- Social Science
- Visual Arts
- Material Type:
- Full Course
- Provider:
- MIT
- Provider Set:
- MIT OpenCourseWare
- Author:
- Fox-Kales, Emily
- Leonard, Suzanne
- Date Added:
- 02/01/2014
Screening Shakespeare is an open-access web-based textbook written and designed by Alexa Alice
Joubin based on her original research. It contains openly-licensed learning modules that introduce
students to key concepts of film studies, such as mise-en-scène, cinematography, sound and music,
and film theory within the context of film adaptations of Shakespeare’s plays.
- Subject:
- Arts and Humanities
- Career and Technical Education
- Ethnic Studies
- Film and Music Production
- Literature
- Performing Arts
- Social Science
- Visual Arts
- Material Type:
- Assessment
- Interactive
- Textbook
- Author:
- Alexa Alice Joubin
- Date Added:
- 01/11/2023
In addition to information on Islam, this website offers free Arabic lessons, starting with the alphabet in its entirety, including the names and all of the connected and unconnected forms of the letters. The grammar lesson includes writing examples, pronouns, the definite article, masculine and feminine nouns, adjectives, the dual form, and plurals. Additional lessons include numbers and counting, and lists of vocabulary, phrases, and sentences. An audio component is included with word lists.
- Subject:
- Arts and Humanities
- Languages
- Material Type:
- Reading
- Provider:
- SearchTruth
- Date Added:
- 10/14/2013
In this lesson we read a book called, Some Secrets Should Never Be Kept, a story about a young person who is touched inappropriately and is told to keep it a secret. We talk about how feelings and emotions can be signals to us, sometimes they’re letting us know something in our world doesn't make sense and we might need help figuring it out. We also talk about the way people sometimes use their power and position to manipulate situations to their advantage and to keep their victims silent.
- Subject:
- Health, Medicine and Nursing
- Material Type:
- Lesson
- Lesson Plan
- Author:
- Sex Ed Open Learning Project
- Date Added:
- 08/09/2022
In this lesson students use the co-created process grid and their journal to create a collage using visuals and words from magazines to illustrate and celebrate all aspects of their identities, with the invitation to include gender expression and gender.
- Subject:
- Health, Medicine and Nursing
- Material Type:
- Lesson
- Lesson Plan
- Author:
- Sex Ed Open Learning Project
- Date Added:
- 08/08/2022
This class is a general study of modern architecture as a response to important technological, cultural, environmental, aesthetic, and theoretical challenges after the European Enlightenment. It focuses on the theoretical, historiographic, and design approaches to architectural problems encountered in the age of industrial and post-industrial expansion across the globe, with specific attention to the dominance of European modernism in setting the agenda for the discourse of a global modernity at large. It explores modern architectural history through thematic exposition rather than as a simple chronological succession of ideas.
- Subject:
- Applied Science
- Architecture and Design
- Arts and Humanities
- Material Type:
- Full Course
- Provider:
- MIT
- Provider Set:
- MIT OpenCourseWare
- Author:
- Dutta, Arindam
- Date Added:
- 09/01/2004
The Sex Ed Open Learning Project User Guide provides background information and tips for navigating the collection.
- Subject:
- Health, Medicine and Nursing
- Material Type:
- Full Course
- Lesson
- Lesson Plan
- Module
- Teaching/Learning Strategy
- Unit of Study
- Author:
- Sex Ed Open Learning Project
- Date Added:
- 02/08/2023
We begin by defining sex, communicating to students that sexual contact can come in diverse forms, all of which require consent. Students learn about sexual reproduction as well as alternative modes of conception/family planning. Students end the lesson learning about contraception methods and the variety of ways they can choose to use to prevent pregnancy.
- Subject:
- Health, Medicine and Nursing
- Material Type:
- Lesson
- Author:
- Sex Ed Open Learning Project
- Date Added:
- 06/13/2022
Define and differentiate between sex and genderDefine and discuss what is meant by gender identityUnderstand and discuss the role of homophobia and heterosexism in societyDistinguish the meanings of transgender, transsexual, and homosexual identities
- Subject:
- Social Science
- Sociology
- Material Type:
- Reading
- Author:
- Audra Kallimanis
- Date Added:
- 06/24/2020
This course offers an introduction to the history of gender, sex, and sexuality in the modern United States, from the end of the nineteenth century to the beginning of the twenty-first. It begins with an overview of historical approaches to the field, emphasizing the changing nature of sexual and gender identities over time. The remainder of the course flows chronologically, tracing the expanding and contracting nature of attempts to control, construct, and contain sexual and gender identities, as well as the efforts of those who worked to resist, reject, and reform institutionalized heterosexuality and mainstream configurations of gendered power.
- Subject:
- Arts and Humanities
- Gender and Sexuality Studies
- History
- Social Science
- Material Type:
- Full Course
- Provider:
- MIT
- Provider Set:
- MIT OpenCourseWare
- Author:
- Horan, Caley
- Date Added:
- 02/01/2016
This course explores the issue of human trafficking for forced labour and sexual slavery, focusing on its representation in recent scholarly accounts and advocacy as well as in other media. Ethnographic and fictional readings along with media analysis help to develop a contextualized and comparative understanding of the phenomena in both past and present contexts. It examines the wide range of factors and agents that enable these practices, such as technology, cultural practices, social and economic conditions, and the role of governments and international organizations. The course also discusses the analytical, moral and methodological questions of researching, writing, and representing trafficking and slavery.
- Subject:
- Anthropology
- Cultural Geography
- Economics
- Gender and Sexuality Studies
- Political Science
- Social Science
- Sociology
- Material Type:
- Full Course
- Provider:
- MIT
- Provider Set:
- MIT OpenCourseWare
- Author:
- Thakor, Mitali
- Date Added:
- 02/01/2015
This lesson defines sexual intercourse and the cells involved with reproduction (sperm and egg) using an AMAZE video. It also includes a discussion of how pregnancy can happen via other methods as well. Using a small group activity, this lesson also examines the economic reality of accessing reproductive health care and how economic disparities impact who can and cannot utilize these methods. This information sets the foundation for understanding a basic physiological process and underpins future lessons about pregnancy prevention.
- Subject:
- Health, Medicine and Nursing
- Material Type:
- Lesson
- Lesson Plan
- Author:
- Sex Ed Open Learning Project
- Date Added:
- 08/09/2022
This assignment is intended to get students to think more about toys, gender, and socialization.
- Subject:
- Early Childhood Development
- Education
- Gender and Sexuality Studies
- Psychology
- Social Science
- Sociology
- Material Type:
- Activity/Lab
- Homework/Assignment
- Author:
- Bobby Hutchison
- Date Added:
- 02/07/2022
The founders of sociology in the United States wanted to make a difference. A central aim of the sociologists of the Chicago school was to use sociological knowledge to achieve social reform. A related aim of sociologists like Jane Addams, W.E.B. DuBois, and Ida B. Wells-Barnett and others since was to use sociological knowledge to understand and alleviate gender, racial, and class inequality.
Steve Barkan’s Sociology: Understanding and Changing the Social World makes sociology relevant for today’s students by balancing traditional coverage with a fresh approach that takes them back to sociology’s American roots in the use of sociological knowledge for social reform.
Print on demand edition available here: https://www.uncpress.org/book/9781469659282/sociology/
- Subject:
- Social Science
- Sociology
- Material Type:
- Textbook
- Provider:
- University of Minnesota
- Provider Set:
- University of Minnesota Libraries Publishing
- Author:
- Steve Barkan
- Date Added:
- 02/20/2015
This lesson challenges students to analyze and to reflect on messages presented in songs — and to express their own views about important issues addressed in some songs.
- Subject:
- Ethnic Studies
- Social Science
- Material Type:
- Lesson
- Provider:
- Southern Poverty Law Center
- Provider Set:
- Learning for Justice
- Date Added:
- 04/26/2017
Elleke Boehmer's work on the crucial intersections between independence, nationalism and gender has already proved canonical in the field. 'Stories of women' combines her keynote essays on the mother figure and the postcolonial nation, with incisive new work on male autobiography, 'daughter' writers, the colonial body, the trauma of the post-colony, and the nation in a transnational context. Focusing on Africa as well as South Asia, and sexuality as well as gender, Boehmer offers fine close readings of writers ranging from Achebe, Okri and Mandela to Arundhati Roy and Yvonne Vera, shaping these into a critical engagement with theorists of the nation like Fredric Jameson and Partha Chatterjee. This new paperback edition will be of interest to readers and researchers of postcolonial, international and women's writing; of nation theory, colonial history and historiography; of Indian, African, migrant and diasporic literatures, and is likely to prove a landmark study in the field.
- Subject:
- Gender and Sexuality Studies
- Social Science
- Material Type:
- Reading
- Provider:
- Manchester University Press
- Author:
- Elleke Boehmer
- Date Added:
- 06/01/2009
Welcome to Critical Theory! We know that this field probably seems daunting, but now that you’re here, we’re here to help you get more comfortable with concepts such as ideology, constructivism, and the uncanny, to name a few. This handbook is a student-built guide that explains and exemplifies different literary theories. Written in accessible language with modern-day examples, this handbook seeks to make literary theory more manageable.
This handbook is a blend between a traditional textbook and an experimental anthology. It includes a range of pieces that show students grappling with the concepts themselves. Moreover, it’s free and organized according to the theories presented in the syllabus.
- Subject:
- Arts and Humanities
- Literature
- Material Type:
- Textbook
- Provider:
- Plymouth State University
- Author:
- Abby Goode
- Date Added:
- 02/24/2020
What has been said of Moby-Dick—that it’s the greatest novel no one ever reads—could just as well be said of any number of American “classics” like The Scarlet Letter, Uncle Tom’s Cabin, or The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. This course reconsiders a small number of nineteenth-century American novels by presenting each in a surprising context.
- Subject:
- Arts and Humanities
- English Language Arts
- Literature
- Reading Literature
- Material Type:
- Full Course
- Provider:
- MIT
- Provider Set:
- MIT OpenCourseWare
- Author:
- Kelley, Wyn
- Date Added:
- 09/01/2007