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You will study feminist activism and theory related to women and other marginalized groups within a multicultural and global context, including experience and identity related to gender and sexuality. You will gain excellent written and oral communication skills, research skills, and strong critical thinking skills. You can go on to work in a variety of fields including psychology, health, education, nonprofits, and other organizations and businesses.
When speaking at Smith College in 1949, Eleanor Roosevelt predicted the needs of today’s global workforce: “How well prepared are we to live in a world that has constantly grown smaller and where we must rub shoulders with people of different cultures, of completely different customs and habits and religions, who live under different legal systems, whose languages are different?”
Women and other historically marginalized groups are now a significant part of today's workforce and a training in issues related to women, gender, and sexuality increases your marketability and range of career opportunities. More employers are recognizing the benefits, and often the necessity, of hiring employees with knowledge of and sensitivity to the needs of a diverse workplace.
While many graduates work in related occupations and/or choose to obtain advanced degrees, others find opportunities in different directions. Many careers do not require a specific major, but rather a wide range of demonstrated skills and accomplishments. Graduates from WGSS programs have demonstrated high achievement in social intelligence, synthesizing information, critical and analytical thinking, problem-solving, effective verbal and written communication, knowledge of cross-cultural and international perspectives, organization, and collaborative teamwork – all transferable skills and strengths welcomed by today’s employers.
Good grades, internship opportunities, involvement in college activities and responsible work experience gained through the women, gender, and sexuality studies program will enhance your marketability in today’s competitive, global, and rapidly-changing job market.
Women, gender, and sexuality studies emphasizes critical and creative thinking, communication skills, active problem solving and civic engagement, and prepares students to work from multiple perspectives and with respect to different cultures, identities, and experiences.
As documented in national studies, flexibility, innovation, and integrated knowledge of diverse peoples and practices are skills valued by employers, while many graduates can expect to work in a variety of professions over the course of their lives. A degree in women, gender, and sexuality studies increases your ability to enter an array of graduate and professional programs as well as a broad range of careers in such areas as teaching, public policy, law, business, research, journalism, communications, social and health services, and nonprofit organizations at local, national, and international levels.
If you are in the women, gender, and sexuality studies program, gain practical experience through coursework that can include practicum, activism, and capstone components (not all are required).
The Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Bachelor of Arts degree program is organized around the following areas of concentration: feminist activism, theory, and methods of inquiry; women and other minoritized groups as subjects of study within multicultural and global contexts; and multiple fields of difference, experience, and identity related to gender and sexuality.
View the Bachelor of Arts in Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies program information and requirements in the Academic Catalog.
Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Bachelor of Arts Checksheet (PDF)
For admission into the undergraduate program, students must have a 2.0 GPA with a letter grade of “C” in WGS 2000: Introduction to Women and Gender Studies (Wright State Core Area 5). To graduate with a degree in women, gender, and sexuality studies, students must complete, along with university and college requirements, a total of 120 credit hours, 40 hours of which must be at the 3000-level or above, and maintain a grade of "C" or higher in all required and elective WGS courses taken for the major.
Finding the right college means finding the right fit. See all that the College of Liberal Arts has to offer by visiting campus.