Welcome To UTSA,Women Studies Institute

A note from the Director Patricia Trujillo,Ph.D.

 

Welcome to our recently re-launched UTSA Women's Studies Institute website! It is an exciting time for WSI; the new major in Women's Studies is officially on the books, we are in the process of planning another event-packed Women's History Month, and are developing new student programs. The new website provides us an opportunityto reflect on our many accomplishments of the past six years as a research institute on the UTSA campus. The Women's Studies Institute we are developing at UTSA is unique in multiple ways.Unlike most Women and Gender Studies programs or Women's Studies research centers across the nation, we currently function as a research center and as the home for one of Texas newest majors in Women's Studies. This unique identity allows us to center our efforts on research, curriculum, and community engagement in exciting, important, and engaging ways. In April 2007, the major proposal in Women's Studies-drafted by Women's Studies Advisory Committee (WSAC), chaired by Dr. Sharon Navarro – was approved by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board. The major is officially listed in the UTSA Undergraduate Catalog and we are happy to announce that we’ve already recruited our first majors! UTSA is one of the top five Hispanic-serving institutions in the US and we at WSI are committed to establishing a Women's Studies program that recognizes our location in South Texas. Our major track in Women's Studies seeks to strengthen the curriculum at UTSA, improve student enrollment and retention rates among the campus’ large population of minority and nontraditional students, and nurture leadership among female students and faculty. Ultimately, the WSAC will author three proposals: a B.A. major (check!), a graduate certificate, and an M.A. degree. All three programs will continue to foster and further establish the culture of women-centered scholarship already present on the UTSA campus.We also seek to forge working relationships with the larger San Antonio community, particularly on issues relating to the development of women's leadership in the 21st Century. The WSI will explore collaborative partnerships with community organizations to distribute information and foster dialogue on issues of concern to working class women. In the tradition of feminist methodologies, WS students will be required to have a service learning component in their studies, offering students a chance to work with women's organizations throughout the community of South Texas. LaPetra Bowman, a Ph.D. student and College of Liberal and Fine Arts advisor at UTSA, is currently developing our internship program to facilitate this aspect of our major. The information will be available soon on the website. Additionally, we will continue to sponsor lectures and conferences, host Women's History Month celebrations, and develop a research agenda that provides an intellectual and social climate for faculty, graduate and undergraduate researchers and scholars in Women's Studies that is likely to expand substantially in years to come. I invite you to get involved with WSI and learn more about how women are researching, educating, inspiring, and shaping our multiple communities on and off campus.