Abstract

“The voice of women needs to be heard” because “when we truly take their lives seriously it changes our whole understanding of who we are and what we are called to become” (Chilcote 10). The revolutionary impact of feminist theory and practice in all areas of contemporary culture illustrates the world-transforming potential of women’s voices. It is now essential to any liberal education, as well as to the intellectual development of individual women students, that women’s voices be richly and intentionally integrated into general education core skills and knowledge requirements, beyond gender and women’s studies programs. Saint Mary’s College, Notre Dame, Indiana, one of about fifty women’s colleges remaining in the United States, has designed a new general education structure, the Sophia Program in Liberal Learning, which foregrounds women’s voices in precisely this way.1 Our general model and the lessons we have learned in implementing it are easily adaptable to coeducational and/or secular institutions, even though our distinctive identity as a Catholic women’s college has shaped the specific details of our curriculum. The women’s voices requirement is a “cognitive and communicative skill” that does not add credit hours. Rather, students typically fulfill it by taking courses that also fulfill one of the four general education area requirements: “science for the citizen,” “arts for living,” “cultures and systems,” and “traditions and worldviews.” I say “typically” because a strength of our new general education program is its flexible responsiveness to each individual student’s desire to construct her own education. Students are required to have a total of four women’s voices learning experiences, but only three of them must be three-credit courses taken from at least three of the four general education areas. These areas are represented by the four arms of the French cross, a graphic design taken from the college seal (see Figure 1, next page). The fourth women’s voices learning experience may also be a course, but, alternatively, it may also be an out-of-class learning experience, such as volunteering at Sex Offense Services (S.O.S.), a local sexual assault prevention, and victim assistance, agency. Many Saint Mary’s students currently volunteer

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call