barnard college
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

45
(FIVE YEARS 9)

H-INDEX

2
(FIVE YEARS 0)

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lauren Babb ◽  
Rachel Austin

Science education research has shown that systemic racism, microaggressions, and unwelcoming or unsupportive climates disproportionally impact the ability of some individuals to flourish in chemistry. In order to help students taking general chemistry learn about the impact of systemic racism in chemistry and to provide them with a venue to discuss this issue, a special seminar-style course was created. This relatively low intensity course successfully created a space for intense conversation, reflection, increased understanding of some of the aspects of racism in chemistry, and the impetus for institutional change. A description of the course, along with student opinions, and co-facilitator reflections, are presented.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lauren Babb ◽  
Rachel Austin

Science education research has shown that systemic racism, microaggressions, and unwelcoming or unsupportive climates disproportionally impact the ability of some individuals to flourish in chemistry. In order to help students taking general chemistry learn about the impact of systemic racism in chemistry and to provide them with a venue to discuss this issue, a special seminar-style course was created. This relatively low intensity course successfully created a space for intense conversation, reflection, increased understanding of some of the aspects of racism in chemistry, and the impetus for institutional change. A description of the course, along with student opinions, and co-facilitator reflections, are presented.


2020 ◽  
Vol 44 (2) ◽  
pp. 355-379
Author(s):  
Desiree Abu-Odeh ◽  
Shamus Khan ◽  
Constance A. Nathanson

AbstractSex on college campuses has fascinated scholars, reporters, and the public since the advent of coeducational higher education in the middle of the nineteenth century. But the emergence of rape on campus as a public problem is relatively recent. This article reveals the changing social constructions of campus rape as a public problem through a detailed examination of newspaper reporting on this issue as it unfolded at Columbia University and Barnard College between 1955 and 1990. Adapting Joseph R. Gusfield’s classic formulation of public problem construction, we show the ways police and other judicial and law enforcement authorities, feminists, university faculty, student groups, university administrators, and health professionals and institutions have struggled over ownership of how the problem should be defined and described, attribution of responsibility for addressing the problem, and prescriptions for what is to be done. Our findings show how beginning in the late 1960s and early 1970s, the simultaneous swelling of the women’s liberation movement and the exponential integration of women into previously male-dominated institutions of higher education and medicine catalyzed the creation of new kinds of knowledge, institutions, and expertise to address rape and sexual violence more broadly on college campuses. New actors—feminists and health professionals—layered frames of gender and health over those of crime and punishment to fundamentally transform how we understand rape on campus, and beyond.


2019 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 198-209
Author(s):  
Jason D. Martinek ◽  
Jacqueline Ellis ◽  
Mark Carnes ◽  
Courtney Klaus
Keyword(s):  
The Past ◽  

Author(s):  
Kaiama L. Glover ◽  
Maja Horn

Kaiama Glover and Maja Horn, both professors at Barnard College, developed and implemented a team-taught course that brought Dominican and Haitian studies into dialogue. On the one hand, this experimental course provided a template for bringing Francophone and Spanish-speaking Caribbean histories into conversation. At the same time, teaching Haiti and the Dominican Republic in one class occasioned an opportunity for students to critically assess both nations in the larger context of transnational and diasporic formations. Their methods unite techniques of digital humanities with transnational pedagogy.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document