Psychology of Women

Spring 2025

Description

Important issues, theories, and research related to the psychology of women are examined. Common stereotypes, myths, and typical societal expectations are explored in terms of biological, social, psychological, and development determinants. Additionally, the social construction of gender categories, female sexuality, victimization of women, mental health of women, and issues related to education, work, and family are examined. Information in this course should serve as a catalyst for constructive change by revealing deficiencies in psychological research and theories relevant to gender, sexuality, cultural, and ethnic issues.
Prerequisites: GE English Composition (1A), GE Critical Thinking (1B), GE Oral Communication (1C), GE Mathematical Concepts/Quantitative Reasoning (2); or faculty permission.

Class Notes

The class is offered entirely online with no set day/time. Students are expected to complete class work asynchronously.

Class Details

Instructor
Instructor Name (static text): 
Dolan, Mary A
Location

WWW ONLINE

Class Registration Information

Class #
2149
Course
PSYC 345 -
SECT 02
Units
3
Fees
Price TBA:
  • $ / unit
Capacity
37/37
Class Meeting Dates

01/21/2025 - 05/16/2025

Days

TBA

Times

TBA

PSYC 345 - SECT 02

Psychology of Women

Class: 2149 Units: 3

M-F 01/21/2025 - 05/16/2025 TBA TBA

Important issues, theories, and research related to the psychology of women are examined. Common stereotypes, myths, and typical societal expectations are explored in terms of biological, social, psychological, and development determinants. Additionally, the social construction of gender categories, female sexuality, victimization of women, mental health of women, and issues related to education, work, and family are examined. Information in this course should serve as a catalyst for constructive change by revealing deficiencies in psychological research and theories relevant to gender, sexuality, cultural, and ethnic issues.
Prerequisites: GE English Composition (1A), GE Critical Thinking (1B), GE Oral Communication (1C), GE Mathematical Concepts/Quantitative Reasoning (2); or faculty permission.

Class Notes

Important issues, theories, and research related to the psychology of women are examined. Common stereotypes, myths, and typical societal expectations are explored in terms of biological, social, psychological, and development determinants. Additionally, the social construction of gender categories, female sexuality, victimization of women, mental health of women, and issues related to education, work, and family are examined. Information in this course should serve as a catalyst for constructive change by revealing deficiencies in psychological research and theories relevant to gender, sexuality, cultural, and ethnic issues.

Instructor
Instructor Name (static text): 
Dolan, Mary A
Location
WWW ONLINE