Electrical and Electronic Engineering (English) | |||||
Bachelor | TR-NQF-HE: Level 6 | QF-EHEA: First Cycle | EQF-LLL: Level 6 |
Course Code: | UNI370 | ||||
Course Name: | Gender Studies | ||||
Semester: |
Spring Fall |
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Course Credits: |
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Language of instruction: | English | ||||
Course Condition: | |||||
Does the Course Require Work Experience?: | No | ||||
Type of course: | University Elective | ||||
Course Level: |
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Mode of Delivery: | E-Learning | ||||
Course Coordinator: | Doç. Dr. ZEYNEP BANU DALAMAN | ||||
Course Lecturer(s): | Zeynep Banu Dalaman | ||||
Course Assistants: |
Course Objectives: | The course objectives focus on enhancing students' knowledge of theoretical foundations and key concepts in gender studies, examining gender roles and discrimination in various contexts, analyzing the interaction between gender and other social factors, and developing critical thinking skills to analyze gender-related issues and their societal impacts. Through this course, students will gain valuable insights into the complexities of gender dynamics in modern society and develop the ability to critically approach gender-related issues across various disciplines |
Course Content: | Gender Studies course offers a comprehensive exploration of gender-related topics, aiming to provide students with a deep understanding of gender studies and its contemporary relevance. The course content covers a wide range of subjects, including gender concepts, roles, stereotypes, discrimination, feminism, violence, and the intersection of gender with various social domains such as media, education, family, work, and politics. |
The students who have succeeded in this course;
1) Students will be able to define and explain the fundamental concepts and theories in gender studies. 2) They will be able to identify and analyze gender roles and stereotypes in various social contexts 3) They will be able to understand the historical development and different waves of feminism. 4) They will be able to recognize and critically analyze forms of gender-based violence and discrimination. 5) They will be able to evaluate gender representation in media and educational materials. 6) They will be able to analyze gender dynamics in family structures and interpersonal relationships. 7) They will be able to assess gender inequalities in the labor market and workplace. 8) They will be able to comprehend the challenges and importance of gender equality in political participation. 9) They will be able to develop and express informed perspectives on current gender issues. |
Week | Subject | Related Preparation |
1) | Introduction | |
2) | What is Gender? Theoretical Framework | • Richardson, D. (2015). Conceptualising gender. Introducing gender and women's studies, 4. • Council of Europe. (2016). Gender Equality Glossary. https://edoc.coe.int/en/gender-equality/6947-gender-equality-glossary.html • Keane, Erin. (2014, July 22). 10 questions Taylor Swift could have asked herself before picking a fight with Nicki Minaj. Salon. |
3) | Gender Roles / Stereotypes | • UN OHCHR. Gender stereotyping OHCHR and women’s human rights and gender equality. https://www.ohchr.org/en/women/gender-stereotyping • What are Gender Roles and Stereotypes? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FuLbyz0Jp08 |
4) | Gender Discrimination: Key Concepts | • Paksoy, S., & Kiliç, S. B. (2016). Analysis of Gender Discrimination with Respect to The Socio-Economic Perspective. Çukurova Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü Dergisi, 25(1), 59-76. • Cusacks, S. ve Pusey, L. (2013). CEDAW and the rights to non-discrimination and equality. Melbourne Journal of International Law, 14(1), 1-34. |
5) | Feminism and Waves | • Mohajan, H. (2022). Four Waves of Feminism: A Blessing for Global Humanity. • Dalaman, Z. B. (2023). New Women Identities Created by Feminist Alternative Media: Inspecting Türkiye. IntechOpen. |
6) | Gender-based Violence | • Council of Europe. (2019). Gender Matters: a manual on addressing gender-based violence affecting young people. https://www.coe.int/en/web/campaign-free-to-speak-safe-to-learn/-/gender-matters-a-manual-on-addressing-gender-based-violence-affecting-young-people-2007-reprint-2013- • Russo, N. F., & Pirlott, A. (2006). Gender‐based violence: concepts, methods, and findings. Annals of the New York academy of sciences, 1087(1), 178-205. |
7) | Friendship and Dating | • Baumgarte, R. (2002). Cross-gender friendship: The troublesome relationship. Inappropriate relationships: The unconventional, the disapproved, |
8) | Midterm | |
9) | Gender and Media | • Wood, J. T. (1994). Gendered media: The influence of media on views of gender. Gendered lives: Communication, gender, and culture, 9, 231-244. • Sharda, A. (2014). Media and gender stereotyping: The need for media literacy. International Research Journal of Social Sciences, 3(8), 43-49. |
10) | Gender in Textbooks | • Dawar, T. & Anand, S. (2017). Gender bias in textbooks across the world. International Journal of Applied Home Science, 4, 224-235. |
11) | Gender and Family | • Flynn, S. I. (2011). Family gender roles. Sociology Reference Guide: Gender Roles and Equality, 64-76. |
12) | Labor from Gender Perspective | • UN. (2012). Promoting gender equality and women’s economic empowerment on the road to sustainable development: Good practice from the UNECE region: https://www.unece.org/fileadmin/DAM/publications/gender/PromotingGenderEqualityBro chure_EN_web.pdf • Frader, L. L. (2020). Gender and labor in world history. A companion to global gender history, 27-42. |
13) | Gender in Workplace | • Purcell, D., MacArthur, K. R., & Samblanet, S. (2010). Gender and the glass ceiling at work. Sociology Compass, 4(9), 705-717. • World Economic Forum. (2023). 5 charts showing workforce gender gaps. https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2023/04/workforce-gender-gap-crisis/#:~:text=An%20analysis%20of%20102%20countries,Image%3A%20World%20Economic%20Forum. |
14) | Gender and Political Participation | • Bari, F. (2005, November). Women’s political participation: Issues and Challenges. In United Nations Division for the Advancement of Women Expert Group Meeting: Enhancing Participation of Women in Development through an Enabling Environment for Achieving Gender Equality and the Advancement of Women. Bangkok (Vol. 393). • Dalaman, Z. B. (2024). Women's Political Participation in Türkiye: A Century of Progress and Ongoing Challenges. Journal of Sustainable Equity and Social Research, 1(Special Issue on Women). • UN Türkiye (2023). According to the UN Women - IPU "Women in Politics 2023" Map: Women's participation in politics is still far from equality.: https://turkiye.un.org/en/224322-according-un-women-ipu-women-politics-2023-map-womens- |
Course Notes / Textbooks: | • Ayata, A. & Gölgeloğlu, Ö. (2011) Siyaset ve Katılım. Toplumsal Cinsiyet Sosyolojisi, Eskişehir: Anadolu Üniversitesi Yay, 64-82. • Büker, S. (200(). Toplumsal cinsiyet eşitliği. https://ceidizler.ceid.org.tr/dosya/Medyada-Toplumsal-Cinsiyet-Esitligi.pdf • Dalaman, Z. B. (2020). Kadın hareketinde feminist alternatif medyanın rolü: Türkiye ve Tunus örnekleri (Doctoral dissertation, İstanbul Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü). • Dalaman, Z. B. (2021). Toplumsal Cinsiyet ve Siyasi Temsil, Toplumsal Cinsiyet ve Hukuk Cilt 2, Onikilevha, 329-361. • Dalaman, Z. B., & Demirtaş, M. (2022). Türkiye’de Dizi Sektöründe Dijital Aktivizm Bağlamında Değişen Çalışma Koşulları. Electronic Turkish Studies, 17(6). • Doğancı, H. K., & Tuncay, T. (2020). Tarihsel Süreçte Kadının Aile içindeki Konumunun Feminist Sosyal Hizmet Yaklaşımı Temelinde Değerlendirilmesi. Toplum ve Sosyal Hizmet, 31(3), 1324-1351. https://doi.org/10.33417/tsh.687922 • Ecevit, Y. (2021). Toplumsal Cinsiyet Eşitliğinin Temel Kavramları. 2021. https://avys.omu.edu.tr/storage/app/public/kokdener/142391/toplumsal-cinsiyet-esitliginin-temel-kavramlaripdf.pdf • Gümüşoğlu, F. (2008). Ders kitaplarında toplumsal cinsiyet. Toplum ve Demokrasi Dergisi, 2(4), 39-50. • Koçak, Y. Ç., & Can, H. Ö. (2019). Flört şiddeti: Tanımı, sınıflaması ve değerlendirmesi. Turkiye klinikleri obstetric-women's health and diseases nursing-special topics, 5(3), 43-53. • Pekel, E. (2019). Toplumsal Cinsiyet Rolleri ve Kadının Çalışma Hayatındaki Konumu. Balkan & Near Eastern Journal of Social Sciences (BNEJSS), 5(1). • Saraç, S. (2013). Toplumsal cinsiyet. Toplumsal cinsiyet ve yansımaları, 27-32. |
References: | • Richardson, D. (2015). Conceptualising gender. Introducing gender and women's studies, 4. • Council of Europe. (2016). Gender Equality Glossary. https://edoc.coe.int/en/gender-equality/6947-gender-equality-glossary.html • Keane, Erin. (2014, July 22). 10 questions Taylor Swift could have asked herself before picking a fight with Nicki Minaj. Salon. • UN OHCHR. Gender stereotyping OHCHR and women’s human rights and gender equality. https://www.ohchr.org/en/women/gender-stereotyping • What are Gender Roles and Stereotypes? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FuLbyz0Jp08 • Paksoy, S., & Kiliç, S. B. (2016). Analysis of Gender Discrimination with Respect to The Socio-Economic Perspective. Çukurova Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü Dergisi, 25(1), 59-76. • Cusacks, S. ve Pusey, L. (2013). CEDAW and the rights to non-discrimination and equality. Melbourne Journal of International Law, 14(1), 1-34. • Mohajan, H. (2022). Four Waves of Feminism: A Blessing for Global Humanity. • Dalaman, Z. B. (2023). New Women Identities Created by Feminist Alternative Media: Inspecting Türkiye. IntechOpen. • Council of Europe. (2019). Gender Matters: a manual on addressing gender-based violence affecting young people. https://www.coe.int/en/web/campaign-free-to-speak-safe-to-learn/-/gender-matters-a-manual-on-addressing-gender-based-violence-affecting-young-people-2007-reprint-2013- • Russo, N. F., & Pirlott, A. (2006). Gender‐based violence: concepts, methods, and findings. Annals of the New York academy of sciences, 1087(1), 178-205. • Baumgarte, R. (2002). Cross-gender friendship: The troublesome relationship. Inappropriate relationships: The unconventional, the disapproved, and the forbidden, 103-124. • Wood, J. T. (1994). Gendered media: The influence of media on views of gender. Gendered lives: Communication, gender, and culture, 9, 231-244. • Sharda, A. (2014). Media and gender stereotyping: The need for media literacy. International Research Journal of Social Sciences, 3(8), 43-49. • Dawar, T. & Anand, S. (2017). Gender bias in textbooks across the world. International Journal of Applied Home Science, 4, 224-235. • Flynn, S. I. (2011). Family gender roles. Sociology Reference Guide: Gender Roles and Equality, 64-76. • UN. (2012). Promoting gender equality and women’s economic empowerment on the road to sustainable development: Good practice from the UNECE region: https://www.unece.org/fileadmin/DAM/publications/gender/PromotingGenderEqualityBro chure_EN_web.pdf • Frader, L. L. (2020). Gender and labor in world history. A companion to global gender history, 27-42. • Purcell, D., MacArthur, K. R., & Samblanet, S. (2010). Gender and the glass ceiling at work. Sociology Compass, 4(9), 705-717. • World Economic Forum. (2023). 5 charts showing workforce gender gaps. https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2023/04/workforce-gender-gap-crisis/#:~:text=An%20analysis%20of%20102%20countries,Image%3A%20World%20Economic%20Forum. • Bari, F. (2005, November). Women’s political participation: Issues and Challenges. In United Nations Division for the Advancement of Women Expert Group Meeting: Enhancing Participation of Women in Development through an Enabling Environment for Achieving Gender Equality and the Advancement of Women. Bangkok (Vol. 393). • UN Türkiye (2023). According to the UN Women - IPU "Women in Politics 2023" Map: Women's participation in politics is still far from equality.: https://turkiye.un.org/en/224322-according-un-women-ipu-women-politics-2023-map-womens-participation-politics-still-far#:~:text=According%20to%20the%20%22Women%20in,%25%20in%202021%20to%2022.7%25. |
Course Learning Outcomes | 1 |
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Program Outcomes | |||||||||||
1) Adequate knowledge in mathematics, science and Electrical and Electronics engineering; the ability to use theoretical and practical knowledge in these areas in complex engineering problems. | |||||||||||
2) Ability to identify, formulate, and solve complex electrical and electronics engineering problems; ability to select and apply appropriate analysis and modeling methods for this purpose. | |||||||||||
3) Ability to design a complex circuit, device or system to meet specific requirements under realistic constraints and conditions; ability to apply modern design methods for this purpose. | |||||||||||
4) Ability to develop, select and use modern techniques and tools necessary for the analysis and solution of complex problems encountered in electrical and electronics engineering applications; ability to use information technologies effectively. | |||||||||||
5) Ability to design, conduct experiments, collect data, analyze and interpret results for the study of complex engineering problems or electrical and electronics engineering research topics. | |||||||||||
6) Ability to work effectively within and multidisciplinary teams; individual study skills. | |||||||||||
7) Ability to communicate effectively orally and in writing; knowledge of at least one foreign language; ability to write effectice reports and understand written reports, to prepare design and production reports, to make effective presentations, to give and receive clear and understandable instructions. | |||||||||||
8) Awareness of the necessity of lifelong learning; ability to access information, to follow developments in science and technology and to renew continuously. | |||||||||||
9) To act in accordance with ethical principles, professional and ethical responsibility; information on the standards used in electrical and electronics engineering applications. | |||||||||||
10) Information on business practices such as project management, risk management and change management; awareness of entrepreneurship and innovation; information about sustainable development. | |||||||||||
11) Knowledge of the effects of electrical and electronics engineering practices on health, environment and safety in the universal and social scale and the problems of the era reflected in electrical and electronics engineering; awareness of the legal consequences of electrical and electronics engineering solutions. |
No Effect | 1 Lowest | 2 Average | 3 Highest |
Program Outcomes | Level of Contribution | |
1) | Adequate knowledge in mathematics, science and Electrical and Electronics engineering; the ability to use theoretical and practical knowledge in these areas in complex engineering problems. | |
2) | Ability to identify, formulate, and solve complex electrical and electronics engineering problems; ability to select and apply appropriate analysis and modeling methods for this purpose. | |
3) | Ability to design a complex circuit, device or system to meet specific requirements under realistic constraints and conditions; ability to apply modern design methods for this purpose. | |
4) | Ability to develop, select and use modern techniques and tools necessary for the analysis and solution of complex problems encountered in electrical and electronics engineering applications; ability to use information technologies effectively. | |
5) | Ability to design, conduct experiments, collect data, analyze and interpret results for the study of complex engineering problems or electrical and electronics engineering research topics. | |
6) | Ability to work effectively within and multidisciplinary teams; individual study skills. | |
7) | Ability to communicate effectively orally and in writing; knowledge of at least one foreign language; ability to write effectice reports and understand written reports, to prepare design and production reports, to make effective presentations, to give and receive clear and understandable instructions. | |
8) | Awareness of the necessity of lifelong learning; ability to access information, to follow developments in science and technology and to renew continuously. | |
9) | To act in accordance with ethical principles, professional and ethical responsibility; information on the standards used in electrical and electronics engineering applications. | |
10) | Information on business practices such as project management, risk management and change management; awareness of entrepreneurship and innovation; information about sustainable development. | |
11) | Knowledge of the effects of electrical and electronics engineering practices on health, environment and safety in the universal and social scale and the problems of the era reflected in electrical and electronics engineering; awareness of the legal consequences of electrical and electronics engineering solutions. |
Semester Requirements | Number of Activities | Level of Contribution |
Project | 1 | % 20 |
Midterms | 1 | % 30 |
Final | 1 | % 50 |
total | % 100 | |
PERCENTAGE OF SEMESTER WORK | % 50 | |
PERCENTAGE OF FINAL WORK | % 50 | |
total | % 100 |
Activities | Number of Activities | Workload |
Course Hours | 14 | 28 |
Study Hours Out of Class | 2 | 18 |
Midterms | 1 | 32 |
Final | 1 | 47 |
Total Workload | 125 |