Universities woo students with queer studies
NEWS / Most departments still piecing together funding to study sexuality
Marcus McCann / National / Friday, January 07, 2011
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Students preparing for university this year are part of the first generation able to choose “gay” as their major.

University applications are typically due over the winter, with big deadlines — including the deadline for high school students applying to first-year undergrad programs in Ontario — arriving as early as Jan 12.

Daniel Faranda is the president of York’s Undergraduate Sexuality Studies Association. Academic programs like York’s are important because they increase visibility of gay and trans people on campuses, he says. It’s also helped Faranda broaden his academic horizons.

“It’s endless, all the things you can study under ‘sexuality,’” he says.

There are 80 students enrolled in sexuality studies at York. Professor Sheila Cavanagh, the program’s coordinator, hopes to grow that number to 100 over the next couple of years. That number is a key York metric separating large from small programs — reaching it would result in more money and administrative support for sexuality studies.

Having a fuller course offering is a boon for students, and it has spinoff benefits. Larger departments mean bigger faculties. And that means more professors with more time to research gay issues.

York and the University of Toronto are the only Canadian schools that offer a major in sexuality to undergraduates. Both programs are interdisciplinary, meaning that many of the courses are taught by more traditional departments, like English or sociology.

Like most sexuality programs, U of T’s started piecemeal, as professors with an interest in gay topics convinced their departments to fund one-off courses that could count toward a sexual diversity studies degree.

But now, U of T boasts a healthy dose of courses offered specifically within the sexual diversity studies program, says Scott Rayter, the program’s associate director of undergraduate studies.

Since students don’t declare their majors at U of T until their upper years, high schoolers in the midst of applying will be selecting only their faculty (in this case, arts and sciences) at this point, Rayter points out. That means they can dabble in the program before deciding to make it their focus.

“And, of course, they’re not learning about sexuality studies in high school, so taking a sociology course or a history course before jumping into theory may be a benefit,” Rayter says.

Other schools have offered minors in sexuality studies for years — with the dream of a full curriculum perpetually just out of reach — including Concordia, Carleton and the University of British Columbia.

The courses themselves are offered by a mishmash of departments, including sociology, English and women’s studies. Most sexuality studies programs have just one or two full-time faculty.

That’s the situation at Carleton, which offers a minor in sexuality studies through the school’s Institute for Interdisciplinary Studies. And while piecing together financing for courses or guest speakers can be a lot of work, it also has its benefits, says Carleton professor Jennifer Evans.

“Before we started our program, I wasn’t even aware of some of my colleagues and their interests. Sharing resources, collaborating, builds community for students and faculty alike,” she writes from Calgary, where she’s attending a sexuality studies conference.

Evans points to a lecture by leading queer theorist Jack Halberstam, which she is planning for March. She cobbled together the cash for the project by approaching several departments at two universities (Carleton and the University of Ottawa), plus the campuses’ queer and women’s centres.

York’s Faranda says he discovered the program too late in his studies to graduate with a sexuality studies major (he’s pursuing a certificate instead). But he says that high school students should give some thought to sexuality studies.

“Don’t be afraid of it. This is a great learning environment,” says Faranda.

Cavanagh agrees.

“Our courses receive some of the highest student evaluations across the university,” she says. “The feedback I receive from students is overwhelmingly positive, and the commitment of our faculty to sexuality studies at York University is very exciting.”


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Reader Comments


 
In other news...
In other news, York philosophy students heave a sigh of relief as they realize they will no longer the be main target of "unemployable graduate" jokes...
William, Montreal QC
01/07/11 5:38 PM EST
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@William
they could join the Gay Left.
Peter From, Toronto ON
01/07/11 8:00 PM EST
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and over here in London
at Western, of all places -- not exactly a queer friendly oasis at the best of times -- a new major in sexuality studies will start this year.... http://www.westerncalendar.uwo.ca/2011/proofing/pg1561.html -- Now I will just sit back and wait for the the trolls the trot out their various wails and whines.
Douglass St.Christian, Stratford Ontario
01/08/11 5:47 AM EST
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YAWN
More rich parents throwing their money down the drain so bourgeois rebels can pretend their hip in the unemployment line. Talk about power and privilege! These courses and their "teachers" are the new ruling class con artists. Pathetic.
Bored, Toronto Ontario
01/08/11 9:13 AM EST
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Unemployable? Not
There will be some jobs for majors in gay sexuality. Their knowledge is what will win equality for gay people where it currently doesn't exist. Beyond equality, their knowledge will inform governments and businesses how to best serve their gay and same-sex populations and customers. There will always be a gay minority being overlooked or threatened by the straight majority, and those stories will need to be catalogued and told.
Randy, Windsor ON
01/08/11 1:28 PM EST
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Skills Training?
@William The original intent of universities was to foster research which would enrich and benefit society as a whole. It is a sign of how intellectually impoverished we have become in that we see universities as mere vehicles to a well paying job and a good lifestyle.
pjr, Toronto ON
01/08/11 3:53 PM EST
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Unemployable? Yes
There are many other faculties and disciplines where students can research and present scholarly works on the subject of sexuality, such as history, political science, social work, law, health science, communications, sociology... It does not need to be a core discipline. Volunteering at a gay community centre or being a professional protester aren't paid gigs. You're not going to win equality for gay people around the world by getting a B.A. in queer studies. People with all kinds of backgrounds can be advocates for gay rights, a fluff degree isn't going to do anybody good. It's important to be knowledgable on issues of gender and sexuality, but you can really do that on your own time without having to take out a student loan. Universities, especially in this economy, should not be offering personal interest degrees. They will take you nowhere unless you can afford to be a career student.
Ryan, Toronto ON
01/08/11 4:30 PM EST
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Waste of taxpayers money
Does each degree come with a free nose ring and copy of The Communist Manifesto? Enjoy your career selling Greenpeace memberships on street corners, lefties.
ron, Vancouver Bc
01/08/11 6:16 PM EST
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All Degrees Are Real Degrees
I'm glad to see that Sexual Diversity Studies (SDS) courses are getting some attention from the media. First, I want to point out a factual error of this article. By enrolling in SDS courses you aren't enrolling as a Gay Studies major, you are enrolling as an SDS Major. The difference is that the course work isn't developed around gays, lebians, bisexuals or trans people really at all. It's developed by analyzing the role that sexuality plays in society, history and various other realms. In fact, a large portion of the people that take these courses don't identify as LGBT or even queer. That being said, a large portion of people who take the introduction classes do identify as queer, but they don't necessarily enroll in the major. But I would think that it's great to have opportunities to look at sexuality as the focus of a course, unlike all of the courses in highschool programs and the poor standards of analyzing sexuality in other courses (Political Sciences, Sociology and Psychology specifically). Now, in terms of the merits of the degree, SDS is an amazing program with many job opportunities arising out of the degree as well as many job opportunities it can relate to. For instances, I know several people who graduated in the program who went on to work for health and wellness centres, community centres, equity and human resources offices as well as for the University itself. With that being said, I know many people who graduated from this degree that went on to work in the banking industry, Queen's Park and other government administrations, and various other very prestigious employment opportunities (though I don't always politically agree with their lines of work, lol).
Corey Scott, Toronto Ontario
01/08/11 6:36 PM EST
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All Degrees Are Real Degrees Pt. 2
My point being, a undergraduate degree is an undergraduate degree. Very few students don't actually pursue employment in their respective fields. Instead, undergraduate degrees exist as an opportunity for students to learn how to work in bureaucracies, excel in fulfilling tasks and gain skills that are relevant to the employment market. This goes for degrees in all fields of Humanities, Sciences and Social Sciences. So please, people who are commenting, don't attack courses like Sexual Diversity Studies, Equity Studies, African Studies, Disability Studies, Near and Middle Eastern Studies, etc as being unemployable - because they are just as employable as any other degree, if not more. In fact, because these degrees are focused on specific areas, they actually provide students with opportunities to be critical and reflective, whereas many traditional degrees lack these aspects and many individual students just become numbers in their classrooms.
Corey Scott, Toronto Ontario
01/08/11 6:44 PM EST
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plezsave single
hey i am single young guy in peachland
ivan, peachland bc
01/09/11 9:49 PM EST
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we need to be visible everywhere
Universities can be important places for advancing social causes. I the best situations they should have transformative dialogue with the "real" world.
Robert Ballantyne, Vancouver bc
01/10/11 3:25 PM EST
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