Misplaced Pages

Women's and Gender Education Center (Eastern Washington University)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
This article may need to be rewritten to comply with Misplaced Pages's quality standards. You can help. The talk page may contain suggestions. (February 2020)
The neutrality of this article is disputed. Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page. Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met. (February 2020) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
(Learn how and when to remove this message)

The Women's and Gender Education Center at Eastern Washington University was established in 1977 as the EWU Women's Center, and has continued to serve students at EWU since that time. The center is part of the Women's and Gender Studies Program.

Creation of the Center

Eastern Washington University's Women's and Gender Education Center, or WAGE, opened officially on October 5, 1977 in Monroe Hall on the Cheney campus. Then called the Women's Center, its first director was Dr. Pat Coontz. The Center was part of the Women's Program, which coordinated the activities of an academic program for Women's Studies with the Center's programming for Eastern Washington University students, faculty, staff, and the greater Cheney community. Pat Coontz also created the Women's Center to break the stigma of women being viewed in the role of wife and mother, and to create an empowering environment to be recognized as a powerful leader in her community.

History of the Center

As the name of the Center suggests, its intention was to support research in women's studies. In addition to supporting scholarship, discussions, counseling, and lectures were on the agenda. In the student newspaper's "Faculty Forum" column on January 19, 1978, Pat Coontz shot down the "Women's Libber" stereotype, noting that extremist views were not characteristic of the majority of feminists. She then called out her male colleagues for contributing to a sexist campus culture. These colleagues, were "good union men, interested in a better future for everyone" yet referred to their "Farrah Fawcett-looking students" as "chicks" and "dolls." The Center's name has changed over time: originally the Women's Center from the fall of 1977 until about June 1989, it was renamed the EWU Women Studies Center in September 1989. It received its current name, the Women's and Gender Education Center, in the fall of 2017.

The main objective of the center is to provide an area for women and non-binary identities with resources and the opportunity to promote in-depth academic and scholarly research on issues relating to women and gender. Ultimately a main goal of the WAGE Center is to educate people about women's status, lend assistance in cases of discrimination, and support the strengthening of women's ideals.

Programs and activities

Annually, the Women's & Gender Studies Program hosts Contemporary Issues in Feminist Research presentation series in which faculty present research in their discipline from a feminist perspective. The Women's Studies Challenge to Tradition was a four day conference, starting May 4, 1978 to May 7, 1978, that brought together members of the general public and scholars from the Northwest to discuss research and developments in women's studies. The keynote speaker for the symposium was Fanny Howe, who spoke on the need to reexamine curricula biased toward a male perspective. There were 15 panels and workshops that discussed different topics such as women under stress, women and work in a technological age, women and politics, history's lost achievements, women in the arts and sciences, the language of sexism, single parent families and the impact of feminism on the church.

In 1986 from October 17–19, Eastern hosted the Northwest Women's Studies Association Conference, featuring keynote speaker and contemporary feminist Nawal El-Saadawi.

The H.O.M.E. (Helping Ourselves Means Education) Program is a self-help network that provides resources for students who are typically low-income parents. H.O.M.E. connects students to a network of volunteer staff, faculty, and administrators.

On October 17–19, 1986, a conference was held and it dealt with the energy of women in building and giving birth to their communities on a local level, as well as nationally and internationally.

Programs offered in the spring quarter of 1977 were sexism in counseling, women in art, racism and sexism, and women and social reform.

Currently, The Women's and Gender Education Center offers a bi-annual leadership seminar to the students of Eastern Washington University. This one day seminar, including local community leaders, celebrates the successes and challenges of women in and around Spokane. This seminar allows ideas to bloom in a safe environment and vital connections are made. The WAGE Center continually connects women to resources within the University and out in the local area.

Directors of Women's Studies and Women's and Gender Studies Program and Managers of the Center

Directors of Women's Studies and Women's and Gender Studies

  • Pat Coontz (1977-1983)
  • Joan Niemann, Interim Director during Coontz's sabbatical (1980-1981)
  • Lisa Brown, Acting Director (1983)
  • Lee Swedberg (1983-1998)
  • Sally Winkle (1998-2018)
  • Judy Rohrer (2018-)

Managers

  • Sherrie Holland (1983)
  • Margaret Craford (1983-1984)
  • Chris Jacox (1984-1990)
  • Carol Vines (1990-2015)
  • Lisa Logan (2015-)

References

  1. ^ Rowe, Jeanne (October 13, 1977). "Women's Center". Easterner. 29 (1): 6. Retrieved 7 March 2018.
  2. Women's Program (c. 1985). "Women's Program brochure". Ewu Pubs, Women's Center Publications (Womenscenter_Womensprogrampamphlet_C1985). Eastern Washington University Archives and Special Collections, Women's Center publications: Eastern Washington University. Women's Program.
  3. Rowe, Jeanne. "Women's Center". Easterner. 29 (1): 6.
  4. Coontz, Pat (January 19, 1978). "Faculty Forum: 'Feminists' Face Problems". Easterner. 29 (10): 6.
  5. "Women's Center calendar". Ewu Pubs, Women's Center Publications (Womenscenterweeklycalendar_19771004-19771006). October 4–6, 1977. Retrieved 2018-03-07.
  6. EWU Women's Center Flier, May/June 1989. EWU Publications - Women's Center. EWU Archives & Special Collections, Cheney, WA.
  7. EWU Women Studies Center Flier, September/October 1989. EWU Publications - Women's Center. EWU Archives & Special Collections, Cheney, WA.
  8. "Women's and Gender Education Center News: Fall 2017" (PDF). Retrieved 11 March 2018.
  9. Norbeck, Julie (11 May 1978). "Symposium Speakers Offer New Views". Vol. 29, no. 23. Eastern Washington University. Associated Students. Retrieved 7 March 2018.
  10. Eastern Washington University. Women's Center (January 1989). "Helping Ourselves Means Education (HOME) brochure". Womenscenter_1989_Homebrochure). Retrieved 7 March 2018.
  11. . NWWSA Conference Committee. {{cite news}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  12. "Women's Studies at Eastern". Eastern Washington University.
  13. ^ Memorandum to the Friends of the Women's Center from Lee Swedberg, 15 September 1983, Women's Center Publications, EWU University Archives and Special Collections
  14. ^ "EWU Women's and Gender Studies Faculty and Staff". www.ewu.edu.
  15. Coomber, Sarah (Winter 2003). "Changing with the times: Women's Studies celebrates 25 years". Perspective. 14 (2): 10–11. Retrieved 7 March 2018.

External links

Categories: