About this book
Welcome to our Work in Progress!
This course is exciting because the textbook is still being written. This means that you have an opportunity to help make it better. You can give valuable feedback to the textbook authors by completing the feedback survey at the end of each chapter. Please note: You may see errors or inconsistencies in the current version.
We are working to ensure that all textbook content is accessible. If you encounter an accessibility issue, please let your instructor know right away.
Accessibility Statement
This book was created with a good faith effort to ensure that it will meet accessibility standards wherever possible, and to highlight areas where we know there is work to do. It is our hope that by being transparent in this way, we can begin the process of making sure accessibility is top of mind for all authors, adopters, students and contributors of all kinds on open textbook projects.
There are many known issues and potential barriers to accessibility in this version of Sociology of Gender. When we revise and publish this Pressbook in the next phase of this project, these issues will be addressed. If you encounter an accessibility issue that you need fixed, please let your instructor know right away.
Equity Lens
The Open Oregon Educational Resources Targeted Pathways Project seeks to dismantle structures of power and oppression entrenched in barriers to course material access. We provide tools and resources to make diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) primary considerations when faculty choose, adapt, and create course materials. In promoting DEI, our project is committed to:
- Ensuring diversity of representation within our team and the materials we distribute
- Publishing materials that use accessible, clear language for our target audience
- Sharing course materials that directly address and interrogate systems of oppression, equipping students and educators with the knowledge to do the same
Designing and piloting openly licensed, intersectional, and antiracist course materials is one starting point among many when addressing inequities in higher education. Our project invites students and educators to engage with us in this work, and we value spaces where learning communities can grow and engage together.
We welcome being held accountable to this statement and will respond to feedback submitted via our contact page.
Course Learning Outcomes
Educators, students, and future employers all benefit when course-level learning outcomes guide our shared work. When course-level learning outcomes are public, institutions demonstrate a commitment to equitable student success through the potential for increased collaboration and inclusive course design. This project analyzed learning outcomes across the state of Oregon to identify themes and commonalities. Authors used this analysis as a basis for developing course outcomes that could match the curriculum of multiple institutions in Oregon while still considering their local needs and context.
See Supporting Cross-Institutional OER Teams in Open Practices and Learning Outcomes Alignment for additional information.
Pedagogical Foundations
The authors of this book embraced an equity-minded design for structure, scope, and sequence of chapters and chapter content. They sought to honor the needs and experiences of students who are often underserved in higher education in Oregon. Authors considered Transparency in Teaching and Learning (TILT), Universal Design for Learning (UDL), and Culturally Responsive Teaching to design meaningful learning pathways for you. You will find rich images and multimedia in addition to written content. You will also find provocative discussion questions that align with learning outcomes and objectives.
Accessibility Statement was adapted from Accessibility Features by Dave Dillon, Blueprint for Success in College and Career: Oregon Edition, licensed under CC BY 4.