Meet with an Academic Advisor
Meet with your professional academic advisor to explore the Gender, Women and Sexualities Major and get your questions answered.
Find Your Professional Academic AdvisorWhat are power, privilege, and oppression? In what ways do these impact individuals and communities? Where do they influence access and opportunity? And what can we do personally and professionally to ensure more equitable and inclusive homes, communities, and societies?
GWS invites you to investigate your own experiences and environments through a critical feminist and queer lens to gain a stronger perspective on the importance of gender equity and social justice.
Gender, Women, and Sexualities studies is an excellent field of study for those interested in learning about how to become active in their own work toward social justice. Through analytical and reflective course work, students gain valuable skills and knowledge that will help them in their everyday lives and careers. Some of these skills include: written and oral communication, critical analysis, strategic thinking, problem solving, and research.
The Gender, Women and Sexualities Studies major must be planned in consultation with a faculty member in GWS. A grade of “C-” or better is required for each course in this program to count toward the Bachelor’s degree. Students should note that programs differ in the minimum grade required.
Meet with your professional academic advisor to explore the Gender, Women and Sexualities Major and get your questions answered.
Find Your Professional Academic AdvisorThe Gender Institute for Teaching and Advocacy offers real-world, relevant courses and new concentrations to match.
Get Started on your Declaration FormFollow the semester-by-semester steps outlined in the CLAS Student Success Roadmap to ensure your success at MSU Denver.
Take me to the CLAS Student Success RoadmapThe recommended sequence for courses are as follows: 1000-level introductory courses, 2000-level courses, core and interdisciplinary electives, 3000-level theory course followed by a 4000-level senior experience.
Choose Two 1000-Level Courses:
Complete Two Required 2000-Level Courses:
Choose One 3000-Level Theory Course:
or
Choose One 4000-Level Experiential Course:
or
A minimum of 15 additional semester hours in GWS courses selected in consultation with and approved by a Department of Gender, Women and Sexualities Studies advisor. Among those courses for students to choose are:
An additional six credit hours is required in any GWS prefix course from the list above.
Required Courses: 18 credit hours
Core Electives: 15 credit hours
Interdisciplinary Electives: 6 credit hours
Senior Experience: 3 credit hours
Major Credit Requirements Total: 42 credit hours
OR
GWS 3510 Feminist Theory and Practices I, and GWS 4750 Feminist Theory and Practices II must be taken in sequence.
Students must take one course from each of the four areas: Transnational and Cultural Diversity, Social Justice and Activism, Bodies and Sexualities, and Interdisciplinary. Additionally, students must take two courses within their selected focus area. These courses must be planned in consultation with a faculty member in GITA.
An additional 6 credit hours is required from any course with a GWS prefix.
Core Required Courses: 24 credit hours
Area Requirements: 12 credit hours
Focus Area: 6 credit hours
Major Credit Requirements Total: 42 credit hours
If you would like to learn more about a specific course, please check out the academic catalog HERE.
MSU Denver emphasizes academic and experiential learning. As a Gender, Women and Sexualities Studies major you can take advantage of the following:
Focus Area: Develop a focus area in Transnational and Cultural Diversity, Social Justice and Activism, or Bodies and Sexualities. Gain knowledge about the histories and experiences of oppressed and underrepresented gender, sexual and racial/ethnic groups. Apply this knowledge to pursue careers within a wide variety of social justice and equity-based organizations.
Experiential Opportunities: Complete a service-learning course, which involves 30 hours of volunteer work, and complete an internship or teaching assistantship—all of which will give you relevant career experience.
Student Services: Take advantage of the services offered by the Gender Institute for Teaching and Advocacy, which houses the Gender, Women and Sexualities Studies Program. Services include wellness/lactation rooms, student advising and advocacy, scholarship support, a snack stop, and community space.
Feminist First Mondays: Get to know the diverse community of feminist scholars on campus through monthly forums that present research and creative work related to feminism, women and gender issues, critical race questions and social justice.
Bridge Speaker: Attend the annual Bridge Speaker series. The event serves as a bridge between Black History Month in February and Women’s History in March. GITA brings noted speakers to campus to discuss educational issues and shed light on the lives and contributions of African American women.
Triple F Film Series: Take part in monthly film screenings featuring work by and for people of color focusing on social justice and feminism.
Student activities: Develop leadership skills through involvement in the Iota Iota Iota Women’s and Gender Honor Society and Feminist Alliance at MSU Denver.
MSU Denver’s Gender Institute for Teaching and Advocacy is located in Boulder Creek, just north of the Colfax light rail station. The Institute serves as a feminist campus resource that provides programming and advocacy related to gender inclusion and social equity.
MSU Denver is located on the Auraria Campus, home to the one of the most historic neighborhoods in the Denver area. Vibrant and multicultural, the campus is close to numerous museums and cultural institutions, including: History Colorado, the Byers-Evans House, the Molly Brown House, the Colorado Historical Foundation, the American Museum of Western Art, the Black American West Museum and the Western History Collection at the Denver Public Library.
MSU Denver is among the most affordable four-year universities in the nation. Not only do we offer a high quality education at a low cost, the Department of History offers two exclusive scholarships: the Columbine Scholarship and the History Department Endowed Scholarship. Apply and have the opportunity to earn FREE tuition money each year.
Learn more about our scholarship application and process.
Join our active student organizations to meet peers, make friends, gain leadership skills and find where you belong! The Department of History has three student-led organizations, History Club and Phi Alpha Theta Honor Society.
Learn more about our student organizations.
Here you can study in one of the largest History Departments in Colorado. Our size and commitment to student learning allows us to provide a wider variety of course offerings, while allowing the kind of individualized attention that can lead to opportunities to present your research at regional and national conferences, as well as internships at places like: History Colorado, the Arvada Center for the Arts and Humanities and the Pueblo History Museum.
MSU Denver Gender, Women and Sexualities Studies program graduates have pursued a range of careers such as:
Associate Professor Anahi Russo Garrido is currently investigating intimacy in Mexico City in the lives of three generations of women participating in queer spaces and is the co-editor of Building Feminist Movements and Organizations. Her research and teaching interests include transnational gender and sexualities, global women’s movements, LGBT and transgender studies and queer and feminist anthropology.
Associate Professor Sonny Dhoot’s current research explores how the configurations of race, capital, gender, sexuality and normalcy shape the erotic lives of queers of colour. His current research and teaching interests include, queer/trans of color critique, decolonial/critical race feminisms, transnational and women of color feminisms, and queer erotics and sexuality studies. Sonny is also interested in anti-carceral community projects.
Professor Sandra Mizumoto Posey was trained as a folklorist at UCLA where she received her M.A and Ph.D., but she has pursued a career that is truly interdisciplinary. Here at MSU Denver, she’s taught courses both for the major and five of our nine general studies categories plus the multicultural graduation requirement. Her publications have spanned ethnography, pedagogy, poetry and creative nonfiction. Her current writing focuses on memoir.
Professor Arlene Sgoutas is the co-editor of “Mothers Under Fire: Mothering in Conflict Areas”. Her research and teaching interests include feminist interventions in global politics, international women’s resistance movements and motherhood studies. She was the recipient of the MSU Denver President’s Distinguished Service Award for faculty in 2014.
Assistant Professor zaynab (they/themme) is a philosopher and scholar of religion and gender. zaynab holds a doctorate in Comparative Religion (Jewish and Islamic law) and an M.A in Religious Studies (Jewish Studies, Islamic Studies, Philosophy of Religion) from Chicago Theological Seminary. zaynab received their B.A from Hampshire College in Jewish Studies (Historical Antisemitism and Jewish Gender Studies). Harnessing the insights of critical phenomenology, left-feminist thought, and queer-of-color critique; zaynab’s research examines the rhetorical relationship between gender, ritual obligation, and public religious space in Jewish and Islamic law.
Full-time Lecturer Dr. Judy Strathearn has been with MSU Denver since 2016 in the Department of Africana Studies and as Interim Coordinator for Supplemental Instruction. She is now a full-time lecturer at GITA. She earned her Ph.D. in English Literature from the University of Colorado, Boulder in 2017 where her dissertation investigated Gullah history and culture through the lens of gender and literature. Her research interests include Gullah Studies, Gullah Womanism and Black Feminism, and narrative strategies of Black women writers of the Diaspora. Her teaching philosophy is rooted in experiential education as a methodology to increase African Diaspora cultural knowledge and community contributions.
Graduates from MSU Denver’s Gender, Women and Sexualities Studies program have gone on to work at places such as:
Gender, Women and Sexualities Studies alumni have been accepted for graduate study at the following schools:
MSU Denver has 36.7% Hispanic/Latinx students which the highest number of Hispanic/Latinx students among institutions of higher education in the state of Colorado.
Learn more about MSU Denver's DesignationMSU Denver is dedicated to diversity, equity and inclusion and has been named one of the Top Colleges for Diversity by Insight Into Diversity for 10 consecutive years.
Learn more about DEI at MSU Denver50% of MSU Denver students are transfers. As the top transfer destination for Coloradans, our students make an immediate impact on our workforce and community.
Learn more about MSU Denver's excellenceContact the GWS Department
Hosted by the Gender Institute for Teaching and Advocacy
Main Line: 303-615-2052
Email: [email protected]
Mailing Address:
Campus Box 36
PO Box 173362
Denver, CO 80217
Campus Location:
Boulder Creek, Room 132
950 10th Street Plaza
Denver, CO 80204