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Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Courses

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  • INDE 212  | 2023-2024 Spring

    Instructors:

    • Lin, B.
    The interdisciplinary field of medical humanities: the use of the arts and humanities to examine medicine in personal, social, and cultural contexts. Topics include the doctor/patient relationship, the patient perspective, the meaning of doctoring, and the meaning of illness. Sources include visual and performing arts, film, and literary genres such ...
  • EDUC 255  | 2023-2024 Spring

    Instructors:

    • Eger, W.
    • Cox, G.
    • Kankolongo Ngoba, N.
    (Same as GSBGEN 373) Educational institutions are defined by their academic missions and their financial structures. When we refer to public/private or nonprofit/profit sectors, these are shorthand descriptions of the different capital structures that underlie educational organizations. Increasingly, these options - and novel variations on them - exist throughout the ...
  • CSRE 1A  | 2023-2024
    This course meets once a week for one hour, over lunch (provided). Students will meet with CSRE faculty who will share their work, their life stories, their reasons for believing that race and ethnicity are of central concern to all members of our society. Diverse fields will be represented: sociology ...
  • CSRE 350G  | 2023-2024
    In this theory and practice-based course, students will examine performances by and scholarly texts about artists who critically and mindfully engage race, gender, and sexuality. Students will cultivate their skills as artist-scholars through written assignments and the creation of performances in response to the assigned material. Attendance and written reflection ...
  • GSBGEN 581  | 2023-2024
    A philanthropist is anyone who gives anything-time, expertise, networks, credibility, influence, dollars, experience-in any amount to create a better world. Regardless of one's age, background or profession, everyone has the potential to lead in a way that both tackles the complex social problems our interconnected world faces and creates greater ...
  • EDUC 377C  | 2023-2024
    (Same as GSBGEN 581) A philanthropist is anyone who gives anything-time, expertise, networks, credibility, influence, dollars, experience-in any amount to create a better world. Regardless of one's age, background or profession, everyone has the potential to lead in a way that both tackles the complex social problems our interconnected world ...
  • GSBGEN 370  | 2023-2024
    All leaders face a host of challenges, but women leaders encounter an additional set of obstacles and considerations-institutional, economic, cultural-that their men counterparts most likely never will. Women from underrepresented groups experience these challenges even more acutely. GG370 Power of You: Women in Leadership will prepare students to successfully identify ...
  • EDUC 377G  | 2023-2024 Autumn

    Instructors:

    • Brest, P.
    • Alvarez, G.
    (Also GSBGEN 367). Stanford graduates will play important roles in solving many of today's and tomorrow's major societal problems -- such as improving educational and health outcomes, conserving energy, and reducing global poverty -- which call for actions by nonprofit, business, and hybrid organizations as well as governments. This course ...
  • GSBGEN 367  | 2023-2024 Autumn

    Instructors:

    • Brest, P.
    • Alvarez, G.
    Stanford graduates will play important roles in solving many of today's and tomorrow's major societal problems-in areas such as education, health, energy, and domestic and global poverty-that call for actions by nonprofit, business, and hybrid organizations as well as governments. This course teaches skills and bodies of knowledge relevant to ...
  • EDUC 340  | 2023-2024
    Western medicine's definition of health as the absence of sickness, disease, or pathology; Native American cultures' definition of health as the beauty of physical, spiritual, emotional, and social things, and sickness as something out of balance. Topics include: historical trauma; spirituality and healing; cultural identity; values and acculturation; and individual ...
  • INDE 215  | 2023-2024 Winter

    Instructors:

    • Stefanick, M.
    Explores specific, pertinent, and timely issues impacting the health of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender community; examines the role of the primary care physician in addressing the health care needs of this community. Guest lecturers provide a gender-sensitive approach to the medical care of the LGBT patient, breaking down ...
  • COMM 284  | 2023-2024 Spring

    Instructors:

    • Li, X.
    • Tadesse, H.
    • Chen, C.
    (Graduate students register for 284. COMM 184 is offered for 5 units, COMM 284 is offered for 4 units.) This course explores the co-construction of media practices and racial identity in the US. We will ask how media have shaped how we think about race. And we will explore the ...
  • CSRE 364A  | 2023-2024 Spring

    Instructors:

    • Al-Saber, S.
    How does race function in performance and dare we say live and in living color? How does one deconstruct discrimination at its roots?n nFrom a perspective of global solidarity and recognition of shared plight among BIPOC communities, we will read and perform plays that represent material and psychological conditions under ...
  • CSRE 363  | 2023-2024 Autumn

    Instructors:

    • Derbew, S.
    This course will investigate representations of black people in ancient Greek and Roman antiquity. In addition to interrogating the conflation of the terms "race" and "blackness" as it applies to this time period, students will learn how to critique the interference of racial ideologies in modern scholarship, and they will ...
  • CSRE 385  | 2023-2024 Winter

    Instructors:

    • Banks, A.
    This seminar explores the intersections of language and race/racism/racialization in the public schooling experiences of students of color. We will briefly trace the historical emergence of the related fields of sociolinguistics and linguistic anthropology, explore how each of these scholarly traditions approaches the study of language, and identify key points ...
  • ANTHRO 320A  | 2023-2024 Autumn

    Instructors:

    • Rosa, J.
    • Burgos, X.
    Language, as a cultural resource for shaping our identities, is central to the concepts of race and ethnicity. This seminar explores the linguistic construction of race and ethnicity across a wide variety of contexts and communities. We begin with an examination of the concepts of race and ethnicity and what ...
  • EDUC 389A  | 2023-2024 Autumn

    Instructors:

    • Rosa, J.
    • Burgos, X.
    Language, as a cultural resource for shaping our identities, is central to the concepts of race and ethnicity. This seminar explores the linguistic construction of race and ethnicity across a wide variety of contexts and communities. We begin with an examination of the concepts of race and ethnicity and what ...
  • EDUC 429  | 2023-2024 Winter

    Instructors:

    • Padrez, R.
    • Sorcar, P.
    • Rodriguez, E.
    Health and education are inextricably linked. If kids aren't healthy, they won't realize their full potential in school. This is especially true for children living in poverty. This course proposes to: 1) examine the important relationship between children's health and their ability to learn in school as a way to ...
  • CSRE 371  | 2023-2024
    Graduate seminar. In this course, we will work together to develop a detailed and comprehensive understanding of the concept(s) of political representation. We will do so by examining a number of historical and contemporary theories of political representation developed within philosophy and cognate fields. 2 unit option only for Phil ...
  • EDUC 417  | 2023-2024 Autumn

    Instructors:

    • Antonio, A.
    The transition from high school to college. K-16 course focusing on high school preparation, college choice, remediation, pathways to college, and first-year adjustment. The role of educational policy in postsecondary access. Service Learning Course (certified by Haas Center).