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THE DEVELOPMENT OF POLITICAL CONSCIOUSNESS AND AGENCY: THE ROLE OF ACTIVISM AND RACE/ETHNICITY IN AN INTRODUCTORY WOMEN'S STUDIES COURSE
by Melissa R. Peet and Beth Glover Reed
In this essay, we explore how activism-related teaching strategies—a
semester-long action project supplemented with a panel discussion among
activists—an be used in conjunction with feminist knowledge about
activism to link personal learning with political consciousness for social
change in a women's studies course. We address the question, "What types
of knowledge and classroom processes facilitate students' intellectual,
emotional, social, and interpersonal development towards seeing themselves
as political actors?" We use students' own words to describe how they
perceive activism, the specific processes and elements in the course that
empowered them to develop towards political action, and some of the barriers
they experienced. Within this, we explore how students' racial identities
play a role in their development and change towards activism, and argue
that engaging in an action may be especially important for white women.
In doing this, we compare the experiences of two groups of white women:
those who did, and those who did not, do an action project. Finally, we
contrast white women's experiences to the experiences of women of color.
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