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Community Studies
211 College Eight Academic Building
(831) 459-2371
http://communitystudies.ucsc.edu
Program Description | Faculty | Course Descriptions
Program Description
Community studies is an interdisciplinary major
integrating knowledge and methodologies from the social sciences and humanities
to examine theory and practice in a variety of social justice domains. The UCSC
faculty offer courses based on their scholarly research as it relates to social
justice-including broad structural and social changes and community-based
organizing-in the following areas: global political economy with regional and
local impacts; the intersection of class, race, gender, and sexuality in
relation to health; labor studies, including the history of the working class;
youth cultures, youth activism, and empowerment; race and racism; cultural work
in social justice; gay and lesbian issues; global food systems; media and
social change; and resistance and social movements. The faculty are active
scholars who publish widely in their respective disciplines and also engage in
community-oriented fieldwork in the U.S., Latin America, and elsewhere.
The major provides an opportunity for the student who
is actively committed to social justice to work on a full-time basis beyond the
boundaries of the university. Each student in the program builds his or her
academic curriculum around a combination of course work and a six-month field
study with a community organization or agency. The core curriculum includes
courses in preparation for field study as well as in theory and analysis.
Students complete the major by preparing a senior capstone project integrating
academic course work, field study, and original research work. The program has
no lower-division prerequisites and usually takes about two years to complete.
With the intellectual guidance of a faculty adviser
and a field study coordinator, community studies students choose field
placements related to one of the department's areas of focus. The majority of
field studies have been in California, although students have worked as far
away as Mexico, Central America, New York, Thailand, London, Paris, and South Africa. Placements have been with health centers, immigrant rights organizations,
newspapers, minority media outlets, city planning departments, neighborhood
organizations, civil rights groups, battered women's shelters, legal clinics,
programs for seniors, tenant unions, government agencies and the offices of
elected officials, trade unions, and other organizations committed to and
working for social justice in communities.
Facilities
The Community Studies Department maintains several
unique resources for students. A media laboratory is available for majors (and
others in the social sciences) to learn the use of video, radio, film, and
graphic media as research and presentation tools. Two field-study coordinators
work with students to develop part- and full-time field studies, and a field
study resource office is available to assist students in selecting an
appropriate field study organization.
Major Program
The program for all students in the major includes
preparatory courses, the field study itself, post-field-study course work,
electives chosen to broaden knowledge for the individual's senior capstone
requirement, and the capstone requirement itself.
It is important to emphasize community studies is a
major with a sequential core curriculum. This means required courses must be
taken in a specified order established by the quarter(s) when those courses are
offered.
To begin the major and declaration process, a
student must be enrolled in one of the Community Studies 100(A-Z), Theory and Practice seminars. These seminars are gateways
into the community studies major. Students will learn about a distinct area of
academic theory and social justice practice that will become the focus of their
academic study plan, field study, and senior capstone requirement. Several
sections of Community Studies 100(A-Z) are offered each fall and winter
quarter. Theory and practice topics vary from year to year and may include
economic justice; health care; race and ethnicity; immigration, social
documentation, sustainability in agro-food systems; Asian-American activism; youth
empowerment; resistance and social movements; and cultural work and social
justice. Following the Theory and Practice seminars
is CMMU 102, Preparation for Field Study, offered
only in spring quarter.
Students are expected to plan the rest of their academic
program of study around the two-quarter (six-month) full-time field study (15
units each quarter). Students must conduct their fieldwork in summer and fall
quarters so that they can immediately follow up with CMMU 194, Analysis of Field Materials, offered only in winter
quarter.
Language competency must be demonstrated by students
planning a field study in a non-English speaking country. Students must plan
appropriate language study well in advance of the field study. In addition,
students must demonstrate knowledge of the history, culture, and political
economy of the place where they will be completing their field study - whether
that place is a neighborhood in Santa Cruz, New York City, or a small village
in Guatemala. Students may also find media production skills useful in their
fieldwork and are encouraged to visit the Social Sciences Media Laboratory,
located in 47 Social Sciences 2, early in their academic career.
Admission to the Major
A general background or course work in politics,
sociology, anthropology, and/or community activism is suggested for students
considering the community studies major. Students are required to have enrolled
in two community studies courses at the time they declare the major: one must
be a CMMU 100(A-Z) seminar and the other may be any of the lower- or
upper-division courses except for the 42 series of student directed seminars or
independent or field studies.
The process of declaring the community studies major
properly begins when a student enrolls in a section of CMMU 100(A-Z), the Theory and Practice seminar series. Prospective majors
must choose a seminar that matches their own academic and social justice focus.
Because of their small size, the CMMU 100(A-Z) seminars are enrolled by
"interview only." Although they are open to all students, prospective community
studies majors enjoy priority enrollment.
To fulfill the declaration of major process,
prospective majors must prepare a three- to four-page essay outlining how their
academic and social justice focus matches the emphasis of their theory and
practice seminar. The essay should also describe their academic study plan,
including relevant upper-division electives and their tentative field-study
plans. Students then meet with the professor in charge of their CMMU 100(A-Z)
seminar to review and discuss the essay and other application materials.
Occasionally, a student is not accepted into the major because the student's
social justice and field-study focus are poorly matched with the department's
theory and practice areas.
1. Attend
a department orientation held at the beginning of each quarter (check the Schedule of Classes for date/time/location).
2. Choose
and enroll in the appropriate Community Studies 100(A-Z) seminar. If you are
accepted into the class, a permission number will be given to you; you can then
move on to step 3.
3. Pick
up a Declaration of Major petition from your college, and obtain approval for
Part 1 (signature of your college adviser). Complete the Application for
Admission to Community Studies (available in the Student
Handbook, found on the department web site: communitystudies.ucsc.edu.
Prepare an academic study plan (on a separate piece of paper) for completing
all requirements for the major including field study and upper-division
electives. (Be prepared to be flexible on your elective choices as your faculty
adviser may make other recommendations during step 5.)
4. Write
a three- to four-page essay (typewritten) explaining:
- Why you think
that the community studies major is the best way for you to pursue your
academic and social change interests. The department is interested in both the
substance of your essay and your ability to express yourself in written form.
- The social
change or social justice organization with which you expect to work.
- The classes you
have taken and/or plan to take, in addition to Community Studies 100(A-Z), to
prepare you to work with this organization.
- Your social
location, defined as the intersection of nationality, immigration, ethnicity,
racial privilege, class, gender, age, and sexuality in you background and
current social status.
- The ways your
social location may influence and be influenced by your six-month field
placement.
5. Meet
with your Community Studies 100(A-Z) seminar professor to discuss your essay,
field-study plans, electives, and other application materials. Obtain the
faculty signature on the application form. Bring any evaluations or progress
reports from currently enrolled courses to support your application to the
major.
6. Before
the declaration of major deadline, bring your completed Declaration of Major
petition, draft study plan, signed application form, and essay to the Community
Studies Department office (211 College Eight) for final approval and
processing. You are not officially declared until step 6 is finalized.
Note: you cannot begin course 102
without completing step 6. Failure to do so will defer your progress in the
major until the following year when the 102 course is again offered. CMMU 102
is offered only in spring quarter.
A student may be directed to another department of
study on campus in those instances where his/her academic interests cannot be
fulfilled by current department offerings.
All Community Studies 100(A-Z) courses are "interview
only." Our goal is to provide access to these courses for those students who
plan to become community studies majors. You must attend the first day of
class. Each instructor will ask you to provide information from which they will
decide who gets priority in the class. It is wise to meet with him or her to
discuss your plans for the major prior to the beginning of course 100(A-Z) to
make sure that Community Studies Department and the 100(A-Z) course you have
chosen is appropriate for your needs.
Major Course Requirements
Summary of Core
Sequence Requirements |
Credits |
| 100(A–Z) |
Theory and Practice
(fall or winter) |
5 |
| 102 |
Preparation for Field Studies
(spring) |
5 |
| 198 |
Independent Field Study
(summer/fall) |
30 |
| 194 |
Analysis of Field Materials
(winter)
|
5 |
| |
Three upper-division electives
(all quarters) |
15 |
Each of these courses explores the relationship
between theory, practice, and social justice within a particular subject area.
The Community Studies 100(A-Z) seminars are designed to raise questions about
the relationships between different theoretical perspectives and social
justice. For example, do social psychological, historical, or literary theories
vary in their usefulness in helping us understand social justice work around
race and racism? What is the relationship between activism and theory? How do social
justice activists select, develop, and, sometimes, even seem to reject their
own theoretical perspectives?
The primary course objective is demonstrating how
current issues and problems can be researched by better understanding the
relationship between theory and practice-how theory gives rise to certain kinds
of issues and actions and, in turn, how practice can introduce new ways of
thinking about the world. The goal is to expose students to different ways of
perceiving and understanding the world and to engage them in an ongoing
dialogue about the "practical implications of theory" and the "theoretical
implications of practice."
This course immerses community studies majors who are
planning full-time field study in the practical and theoretical work of field
study with a focus on activist research-that is, study conducted by and with
activists so as to participate in and learn from their work. A required
part-time field study of six to eight hours/week with a local community-based
social justice organization is a central component of the course; this activity
should ideally approximate the kind of work students intend for their full-time
field study. Other course assignments are organized around this core component
of the course.
Community Studies 102 engages students in a range of
issues common to all field studies and focuses on the relationship between
theory, field methods, and on-the-ground fieldwork. It gives students the
opportunity to develop interpersonal and organizational skills and to learn how
to relate issues in the fieldwork within a community/region to those within the
global society. Assignments are designed to rigorously prepare students for
activist research in a social justice organization by fostering specific
research and organizing skills.
A distinguishing feature of the community studies
major is the six-month, full-time field study, an arrangement facilitated by
the student's Community Studies 100(A-Z) instructor and the field study
coordinators. During the field study, students are enrolled at UCSC and receive
full-time university credit. Students in the 100(A-Z) courses are presented
with recommended organizations from which to select their placements. The Field
Study office provides full placement information and guidelines for setting up
placements, along with logistical and academic support during the field study.
This course is designed for community studies seniors
returning from their full-time field study. The course has two related goals:
(1) to help students, both individually and collectively, analyze and gain
perspective on their field experiences; and (2) to move students through the
process of completing the senior capstone requirement. A central question
addressed in the course is how the student's theory and practice of social
justice has been affected by his or her field experience. Each student has a
unique field-study experience; and, collectively, students have been involved
with widely varying types of organizations with little or no relation to each
other. Yet there is common ground, and students have much to learn from each
other. Thus, a related objective of this course is to discover and travel the
common ground. For students completing the major with a senior essay, the essay
is completed in course 194. For students doing a senior thesis, project, or
student-directed seminar, the student completes at least three major pieces of
writing; some or all of which will be incorporated into the completed thesis,
project, or student-directed seminar.
Upper-Division Electives
Each student in the major must complete three
upper-division electives. The purpose of the elective requirement is to ensure
that students have the necessary intellectual background for their field
studies and senior capstone requirement. At least one of these courses must be
from the Community Studies Department, but the other two may be from another
campus program as long as the substantive content of the courses is related to
the full-time field study and academic plan. Senior thesis and independent
studies do not fulfill the elective requirement. At least two of the three
electives must be completed prior to the full-time field study. Electives must
be approved by the student's 100(A-Z) seminar professor.
Senior Capstone Requirement
Each student must fulfill a senior capstone requirement,
either through the senior essay, a senior thesis, a senior project, or a
student-directed seminar. For a thesis, project, or student-directed seminar,
the student must choose a faculty member to serve as his or her adviser.
Senior Essay: Students
complete a senior essay that analyzes local, global, and theoretical
contextualizations of field study; the essay should incorporate essays
completed in other courses, including course 100(A-Z) and field study, along
with essays written in course 194. The minimum length is 25 pages, plus
bibliography. The senior essay is completed entirely in course 194, Analysis of Field Materials.
Senior Thesis: Some
students may choose to complete a senior thesis, which is comprised of linked
essays combining local and global contextualizations of field study and
theoretical and historical analysis of social justice issues at the heart of
the field study. The thesis can incorporate essays from other courses
(including course 194), but must involve significant post-field-study research
using primary source materials; typical length is 35-50 pages, including
bibliography. Students begin the senior thesis during course 194 and generally
complete it in the following quarter(s).
Senior Project: Students
may choose to complete a senior project in other genres of social documentation
including film and video production, photography, sound production, creative
writing, and other formats such as grant proposals and organizing pamphlets.
The senior project also requires a significant analytical essay of 20 pages,
plus bibliography, describing the project conceptualization, rationale,
methodology, and evaluation. Students begin the senior project during course
194 and complete it the following quarter(s).
Student-Directed Seminar (SDS):
The SDS capstone option is reserved for exceptional students. Under the
direction of a faculty adviser, the student develops and teaches a Community
Studies 42 course that relates to the student's field study and social justice
focus, accompanied by a seminar completion report.
The department selects only a limited number of
student-directed seminars each year. Selection is based on the excellence of
the SDS proposal, the relevance of the subject matter to the major, the
student's background preparation, and the total number of proposals submitted
each quarter. The Committee on Educational Policy gives the final approval.
For students interested in teaching a
student-directed seminar, it is recommended that they meet with their adviser
early on-prior to the full-time field study-to begin the process of obtaining
course approval. A short written work providing the theoretical basis for the
project, giving a brief analysis of the connection between the student's field
work and the project itself, a course syllabus, a bibliography, and copies of
their evaluations are required, along with a letter from the sponsoring faculty.
Students must also take course 199, Tutorial, the
quarter prior to teaching the SDS, to give them time to prepare the course
material. A Student-Directed Seminar Guide, giving
detailed information about preparing for and teaching an SDS, is available in the
department office.
Honors in the Major
Honors in the community studies major are awarded to
graduating seniors whose academic performance in their major coursework is
judged to be consistently excellent to outstanding. Students must also do
excellent work on their senior capstone requirement; an honors-eligible senior
essay must be particularly outstanding. The senior capstone must have
intellectual merit, a genuine social change/social justice focus, and
demonstrate that the student gained insight into processes of social change.
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