3.5 Course Overviews: "T", "W"
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TAXATION (TAXX)
TAXX 301
Introduction to Income Taxation
3Applied Studies
Delivery Mode: Home study; paced; or ViTAL®.
Prerequisite: ACCT 253 and ECON 247.
This course examines the Canadian income tax system including its purpose and
administration. The calculation of income for tax purposes is examined in detail
and the procedures used to calculate personal, business and corporate taxable
income in common situations are presented.
TAXX 301 is revised annually and is periodically unavailable. Confirm course
availability before registering.
TAXX 302
Introduction to Taxation in the United States
3Applied Studies
Delivery Mode: Home study or ViTAL® (2001).
This course covers aspects of personal, business (proprietorship, partnership),
corporate and property tax in the United States federal tax system. It covers
types of taxes, tax effects of transactions, types of taxpayers, types of income
and the rules which determine whether an item is taxable. It includes a
discussion of tax planning.
WOMEN'S STUDIES (WMST)
WMST 267
Perspectives on Women: An Introduction to Women's Studies
3Social Science
Delivery Mode: Home study.
Prerequisite: None.
This course examines the questions that women's studies raise about many
academic disciplines and teaches how to seek out and use the ever-increasing
research on women's experience. Topics explored include theories of human
origins, the
history and sociology of women and work, the acquisition
of gender identity, gender and communication, and women in popular culture.
WMST 300
Women: Psychology, Sociology, and Feminist Thought
3Social Science
Delivery Mode: Paced study.
Prerequisite: None.
Precluded course: WMST 300 (for students in the University Certificate in Counselling Women) may not be taken for credit if credit has already been obtained for WMST 267.
This course uses feminist analysis to increase understanding of women's lives in
contemporary patriarchal, capitalist society. Topics addressed include the
women's movement
and its impact; the dynamics of social power; women's labour; and feminist
counselling as a legitimate alternative for healing and change.
WMST 302
Communication Skills: Feminist Practice
3Social Science
Delivery Mode: Paced study (Jan./01).
Prerequisite: WMST 300.
This is an introduction to communications skills from a feminist counselling
perspective. This course emphasizes communications as a process, how we
communicate rather than what we say. Experiential exercises will help
participants practise communication skills and develop their own personal style
of counselling.
WMST 303
Issues in Women's Health
3Social Science
Delivery Mode: Home study.
Prerequisite: None.
This course allows students to examine and apply a feminist analysis to issues
in women's health. Specific issues such as premenstrual syndrome, contraception,
childbirth, reproductive technologies, estrogen replacement therapy, breast
cancer, Candidiasis, pelvic inflammatory disease, and workplace hazards are
explored within a framework that seeks to explain why women have little control
over their health. An overview of the history of health care is provided, and
the forces shaping the nature of modern medicine are identified.
WMST 310
Feminist Approaches to Counselling Women
3Social Science
Delivery Mode: Paced study.
Prerequisite: WMST 302
This course examines the application of feminist counselling to crisis
intervention and specific women's issues; to develop strategies for positive
action; and to explore ethical issues. The emphasis is on skill development.
Teaching methods used include demonstrations, experiential exercises, lectures,
readings, and discussions.
WMST 311
Special Issues in Counselling Women
3Social Science
Delivery Mode: Paced study (Jan./01).
Prerequisite: WMST 310.
This course examines how social categories such as race, age, class, sexual
orientation, and physical ability can be a source of women's power or factors in
their oppression. It also considers how women's beliefs, attitudes, and
socialization affect their counselling practice. Separation of the counsellor's
personal issues from the counselling relationship is addressed.
WMST 312
Advocacy from the Margins
3Social Science
Delivery Mode: Paced study (Jan./01).
Prerequisite: An introductory course in women's studies, a course from another
discipline or permission of the course professor.
This course introduces students to the issues involved in advocating for a
change in women's status. It provides a theoretical and practical background in
the applications of advocacy in women's and community organizing. WMST 312
examines advocacy from a feminist perspective including self-advocacy, the
development of support groups, planning and timing, policy development,
government policies and programs that affect women.
WMST 314
Transformatory Organizing: Organizing for Activists
3Social Science
Delivery Mode: Home study or paced.
Prerequisite: None.
We all want to know about successful organizing strategies so that we can get
what we want done well, and many of us want to know how to do that without
exploiting other people. Too often organizing strategies exclude, marginalize or
subordinate. However, this courses argues that if we marginalize, exclude and
continually redefine the different as lesser in our organizations, two
consequences are inevitable. First, we're not going to be able to work together
to get things done very effectively. Second, and as a direct result of this
marginalization and exclusion, we are not going to learn how to be successful
strategists. This course will teach you how to be skilful political strategists
through skill-sharing and entrustment, the organizing skills at the heart of the
successful organization, and key to shaping the world to suit us.
WMST 333
Goddess Mythology: Faces of Female Divinity
3Humanities
Delivery Mode: Home study.
Prerequisite: None.
This course introduces students to the cultural heritage of the goddess. It
examines the historical evolution of Western and Near/Middle Eastern goddess
mythology from Palaeolithic and Neolithic times through to Judaism and
Christianity, linking ancient goddess traditions with contemporary movements
such as ecofeminism.
WMST 400
Feminism in the Western Tradition
3Humanities
Delivery Mode: Home study.
Prerequisite: WMST 267 is strongly recommended but not required.
This course deals with selected aspects of feminist thought and feminist
movements in the Western tradition from the 1790s to the 1940s. Its topics
include various debates about the meaning of feminism, and feminist critiques of,
and attempts to change, the social order in particular times and places. The
course has six general themes: feminism: every woman's heritage?; the struggle
for full citizenship; bread and roses; man-made religion; institutionalized
sexuality; and women and (men's?) wars.
WMST 401
Contemporary Feminist Theory
3Social Science
Delivery Mode: Home study.
Prerequisite: WMST 267 is strongly recommended but not required.
This course focuses on the theoretical basis of programs, policies, and research
for and about women. It introduces students to feminist theory. Students will
have the opportunity to learn about feminist theory that has had an impact on
the academic discipline of women's studies; critically assess this theory;
examine the way feminist theory is used in the women's movement; and think and
write using a feminist theoretical approach and/or an approach that is critical
of feminism.
WMST 422
Women, Violence, and Social Change
3Social Science
Delivery Mode: Home study.
Prerequisite: WMST 267 is strongly recommended but not required.
This course provides definitions and explanations for male violence against
women, as well as information on ways to end the violence.
WMST 444
Feminist Research Methodology
3Social Science
Delivery Mode: Home study.
Prerequisite: WMST 267 is strongly recommended but not required.
This course is about feminist epistemology, feminist research methodology, and
feminist research methods. Students will have the opportunity to learn about
various defining features of feminist research; familiarize themselves with the
problems associated with sexist research; read and evaluate examples of
nonsexist and feminist research; and identify a research question, choose a
feminist method by which to answer this question, collect information using this
method, and evaluate each of these procedures.
WMST 465
Special Projects in Women's Studies I
3Humanities
Delivery Mode: Home study.
Prerequisite: Permission of the professor. This course is normally taken after
successful completion of the BA major in Women's Studies program core courses or
their equivalent.
This special projects course is designed through consultation between the
professor and the student. It will include a significant component of advanced
and more theoretical reading. A major written piece of work will generally be
required with its form being dependent on the focus of the work. Students are
responsible for obtaining access to all necessary materials. Contact the course
professor for more information.
WMST 466
Special Projects in Women's Studies II
3Social Science
Delivery Mode: Home study.
Prerequisite: Permission of the professor. This course is normally taken after
successful completion of the BA major in Women's Studies program core courses or
their equivalent.
This special projects course, like WMST 465, is designed through consultation
between professor and student. It will include a significant component of
applied theory or research. A major written piece of work will generally be
required with its form being dependent upon the focus of the work. Students are
responsible for obtaining access to all necessary materials. Contact the course
professor for more information.
WMST 467
Special Projects in Women's Studies III
3Humanities
Delivery Mode: Home study.
Prerequisite: Permission of the professor. This course is normally taken after
successful completion of the BA major in Women's Studies program core courses or
their equivalent.
This special projects course is designed through consultation between professor
and student. It will include a significant component of applied theory or
research. A major written piece of work will generally be required with its form
being dependent upon the focus of the work. Students are responsible for
obtaining access to all necessary materials. Contact the course professor for
more information.
WMST 468
Special Projects in Women's Studies IV
3Social Science
Delivery Mode: Home study.
Prerequisite: Permission of the professor. This course is normally taken after
successful completion of the BA major
in Women's Studies program core courses or their equivalent.
This special projects course is designed through consultation between the
professor and the student. It will include a significant component of advanced
and more theoretical reading. A major written piece of work will generally be
required with its form being dependent on the focus of the work. Students are
responsible for obtaining access to
all necessary materials. Contact the course professor for
more information.
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