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    Grace Braga's Shadow Visit Page

    Hometown: Southern Rhode Island
    Class Year: 2027
    Programs of Study: Psychology (major), Public & Professional Writing and Criminal Justice (minors)
    Campus Involvement: Equestrian Team, Psychology Club, Health and Wellness Educator (HAWE), Chess Club, Women in Justice Studies Club, Feminist United

     Please refer to Grace's course schedule and upcoming availability below to select your desired experience. 

     

    Shadow Visit Experience Course Options

    Monday Class Options:

    PSYCH 230 - Psychology of Men and Masculinities: 2:00 PM - 3:20 PM
    The course surveys the concepts of manhood and masculinities based on broad social science research and literatures. Students are exposed to masculine ideologies and research from Western, Asian, African, and Latin American perspectives. In addition, masculinities as related to gay, bisexual, and transgender men are explored.

    Tuesday Class Options:

    WTNG 304 - Feminist Rhetoric's: 9:30 AM - 10:50 PM
    Feminist. A polarizing word, people understand it in very different ways. In this course we will analyze various definitions of feminism by exploring how scholars of feminist rhetorics have recovered the transgressive ways women use their writing, speaking, and silence to intervene in the world. We will focus on the methods and methodologies by which these scholars examine feminist rhetorics. As we investigate the ways feminists (of all genders) have used their writing, speaking, and silence to speak back to power and to challenge implicit rules about who gets to speak (or write) in a given situation, we will consider how these feminist rhetorical theories and practices might inform our own discursive interventions in the world.

    Friday Class Options:

    PSYCH 342 - Legal Psychology: 11:00 AM - 11:50 AM
    The application of social science research methods and psychological knowledge to contemporary issues in the criminal justice system. Topics include eyewitness memory, scientific jury selection, police identification procedures, jury decision making, credibility of witness testimony, the social scientist as an expert witness, and research methods used by legal psychologists.
     
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