CCOG for APR 250B Fall 2024
- Course Number:
- APR 250B
- Course Title:
- Equity in the Trades
- Credit Hours:
- 4
- Lecture Hours:
- 40
- Lecture/Lab Hours:
- 0
- Lab Hours:
- 0
Course Description
Introduces histories of inequity in the trades and strategies for positive change, with emphasis on the United States and Oregon. Prepares individuals for effective and inclusive leadership within the trades as advocates, allies, project managers, general contractors, or superintendents.
Intended Outcomes for the course
Upon completion of the course students will be able to:
- Locate themselves within social contexts to reflect on processes that shape self and society and to address continuity and change.
- Identify power disparities in policies and practices in trades most culpable for inequities.
- Identify key legislative acts that sought gender and racial equity in trades and other industries or sectors of society.
- Articulate the function and role of trades unions and open shops in perpetuating and ameliorating racial and gender inequities.
- Identify and negotiate moments of inequity, discrimination, and/or harassment encountered on the job, in training, or elsewhere.
- Act as leaders in recognizing barriers to equity and implementing various strategies (interpersonal, organizational, cultural, and systemic) for equity.
Aspirational Goals
- Provide information and education in trades that contributes significantly to greater equity in trades in the State of Oregon.
- Contribute significantly to greater workforce diversity in trades in the State of Oregon.
- Effect social change.
Course Activities and Design
- Lecture
- Discussion
- Group work
- Guest presentations
- Independent reading and research
- Case studies and role plays
- Essays (Please note: There is no writing prerequisite for this course; and while students will be encouraged to articulate their ideas in writing and be introduced to principles of composition, they will not be evaluated for a grade based on their competence with conventions of standard English and academic communication)
Outcome Assessment Strategies
- Quizzes
- Exams
- Oral presentations
- Individual and group projects
Course Content (Themes, Concepts, Issues and Skills)
I. Introduction -- Social identity
- Sociology and the sociological perspective/framework
- Sociological imagination
- Social categories and identities: race, gender, class, sexuality
II. Systemic Oppression
- Key concepts: power, privilege, oppression, social identities, classism, sexism, racism
- Elements of: institutional, internalized, imposed, historical, motivational (driving force)
- Intersectionality
- Identities in Inequality: students identify historical structures of social inequality and ways they're complicit in and how they can interrupt
III. Disparities in Trades: Historical Context
- Capitalism and industrialization
- Occupational segregation
- Intersectionality
- Class, Race, Gender, Sexuality, Age: Data from Building a More Diverse Skilled Workforce in Highway Trades: Are Oregon's Current Efforts Working?
- King's Poor People's Campaign, a "new phase" of civil rights movement (economic justice for poor people)
- The Journey Card
- Apprentices v. journeyman
- Journeying out
- Barriers to a journey card: Class, race, gender, sexuality, coercion, quid pro quo
- Unique challenges faced by women and people of color in journeying out
IV. Legislative, Policy, and organizational strategies for equity:
- Unions: Why unions?
- Purpose/role of wokers v. employers v unions (Marx)
- Films: Matewan; Chicano! A History of Mexican American Civil Rights Movement
- Legislation for equity: Community Benefits Agreements, State Law etc.
V. Equity 欧洲杯决赛竞猜app_欧洲杯足球网-投注|官网
- Networking with advocates and advocacy organizations. What advocacy organizations in the trades are there in Oregon? What other pertinent organizations? Oregon Tradeswomen Inc., Constructing Hope, Youth Builders, MAWE, CAWS, Voz etc.
- Facilitation: facilitating a large group conversation around difficult and potentially inflammatory and polarizing topics
- Towards a sustainable advocacy -- Strategies for preserving your commitment to equity despite challenges, threats, fears, anxieties
- Talking effectively with those in power about equity