Pages

Thursday, May 19, 2016

CALL FOR SPW CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE APPLICANTS


CALL for SPW (APA Division 35) Campus Representative Applicants

Among universities and colleges across the country, SPW Campus Representatives promote feminist scholarship, research, activism and practice; give a face to Division 35 among students; and encourage awareness about diversity and social intersections as they affect women’s lives.  Campus Representatives are supported by their fellow Representatives and the Student Representative as they create and organize programming that highlights feminist thought in psychology on their campus.  

Campus Representative duties, to be accomplished over the 2016-2017 academic year, include:
1) Create and execute at least 2 SPW-related events
2) Write a minimum of 2 FemPop blog posts

Both graduate and undergraduate students are welcome to apply!

--

APPLICATIONS DUE BY FRIDAY, JULY 8, 2016. Please find link to the application and information below:

Please use this form to apply for SPW (APA Division 35) Campus Representative positions for the 2016-2017 academic year (August 1, 2016-July 31, 2017).



Due Date: Friday, July 8, 2016

Please email the Division 35 Student Representative, Stephanie Wong (stephaniewong@nyu.edu), with any questions.

Thursday, May 5, 2016

Can Women Really Have It All??? // Dannet Palacios


 
Image from www.huffingtonpost.com

Gone (hopefully) are the days when women were expected to stay at home, take care of the children, household, and husband. Women have worked hard to change societal expectations and definitions of being a woman. Yet a lingering question remains: Can a woman really have it all? So what does this question even mean? Who defines what having it all means? Does society still dictate this issue, or do women get to decide whathaving it allmeans to them. This issue seems to be a debate fueled by media, men, and women around the world, and will not likely have a resolution any time soon.

So I ask women everywhere to consider my original questions. Whose rules or expectations are you going to follow? When I think of these same questions, I ask myself: What does it mean to me to have it all? Am I thinking of material items, family, and a career? Is it even possible to have ever have it all?

I believe there may be a misperception by larger society of what it means for women to have it all. It seems to me, that for women to have it all, said woman should have a successful career, a partner, and children. She should be able to juggle household duties, multiple children, and their related activities while being the best in her career, and having a successful relationship with her partner. In other words, she should be a Wonder Woman. Is this a realistic and actual expectation that women should have for themselves and other women? Well, that is not for me to decide. Instead, I believe that women should redefine their own expectations of what having it all means, and choose to live instead by those standards. Choose to ignore what society or others think you should be doing, be and do instead what makes you happy. Women embrace our own uniqueness and realize that all women have different strengths and weakness, which does not make them better or worse than any other women. Women should unite in this debate and support other women in defining their own choices. After all is that not what women rights are ultimately about?