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Testimonials from our WST Graduates!

What made you pursue a Women’s and Gender Studies (WST) major/minor? 

Amanda Testimonial
 
"WGSS courses are very interesting and enlightening and helped me to reconcile my experiences living within the intersectionality of my identities as an African American woman. I loved learning about the intersection between race, gender, and sexuality and how these identities have impacted my life experiences which have been very empowering to learn about throughout the WGSS courses I have taken over the last four years at Stony Brook."  - Amanda Stuart (May 2022)
 
 
 
 
Karyna"I grew up in a small rural college town, was raised by a single mother, and had the opportunity to attend an all-girls boarding high school, consisting of international students. I honestly didn’t experience much blatant sexism until college because I was fortunate enough to grow up steeped in feminism. My background presented me with the female experience in a lot of different ways and helped me realize and solidify my position as a woman. The events leading up to and during the 2016 Women’s March though, opened my eyes to just how alive and well sexism is in this country, and that gender and sexuality continue to be weaponized. With the exposure I had coming into college, I knew gender and gender studies were extremely important to me. I began my minor as a sophomore and was finally given vocabulary and theories that explained what I had been seeing for years. It was a baffling first semester of classes because I thought as a woman, who grew up around a variety of women, I knew what it meant to be a woman, but I quickly learned how naïve I was. Having the option to pursue WGSS as a minor allowed me to have a more holistic college experience, and helped me develop my interpersonal and professional skills from research to outreach. Coupled with my major in health science, I hope to someday work with underserved women and children, preferably in healthcare education and advocacy. I hope to give back to the communities that have shaped me, and without the deeper knowledge and understanding I gained through my minor I would not be able to do that."  - Karyna Colyer (May 2022)
 
 
Sophia G"I enrolled in WST 103 with Professor Montegary in the second semester of my freshman year. My 101 fellow is also a WGSS major and talked to me about the program after I decided to stop pursuing the pre-med track. During our first class, we dove right into learning about critical feminist theory, something I’d never been exposed to before. It completely blew my mind! As someone who loves abstract thinking and is passionate about rectifying injustices, I felt like I’d finally found what was missing in my entire academic career up until that point. Nothing in school had really made me think about complex big ideas before that, but intersectional feminism now allowed me to explore concepts without fear of being wrong, because a “right” answer is always subjective." - Sophia Garbarino (May 2022) 
 
 
"I came in as a freshman AMS major and quickly realized that I did not want toPav spend all my time in math classes. I took WST 102 with Suzanne Staub (amazing class!!) for an SBC requirement and fell in love with the content and the style of learning. I enjoyed being exposed to different issues and perspectives every week through a variety of readings and having the opportunity to discuss them with our class in a respectful way. I realized that it was important to me to make sure that I was learning as much as I could about the way the world works and how people are impacted by these systems, even if the topics are a little difficult at times. As someone who identifies with a few different minority identities, being able to learn about people like me as well as people not like me at all is eye-opening and has led me on a journey of personal growth as well as academic learning." - Pavithra Venkataraman (May 2022) 
 
 
Cassandra Blog"I discovered myself living through a viral pandemic, one traversing centuries before I was born. A pandemic that privileges the few and oppresses the many. I knew these inequalities existed, but I found why they existed to be incomprehensible. I was ecstatic when I learned about the Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies major at Stony Brook University, feeling that I might finally be capable of answering the question we have all asked at some point in our lives… why? My passion is for genuine social change, establishing an alternative society that raises us all up and leaves none of us behind. The Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies program incorporates interdisciplinary methodologies that prepare students for critically assessing the world around them. These skills are something I knew would be invaluable for my future pursuits!" - Cassandra Skolnick (May 2022)