The Hebrew University Logo

ñéìáåñ

îâãø åîãò - 87843
òáøéú
äãôñä
 
ñâåø ñâéøä çìåï
âøñú PDF
úàøéê òãëåï àçøåï 12-08-2018
ð÷åãåú æëåú áàåðéáøñéèä äòáøéú: 2

úåàø: îåñîê

äéçéãä äà÷ãîéú ùàçøàéú òì ä÷åøñ: äéñèåøéä, ôéìåñåôéä åñåöéåìåâéä ùì äîãòéí

ñîñèø: ñîñèø á'

ùôú ääåøàä: òáøéú

÷îôåñ: äø äöåôéí

îåøä àçøàé òì ä÷åøñ (øëæ): òúðéàì ãøåø

ãåà"ì ùì äîåøä äàçøàé òì ä÷åøñ: otnield@ekmd.huji.ac.il

ùòåú ÷áìä ùì øëæ ä÷åøñ: 11-12

îåøé ä÷åøñ:
ã"ø òúðéàì ãøåø

úàåø ëììé ùì ä÷åøñ:
ìáçåï àú îäåú äîãò åäøôåàä äîåãøðééí îð÷åãú îáèï ùì âéùåú äîàîöåú ôøñô÷èéáåú îâãøéåú ùåðåú áäúééçñ äï ìéãò åäï ìòùééä (ôø÷ñéñ) äîãòé åäøôåàé

îèøåú ä÷åøñ:
ðáçï ÷ùú ùì âéùåú: äçì áâéùåú äîàîöåú àú äàñëåìä ùì äáðééä (constructivism), ðîùéê áâéùåú ùöîçå ìàçøåðä îúåê îãòé äèáò åîùìáåú áéï áé÷åøú ôîéðéñèéú åâéùä àðèé-äáðééúéú ìéãò (“feminist science”); åëìä áàñëåìåú äãåçåú àú îåãì ääáðéä àåìí îàîöåú àú äîâãø ë÷èâåøéä çùåáä, îúåê îáè îãòé (ìãåâîà: gender based medicine)

úåöøé ìîéãä :
áñéåîå ùì ÷åøñ æä, ñèåãðèéí éäéå îñåâìéí:

ìäöéâ àñëåìåú ùåðåú äáåçðåú àú ää÷ùøéí áéï îãò åîâãø. ìðúç îð÷åãåú îâãøéåú ùåðåú àú äéãò äîòøáé äîåãøðé.

ãøéùåú ðåëçåú (%):
80%

ùéèú ääåøàä á÷åøñ: ñîéðø

øùéîú ðåùàéí / úëðéú äìéîåãéí á÷åøñ:
îáåà
îâãø, îãò åçáøä
ùåðé, îâãø, îãò
îåãìéí ùì îéï
âåó äàùä
âåó äàùä áçáøä ùì âáøéí
ñ÷ñ îàèøñ
îãò ôîéðéñèé
âáøéåú åîãò
ñëîåú ùì îâãø
úéàåøéä îãòéú ôîéðéñèéú
òöåá ôîéðéñèé
àøëéàåìåâéä ôîéðéñèéú
îàèéøéàì ôîéðéæí
îãò äîâãø

çåîø çåáä ì÷øéàä:
descriptions of Fertilization: Egg and Sperm
2. Emily Martin, "The Egg and the Sperm: How Science has Constructed a Romance Based on Stereotypical Male-Female Roles," Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 16 (1991): 485-501.
1. Nelly Oudshoorn, ”On Measuring Sex Hormones: The Role of Biological Assays in Sexualizing Chemical Substances” Bulletin of the History of Medicine 64 (1990): 243-261.
2. Myra J. Hird, Sex, Gender, and Science (Palgrave, 2004), Chapter Two, pp. 17-28.
1. Cynthia Kraus, “Naked Sex in Exile: On the Paradox of the “Sex Question” in Feminism and in Science,” NWSA Journal, Vol. 12 (2000), pp. 153-157
2. Letitia Meynel, “Pictures, Pluralism, and Feminist Epistemology: Lessons from “Coming to Understand”, Hypatia vol. 23, no. 4 (October–December 2008), pp. 1-10.
3. Gender Based Medicine: newspaper articles
4. Ray Moynihan, “The making of a disease: female sexual dysfunction,” British Medical Journal 326 (2003): 45-47.
5. Emily Martin, “Premenstrual Syndrome, Work Discipline, and Anger,” in Wyer, et al. Women, Science, and Technology (Routledge, 2001), pp. 285-298.
6. Lori D. Hager, “Sex Matters: Letting Skeletons Tell the Story,” in Londa Schiebinger (ed.), Gendered Innovations in Science and Engineering (Stanford, 2008), pp. 65-78.
1. Robert A. Nye, “Medicine and Science as Masculine ‘Fields of Honor’,” Osiris 12 (1997): 60-79.
2. Naomi Oreskes, "Objectivity or Heroism? On the Invisibility of Women in
Science," Osiris 11 (1996): 87-113. Focus on 102-113
1. Deboleena Roy , “Asking Different Questions: Feminist Practices for the Natural Sciences,” Hypatia vol. 23, no. 4 (October–December 2008), pp. 148-153 (presentation)
2. Intro + Longino, in Wyer, et al. Women, Science, and Technology (Routledge, 2001), pp. 210-212; 216-217
3. Schiebinger, Introduction, in Londa Schiebinger (ed.), Gendered Innovations in Science and Engineering (Stanford, 2008), pp. 1-6.
4. Evelyn Fox Keller, A Feeling for the Organism: The Life and Work of Barbara McClintock (San Francisco: W. H. Freeman and Company, 1983), pp. 197-207
1. Tatiana Butovitsch Temm, “If You Meet…How Volvo Designed a Car for Women…” in Londa Schiebinger (ed.), Gendered Innovations in Science and Engineering (Stanford, 2008), pp. 131-149.
2. Judy Wajcman, “The Built Environment: Women’s Place, Gendered Space,” in Wyer, et al. Women, Science, and Technology (Routledge, 2001), pp. 194-208.
1. Alison Wylie, “Doing Social Science as a Feminist,” in Angela H. Creager, Elizabeth Lunbeck, Londa Schiebinger (ed.), Feminisms in Twentieth-Century Science, Technology, and Medicine (Chicago, 2001), pp 28-40.
Margaret W. Conkey, “One Thing Leads to Another: Gendering Research in Archaeology,” in Londa Schiebinger (ed.), Gendered Innovations in Science and Engineering (Stanford, 2008), pp.43-64
1. Celia Roberts, “Biological Behavior? Hormones, Psychology, and Sex,”
NWSA Journal, Vol. 12 (2000), pp. 11-17.
Anne Fausto-Sterling, “The Bare Bones of Sex: Part 1—Sex and Gender,” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 30 (2005), pp. 1491-1517

çåîø ì÷øéàä ðåñôú:

îøëéáé äöéåï äñåôé :

îéãò ðåñó / äòøåú:
5 úøâéìéí ÷öøéí òì äçåîø äùáåòé äð÷øà îäååéí 10 àçåæéí îäöéåï äñåôé òì ä÷åøñ.
 
àí äéðê æ÷å÷/ä ìäúàîåú îéåçãåú áùì ì÷åú îúåòãú ëìùäé òîä àú/ä îúîåãã/ú, àðà ôðä/é ìéçéãä ìàáçåï ì÷åéåú ìîéãä àå ìéçéãú äðâéùåú áä÷ãí äàôùøé ì÷áìú îéãò åééòåõ àåãåú æëàåúê ìäúàîåú òì ñîê úòåã îúàéí.
ìîéãò ðåñó àðà á÷ø/é áàúø ãé÷ðè äñèåãðèéí.
äãôñä