Introduction: In this class, the stories of women physicians show diversity in the challenges they faced. The ways that different writers represent the challenges and benefits of women's medical education and professional practice reveal a deep need to demonstrate women's fitness as professionals. The barriers that they overcame demonstrate not only their skills as doctors, but also their ability to face financial and social hardship because of gender and race. In Pioneer Work, Blackwell recounts her struggle to earn money for medical school, gain preparatory education, and secure admittance to a medical college. In A Country Doctor, Sarah Orne Jewett's fictional character Nan Prince demonstrates a natural aptitude for medical study while being mentored by an ideal father-figure physician; still, her decision about whether to pursue medicine is difficult. Regina Morantz-Sanchez's brief essay gives an overview of women's entrance to medical education starting with Elizabeth Blackwell. The treatise "Letter to Ladies" by Dr. Samuel Gregory presents encouragement for women who could medically benefit other women. Finally, the biographies under "Opening Doors" and "Challenging Racial Barriers" in Changing the Face of Medicine, reveal the diverse obstacles that the first generation of women faced in obtaining medical education and establishing practices, and highlight their remarkable successes. Women's combined efforts in writing both professionally and literarily contributed to their success in entering the profession and beginning to change cultural attitudes toward women.
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Students read primary source materials in the archive, paying attention to their research questions. They use a table with columns with headings that read "observation," "inference," and "relevance" to a research question in order to organize and capture their research notes. Students are encouraged to write down miscellaneous and interesting information as well as full and complete notes that address the research questions to help with writing their assigned segment of the physician's biography. They produce full citations for sources used—i.e., bibliography.