Childhood, Youth, and Family Studies Minor
Program Requirements
The Childhood, Youth, and Family Studies Minor requires 18 senior-level credits. Students are limited to a maximum of nine credits (three courses) from within one discipline to fulfill their minor requirements. Students are further limited to a maximum of six credits (two courses) from sociology courses.
Code | Title | Credits |
---|---|---|
Specific Minor Requirements | ||
CYCW 340 | Social Justice with Children, Youth, and Families | 3 |
CYCW 466 | Advanced Child and Youth Care Practice with Families | 3 |
ECCS 310 | Images of Children in Society | 3 |
ECCS 440 | Professional Practices: Ethics, Caring and Social Activism | 3 |
Choose six credits from the following: | 6 | |
Child/Youth Care Methods I: Current Trends | ||
Supporting Mental Health for Children, Youth, and Families | ||
Family Systems and Dynamics | ||
Child/Youth Care Methods II: Therapeutic Interventions | ||
Applying Developmental Theory to Practice | ||
Law and Social Services | ||
Abuse and Neglect | ||
Addictions and Recovery | ||
Advanced Child and Youth Care Practice with Community Groups | ||
Family and Community Issues | ||
Inclusion and Equity in Early Childhood | ||
Families in Global Context | ||
Advanced Practice in Early Learning and Indigenous Families | ||
Disability as an Aspect of Human Diversity | ||
Working with Sexual and Gender Minority Children and Youth | ||
Introduction to Indigenous Perspectives | ||
or ANTH 250 | Introduction to Indigenous Peoples in Canada | |
Introduction to the Family | ||
Current Issues in Family, Youth and Diversity | ||
Youth, Culture and Identity | ||
Advanced Topics in the Sociology of Families | ||
Advanced Topics in Youth | ||
Total Credits | 18 |
Program Learning Outcomes
Graduates of this program will be able to:
- Engage in professional conduct across contexts.
- Make decisions ethically.
- Engage in self-reflection to appraise one's own attitudes, skills, and knowledge.
- Develop and articulate a child and youth care professional identity.
- Critique, integrate, and apply theoretical frameworks.
- Utilize effective communication across contexts.
- Employ verbal, non-verbal, and written communication in professional contexts.
- Employ therapeutic communication skills with children, youth, and families.
- Plan, facilitate, and evaluate therapeutic interventions with children, youth, families, and communities.
- Use relational and developmental approaches.
- Engage purposefully within the lifespace.
- Intentionally employ activity-based interventions.
- Assess and respond to contexts that shape professional practice, such as but not limited to law, legislation and regulations, addictions, mental health, abuse and neglect, and sustainability.
- Evaluate research from child and youth care and other related disciplines.
- Employ foundational research skills.
- Integrate research into professional practice.
- Contribute to emerging child and youth care scholarship.
- Engage in professional practice that preserves, promotes, and advocates for social and economic justice.
- Respond critically to forms and mechanisms of oppression and discrimination.
- Examine self in an intersectional framework.