Academic Calendar

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.

Specific Minor Requirements
CYCW 340Social Justice with Children, Youth, and Families3
CYCW 466Advanced Child and Youth Care Practice with Families3
ECCS 310Images of Children in Society3
ECCS 440Professional Practices: Ethics, Caring and Social Activism3
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
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 Credits18

Program Learning Outcomes

Graduates of this program will be able to:

  1. Engage in professional conduct across contexts.
    1. Make decisions ethically.
    2. Engage in self-reflection to appraise one's own attitudes, skills, and knowledge.
    3. Develop and articulate a child and youth care professional identity.
  2. Critique, integrate, and apply theoretical frameworks.
  3. Utilize effective communication across contexts.
    1. Employ verbal, non-verbal, and written communication in professional contexts.
    2. Employ therapeutic communication skills with children, youth, and families.
  4. Plan, facilitate, and evaluate therapeutic interventions with children, youth, families, and communities.
    1. Use relational and developmental approaches.
    2. Engage purposefully within the lifespace.
    3. Intentionally employ activity-based interventions.
  5. 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.
  6. Evaluate research from child and youth care and other related disciplines.
    1. Employ foundational research skills.
    2. Integrate research into professional practice.
    3. Contribute to emerging child and youth care scholarship.
  7. Engage in professional practice that preserves, promotes, and advocates for social and economic justice.
    1. Respond critically to forms and mechanisms of oppression and discrimination.
    2. Examine self in an intersectional framework.