OHIO University Undergraduate Catalog 2014-15
[Archived Catalog]
Child and Family Studies Major (B.S.C.F.S.) |
Major code BS6468
College of Health Sciences and Professions
Social and Public Health, Department of
Grover Center W324
Phone: 740.593.4675
Fax: 740.593.0555
www.ohio.edu/chsp/sph
Jenny Chabot, contact person
Program Overview
The program prepares you to work with children, adults, and families throughout the lifespan in a broad range of settings. The developmental orientation of the program is designed to provide a thorough understanding of every major developmental period in life in multiple contexts from birth to adolescence, to working with mid-life and older adults. It includes child, adult, and family development classes in the Department of Social and Public Health, with a life span emphasis, as well as courses that include diversity in families, family ties and aging, human sexualities, the impact of stress and trauma, and death and dying. Professional skill development is an essential part of the program and intended to give students the practical skill set needed by human services specialists. Required courses from other departments or programs include early childhood education, health, psychology, sociology, and social work. Also required are a 75 hour practicum and a 600 hour full-time internship. These provide practical experience and the opportunity to integrate theory and course content into real-life situations. The program also is designed to provide a strong foundation for those students who plan to go on to graduate school. The child and family studies program offers three different concentrations to choose from: child, adult, and family services; child life; and family gerontology.
Child, Adult, and Family Services Concentration
This concentration prepares students to work with individuals and families in diverse settings, including human and social service agencies, and programs for children, adolescents, as well as young, mid-life, and older adults. Students learn about the nature of individual and family interactions, family dynamics, how individuals within the family contribute to and are shaped by these dynamics, and how broad societal contexts (e.g., schools, peers, gender, poverty) influence individual development and family functioning. By studying varied developmental pathways, including those pathways characterized by stress and trauma, students will have the opportunity to acquire the professional skills necessary to work with individuals, couples and families in a broad range of human service settings.
Child Life Concentration
This concentration prepares students for careers working with children and families in pediatric health care settings, including Ronald McDonald House, Make-a-Wish organizations, and children’s hospitals. This concentration also prepares students to become a Certified Child Life Specialist (CCLS), as designated by the Child Life Council, the governing organization that oversees this profession. The CCLS helps normalize the hospitalization experience for children and families, and provides specific services that include preparations for medical procedures, coping skills for children during stressful health care experiences, support for siblings and parents, therapeutic medical play, planning and implementing activities to enhance growth and development, and interdisciplinary team involvement. In addition to core cores in the child and family studies program, students in this concentration are required to take courses in biology, psychology, early childhood education, and health. Students following the CCLS career path must maintain a 3.0 GPA or higher in order to apply for the required child life practica and internships. However, many other career options working with psychosocial issues for children and families navigating stressful health care experiences exist within this concentration (besides CCLS).
Family Gerontology Concentration
This concentration focuses on aging within the context of families, more specifically the implications, support needs, and outcomes for adults and their family members as they age and the quality of their relationships across the life course. Child and family studies students who chose this concentration also will receive an undergraduate gerontology certificate to help them better prepare for careers advocating for and helping older adults and their family members. With this concentration, students typically seek employment working with mid to later life adults and their family members or pursue graduate work in such areas a marriage and family therapy, social work, human development and family studies, rehabilitation services, and public/community health.
Admissions Information
Freshman/First-Year Admission
No requirements beyond University admission requirements.
Change of Program Policy
No selective or limited admission requirements.
External Transfer Admission
No requirements beyond University admission requirements.
Opportunities Upon Graduation
With an accumulation of over 700 hours of service-learning, practicum, and internship experiences (includes 600 hour final internship, 75 hour practicum, and required service-learning hours built into selected courses), students who graduate from this program will have ample opportunities to explore career options, gain valuable experience, and develop/refine marketable skills. Child and family studies graduates find employment in many areas of human services, including child and family services, adolescent groups homes, rehabilitation centers, community programs for the developmentally disabled, senior citizen centers and facilities, family planning centers, mental health agencies, probation services, emergency shelters, adult foster care, hospice, hospitals, 4-H programs, and other agencies that assist families and individuals in crisis. The child and family studies program offers three different concentrations to choose from: child, adult, and family services; child life: and family gerontology. All three concentrations are designed to provide a strong foundation for those students who plan to go on to graduate school.
Requirements
Universitywide Graduation Requirements
To complete this program, students must meet all Universitywide graduation requirements .
College-Level Requirements for the College of Health Sciences and Professions
View the College-Level Requirements for the College of Health Sciences and Professions .
Core Requirements for all Child and Family Studies Majors
Complete the following courses:
- CFS 2700 - Intimate and Family Relationships Credit Hours: 3
- CFS 2710 - Individuals and Families Over the Lifespan Credit Hours: 3
- CFS 3800 - Death, Dying and Bereavement Credit Hours: 3
- CFS 3810 - Research Design and Program Evaluation Credit Hours: 3
- CFS 4600 - Children, Families, and Diversity Credit Hours: 3
- CFS 4602 - Professional Assessment and Helping Skills Credit Hours: 3
- CFS 4610 - Dynamics in Parent-Child Relations Credit Hours: 3
- CFS 4640 - Children, Families, and Poverty Credit Hours: 3
- CFS 4670 - Children, Families, Stress and Trauma Credit Hours: 3
- CFS 4910 - Child and Family Studies Internship Credit Hours: 15
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Requires a C (2.0) or better.
Related Core Requirements
Complete the following courses:
- EDEC 1600 - Introduction to Child Development Credit Hours: 3
- HLTH 2000 - Introduction to Public Health Credit Hours: 3
- PSY 1010 - General Psychology Credit Hours: 3
Complete one of the following courses:
- PSY 1110 - Elementary Statistical Reasoning Credit Hours: 3
- PSY 2110 - Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences Credit Hours: 4
Child, Adult, and Family Concentration Requirements
Complete the following courses:
- CFS 2990 - Introduction to Child and Family Studies and Field Experience Credit Hours: 3
- CFS 3601 - Human Sexualities Credit Hours: 3
- CFS 4630 - Transitions in Development: Middle Childhood Credit Hours: 3
- CFS 4650 - Transitions in Development: Adolescence Credit Hours: 3
- CFS 4660 - Transitions in Development: Middle and Later Life Credit Hours: 3
Concentration Related Requirements
Complete one of the following courses:
- SOC 1000 - Introduction to Sociology Credit Hours: 3
- SW 1000 - Introduction to Social Work and Social Welfare Credit Hours: 3
Complete six of the following courses:
- CFS 4900 - Special Topics in Child and Family Studies Credit Hours: 3
- EDEC 3003 - Junior Clinical Experiences II Credit Hours: 1
- EDEC 3610 - Guidance and Classroom Management in Early Childhood Credit Hours: 3
- HLTH 2040 - Alcohol, Tobacco, and Other Drugs Credit Hours: 3
- HLTH 2050 - Preventing HIV and STIs Credit Hours: 3
- HLTH 2100 - Women and Health Credit Hours: 3
- HLTH 2150 - Violence in America Credit Hours: 3
- HLTH 2700 - Family and Consumer Health Credit Hours: 3
- PSY 2710 - Abnormal Psychology Credit Hours: 3
- PSY 2720 - Psychology of Personality Credit Hours: 3
- PSY 3250 - Psychology of Health and Illness Credit Hours: 3
- PSY 3430 - Psychological Disorders of Childhood Credit Hours: 3
- PSY 3440 - Psychology of Gender Credit Hours: 3
- SOC 2000 - Contemporary Social Problems Credit Hours: 3
- SOC 2040 - Animals and Human Society Credit Hours: 3
- SOC 2100 - Introduction to Social Psychology Credit Hours: 3
- SOC 2110 - Collective Behavior Credit Hours: 3
- SOC 2200 - Introduction to the Family Credit Hours: 3
- SOC 2310 - Sociology of Health and Health Care Credit Hours: 3
- SOC 2330 - Sociology of Sport Credit Hours: 3
- SOC 2600 - Criminal Justice Credit Hours: 3
- SOC 2610 - Deviant Behavior Credit Hours: 3
- SOC 3090 - Sociology of Appalachia Credit Hours: 3
- SOC 3310 - Class and Inequality Credit Hours: 3
- SOC 3630 - Juvenile Delinquency Credit Hours: 3
- SOC 3650 - Sociology of Mental Illness Credit Hours: 3
- SW 2601 - Social Welfare Overview and Trends Credit Hours: 3
- SW 3213 - Child Abuse and Neglect Credit Hours: 3
Child Life Concentration Requiremnts
For those students interested in the child life concentration, please note that this career field is extremely competitive. Maintaining a high GPA, completing demanding extracurricular opportunities focusing on hospitalized children and their families, and understanding the need to be geographically flexible in terms of internship and career placements are expected.
Complete the following courses:
- CFS 2980 - Introduction to Child Life and Field Experience Credit Hours: 3
- CFS 4630 - Transitions in Development: Middle Childhood Credit Hours: 3
- CFS 4650 - Transitions in Development: Adolescence Credit Hours: 3
- CFS 4760 - Children and Families in Health Care Settings Credit Hours: 3
- CFS 4770 - Professional Practices in Child Life Credit Hours: 3
Concentration Related Requirements
Complete the following courses:
- BIOS 1030 - Human Biology I:Basic Principles Credit Hours: 3
- BIOS 2030 - Human Biology II: Essentials of Anatomy and Physiology Credit Hours: 3
- BIOS 2035 - Human Biology II Laboratory: Functional Anatomy Credit Hours: 1
- EDEC 1001 - Introduction to Early Childhood Education Credit Hours: 2
- EDEC 2400 - Infant-Toddler Education: Development, Curriculum and Program Credit Hours: 3
- EDEC 3003 - Junior Clinical Experiences II Credit Hours: 1
- EDEC 3610 - Guidance and Classroom Management in Early Childhood Credit Hours: 3
- EDSP 2710 - Introduction to Special Education Credit Hours: 3
- HLTH 2300 - Medical Terminology Credit Hours: 3
- PSY 2720 - Psychology of Personality Credit Hours: 3
- PSY 3250 - Psychology of Health and Illness Credit Hours: 3
Family Gerontology Concentration Requirements
Complete the following courses:
- CFS 2990 - Introduction to Child and Family Studies and Field Experience Credit Hours: 3
- CFS 3601 - Human Sexualities Credit Hours: 3
- CFS 4630 - Transitions in Development: Middle Childhood Credit Hours: 3
- CFS 4650 - Transitions in Development: Adolescence Credit Hours: 3
- CFS 4660 - Transitions in Development: Middle and Later Life Credit Hours: 3
Concentration Related Requirements
Complete six of the following courses:
- CLWR 4820 - Thinking About Death: Belief and Practice Credit Hours: 3
- CSD 3000 - Aging and Disorders of Communication Credit Hours: 3
- HLTH 2250 - Long-Term Care Administration I Credit Hours: 3
- HLTH 2901 - Health Aspects of Aging Credit Hours: 3
- HLTH 3250 - Long-Term Care Administration II Credit Hours: 3
- HLTH 4050 - Long-Term Care Administration III Credit Hours: 3
- HLTH 4060 - Alternatives to Traditional Long-Term Care Credit Hours: 3
- HLTH 4070 - Interprofessional Gerontology Credit Hours: 3
- PSY 3420 - Psychology of Adulthood and Aging Credit Hours: 3
- REC 4210 - Principles of Aging, Physical Activity, and Recreation Credit Hours: 3
- SW 3233 - Counseling Older Adults Credit Hours: 3
- SW 3273 - Mental Health and Social Work Credit Hours: 3
- SW 3293 - Aging in American Society Credit Hours: 3