SFL 335

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Family Adaptation and Resiliency

Family Life College of Family, Home, and Social Sciences

Course Description

Understanding family resiliency and building family strengths in normative transitions (birth, death, job) and nonnormative transitions (divorce, disability, remarriage, poverty, violence). Developing familial, social, religious, and instrumental resources to adapt positively to these transitions.

When Taught

Fall and Winter

Min

3

Fixed/Max

3

Fixed

3

Fixed

0

Other Prerequisites

SFL 160 or concurrent enrollment

Note

Also offered by BYU Independent Study; enroll anytime throughout year; one year to complete; additional tuition required; register at is.byu.edu.

Title

Effective Writing and Analysis

Learning Outcome

Demonstrate improvement in course content writing skills.

Title

Content and Theory

Learning Outcome

Articulate the main conceptual frameworks which help us understand how families cope with stress. Demonstrate how a wide range of life events influence families both positively and negatively. Demonstrate what factors contribute to whether families respond positively or negatively to life events and transitions. Understand and apply how gospel principles regarding the family, charity, faith and trials interconnect with scholarly research on family stress.