Welcome to Family 430!


Course Description

This course teaches the ecological and gospel perspectives on providing family-focused prevention and intervention services and support, with emphasis on communicating with families, empowering parents, developing family and professional partnerships, interagency collaboration, and accessing and linking family and community resources.

Course Objectives

Course Architecture

In an online course, regular and sustained attention to the course is critical. You are encouraged to be attentive to the deadlines, reading assignments and course activities. This course is organized into, and will run in 14 one-week lessons. In the first week, you will complete the Course Introduction, which will help orient you to the course and give you time to practice using the I-Learn tools. During the next 12 weeks, you will study one lesson per week.

Each lesson:

Even though this course is an online course, it is not an independent study course. You will be expected to interact with classmates in order to teach one another about what you are learning. Students will be expected to participate in Teach One Another activities where some of the most powerful experiences occur. This course has an expectation that students spend 3-4 hours each week for every credit earned. Students will need to be able to commit 9-12 hours each week. If you are unable to commit to the time demands of this course then you would be advised to take this course some other time when you will be able to commit to the workload.

This course has been designed to help you slowly build up a knowledge base of ideas and skills. Not all of these ideas and skills will come easily. It takes a lot of work and practice before some things will even start to make sense, so you should not be surprised to find that it may take you a little time to comprehend these ideas. Just be patient-as you approach the end of the course the ideas will start to come together and you will see how much progress you have really made. You will understand what this course is all about and you will be glad you persisted in your efforts to learn.

As you thoughtfully prepare, teach one another, and ponder/prove what you have learned, and as you humbly seek the guidance of the Holy Spirit, the Lord will bless you with a greater knowledge of His mercy and love, and you will receive an increased testimony of the Gospel of Jesus Christ.

Activities

Preparation (Due Date #1 & #2)

Be aware that: The time it takes to complete the assigned readings may not be consistent every week.

Treasure Hunt (Due Date #2)

Application (Due Date #2)

You will be responsible to report on the amount of your service provided in your weekly report each week.

Note: At mid-term and at the end of the course you will submit a 600-700 word paper reflecting on your experience. You will also be responsible to report on the amount of your service provided in your weekly report each week. Find more instructions in your course under Resources > Lift Others Instructions.

Lesson Reflection (Due Date #2)

  • Weekly reports: This short report will allow you to give important feedback about how you are experiencing the course and completing the assignments. Because the reports are a summary of what you have done throughout the week, they will not open until later in the week that they are due.

Note: Some lessons have additional assessment activities, such as: Mid-course Feedback, Midterm, and Final.

Preparation

This course is designed to engage both your mind and your heart. Thus, it is important to prepare both intellectually and spiritually each week. Consistent personal prayer, scripture study, and attention to your covenants will provide a great support to your academic studies. While this is not a religious course, what you study here will help you to grow spiritually. When you are prepared, the Holy Spirit can provide guidance and direction that will make a difference in your life. As you interact with others in various assignments, please remember to be kind, considerate, and respectful of differing viewpoints. You can differ in opinions (sometimes the best learning comes when others challenge your thinking) but still be civil. Any violation of basic common courtesy-including interaction with the instructor-will negatively impact your grade.

Read the following article as a reminder to the promises and warnings Elder Bednar addressed concerning entitlement.

Point Break-Down

Weekly Activities Points
Preparation Activities: Nugget List OR Concept Map 5 points
Check for Understanding Part A 18 points
Check for Understanding Part B 16 points
Treasure Hunt Research 10 points
Weekly Report 10 points
Personal Application Questions 10 points
Semester Activities Points
Lift Others Proposal 10 points
Lift Others Report 20 points
Comprehensive Exam 120 points

Course Requirements

Course Text

  • Child, Family, School, Community Socialization and Support by Roberta M. Berns, (10th Edition) Cengage Learning: Stamford, CT (ISBN: 978-1-305-08897-9). Compare prices for your textbooks through the University Store Price Comparison site. They will show you all of the options from the University Store plus several online options to help you find the best price. See link to price comparison tool for current price.
  • Additional reading will be available through I-Learn.

Department Policy Regarding Intellectual Property and Course Materials

All of the materials in this course are covered by fair use and copyright law and are proprietary (intellectual property). Students are not permitted to sell, post, trade, share, distribute, or send any information contained in this course (including outlines, handouts, syllabi, exams, quizzes, PowerPoint presentations, lectures, audio and video recordings, or images of the same, etc. including your own work for this course) to any parties outside of this course (ie Course Hero, Quizlet, Google Docs, etc.) by any means (e.g., posting, uploading, attachments, etc.) without the express written permission from the creator of these works and the Department Chair. Any of these actions violate the Academic Honesty policies of Brigham Young University-Idaho (please see Academic Honesty) and will be dealt with as such. The materials in this course are also intellectual property and taking any materials from the course and posting them outside of this course in any manner will be construed as theft and distribution of intellectual property. If you engage in any of these actions, or use any of these materials without authorization, the instructor has the right to impose an appropriate academic sanction (e.g., give you a failing grade for the assignment and/or fail you from the course). Additionally, the respective Course Lead, Program Lead, and/or Department Chair also reserve the right to impose appropriate academic sanctions regardless of any imposed by the instructor.

Grading Policies

Final Grade Breakdown

A=94% +

A-=90-93%

B+=87-89%

B=84-86%

B-=80-83%

C+=77-79%

C=74-76%

C-=70-73%

D+=67-69%

D=64-66%

D-=60-63% 

F=below 60

CLASS POLICIES

Late Work Policy

Assignments are due on the day indicated. No late work will be accepted without permission from the instructor. Work that is late hampers your ability to fully participate in the course and will be accepted only at your instructor's discretion. Inform your instructor before the assignment is due. Any late work that is accepted is subject to a penalty as determined by your instructor.

Disclaimers

The instructor reserves the right to change any part of this syllabus any time during the semester in order to adapt to changing course needs. You will be notified prior to any changes that may take place.

Students with Disabilities

Brigham Young University-Idaho is committed to providing a working and learning atmosphere that reasonably accommodates qualified persons with disabilities. If you have any disabilities, which may impair your ability to complete this course successfully, please contact Services for Students with Disabilities Office, (208) 496-1158. Reasonable academic accommodations are reviewed for all students who have qualified documented disabilities. Services are coordinated with the student and instructor by this office. It is the student's responsibility to disclose to their teacher any special need she/he may have before the end of the first week of class. If you need assistance of if you feel you have been unlawfully discriminated against based on your disability, you may seek resolution through established grievance policy and procedures. You should contact the Human Resources Office at (208) 496-1130.