UNDERGRADUATE CATALOG 2002–2003
Brigham Young University
Back College of Family, Home, and Social Sciences

   


990 SWKT, (801) 422-2083

Dean: David B. Magleby, Professor, Political Science
Associate Dean: Sally H. Barlow, Professor, Psychology
Associate Dean: James M. Harper, Professor, School of Family Life
Associate Dean: Rulon Pope, Professor, Economics

Academic Departments and Curriculum Areas

American Heritage
Anthropology
Economics
Family Life
Geography
History
Political Science
Psychology
Social Work
Sociology

Research and Academic Support Areas

Camilla Eyring Kimball Chair of Home and Family Life
Charles Redd Center for Western Studies and Lemuel H. Redd Jr. Chair in Western History
Comprehensive Clinic
Family Studies Center
J. Fish and Lillian F. Smith Chair of Economics
Joseph Fielding Smith Institute for Latter-day Saint History
Museum of Peoples and Cultures
New World Archaeological Foundation
Women's Research Institute

College Advisement Center

Larry K. Taylor, Supervisor (151 SWKT, [801] 422-3541)

Advisors are prepared to assist students in the selection of General Education offerings that will contribute to a broad education. Advisors also assist faculty in offering counsel for specific majors and in monitoring a student's progress toward graduation.

Purposes

The College of Family, Home, and Social Sciences is composed of departments whose primary focus is people.

Of particular concern is the family as the basis of human society. Each of the basic disciplines represented in the college has a special contribution to make to the family. Some are concerned with helping people to be healthy, responsible, and caring; some concentrate on helping families improve the quality of life; some focus on the home as a laboratory for family enhancement; and some explore the relationship between the family and the social systems that constitute the larger society.
The instructional program of the College of Family, Home, and Social Sciences has two major emphases. One provides a broad education that helps develop an appreciation of the values that establish and strengthen modern civilization and that prepares individuals to contribute effectively as citizens. The other prepares professionals to discover truths that reveal our heritage and to provide significant services to individuals, families, and institutions.

Degrees Offered

Bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees are offered in the college. See the individual department and program listings in this catalog for specific degrees offered and the requirements for each.

Scholarships and Awards

Scholarships and awards are available to qualified students. Applications may be obtained from the Financial Aid Office (A-141 ASB).

Women's Studies Minor

Bonnie Ballif-Spanvill, Director (337 SWKT, [801] 422-4609]

The Women's Research Institute sponsors a minor in Women's Studies. This program educates students in the findings, theory, and research methodologies fundamental to the women's studies field, and fosters critical thinking and superior scholarship. The research and study of women and their viewpoints in traditional academic disciplines creates a new framework of interpretation and scholarship for our historical and cultural traditions. Courses in the minor represent many disciplines and provide a variety of perspectives on topics relating to women's experiences.

See the Women's Research Institute section of this catalog for course requirements for this minor.

Family Studies Center

D. Russell Crane, Director (350 SWKT, [801] 422-2948)

The Family Studies Center is dedicated to identifying characteristics associated with strong families and the processes by which they develop. At the heart of the center's mission is a deep and abiding desire to understand families and family members and to assist them to achieve their full potential. The center understands the important link that research can and must have to families themselves. Research that illuminates the relationship between the family and other important institutions such as governments, schools, and business, as well as social contexts including households, neighborhoods, and cultures, is germane to the center's research program. Relevant information is presented through publications, conferences, symposia, seminars, and lectures.

The center helps organizations design and implement programs to aid couples and individuals in building and sustaining stronger families. Programs are designed not only to strengthen families but also to prevent critical family problems, including family violence, child abuse and neglect, divorce, financial mismanagement, and substance abuse. In addition, public policies that strengthen families are discussed and developed.

Museum of Peoples and Cultures

Marti Lu Allen, Director (105 ALLN)

The Museum of Peoples and Cultures is located in Allen Hall at 700 North 100 East in Provo. Museum hours are from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday. Guided tours are available for a nominal fee and can be scheduled by calling the museum at (801) 378-6112.

Educational Opportunities. Classes in museum practices designed to provide students with practical experience in collections care and management—including computer applications, exhibition curation, and educational programming—are available with approval. Museum practice courses are taught by the museum's staff, who are adjunct anthropology faculty (see listings in the Anthropology section of this catalog). The museum also employs several students each semester to assist in collections work and welcomes volunteers to assist in educational and promotional work.

Anthropological Collections and Research Opportunities. Museum collections contain prehistoric and ethnographic artifacts from various parts of the world. The bulk of holdings are from the Southwest, Mesoamerica, Polynesia, ancient Peru, and the Great Basin, especially Utah Valley. The museum also cares for a collection of more than 20,000 black and white and color photographs that document BYU archaeological research and the artifactual materials. The museum encourages students to inquire about research possibilities using its collections.

For a free video go to http://www.gohip.com/free_video.

Joseph Fielding Smith Institute for Latter-day Saint History

Ronald K. Esplin, Director (121 KMB, [801] 422-4023)

The Joseph Fielding Smith Institute for Latter-day Saint History is a research institute charged with the scholarly study of the history, people, institutions, and culture of the Latter-day Saints. Its mission is to use the materials of history and the tools of scholarship to research, write, and publish works about the Latter-day Saints generally. Documentary editing—the publication of many of the most important records documenting Latter-day Saint history—is a major emphasis.

Under the direction of the appropriate departments, Smith Institute faculty also teach courses in history, LDS Church history, and other disciplines related to their fields of expertise and advise students whose major papers, theses, and dissertations address Mormon history topics. The institute seeks to facilitate research by other scholars in LDS Church history as well. Limited support for research and publication in LDS Church history is available to faculty members from other departments within the university, based on an exchange of teaching and research assignments with institute faculty.

Joseph Fielding Smith Institute Faculty

Research Professors

Bushman, Richard L. (1999) BA, Harvard Coll., 1955; MA, PhD, Harvard U., 1960, 1961.

Esplin, Ronald K. (1980) BA, U. of Utah, 1969; MA, U. of Virginia, 1970; PhD, Brigham Young U., 1981.

Madsen, Carol Cornwall (1980) BA, MA, PhD, U. of Utah, 1957, 1977, 1985.

Underwood, Grant (2000) BA, MA, Brigham Young U., 1977, 1981; PhD, U. of California, Los Angeles, 1988.

Walker, Ronald W. (1980) BS, MA, Brigham Young U., 1961, 1965; MS, Stanford U., 1968; PhD, U. of Utah, 1977.

Associate Research Professors

Derr, Jill Mulvay (1998) BA, U. of Utah, 1970; MA, Harvard U., 1971.

Hartley, William G. (1980) BA, MA, Brigham Young U., 1965, 1969.

Jensen, Richard L. (1980) BA, Utah State U., 1968; MA, Ohio State U., 1972.

Senior Research Fellows

Allen, James B. (1963) BS, Utah State U., 1954; MA, Brigham Young U., 1957; PhD, U. of Southern California, 1963.

Anderson, Richard L. (1955) BA, Brigham Young U., 1951; JD, Harvard U., 1954; MA, Brigham Young U., 1957; PhD, U. of California, Berkeley, 1962.

Jessee, Dean C. (1980) BA, MA, Brigham Young U., 1956, 1959.

Emeritus

Beecher, Maureen Ursenbach (1980) BS, Brigham Young U., 1958; MA, PhD, U. of Utah, 1966, 1973.






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