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Human Development and Family Science (HDFS) takes an interdisciplinary, lifespan-focused approach to examining children, adolescents, and family systems. This field incorporates specialized domains including early childhood research, adolescent development, family dynamics, household resource allocation, and aging studies. Program graduates will positively impact children, teens, and family units, emerging as tomorrow's pioneers who will design, oversee, and assess initiatives in early education, adolescent programs, family services, and community interventions. These professionals will drive progress in research and policymaking concerning youth and family welfare.
The School of Human Sciences provides graduate-level education through both master's and PhD programs in Human Development & Family Science. HDFS adopts a comprehensive, lifespan perspective when studying children, adolescents, and family structures. The discipline integrates specialized fields such as infant development research, youth studies, family systems analysis, domestic resource administration, and aging research. Graduates will create meaningful change for children, teenagers, and their relatives, evolving into visionary leaders capable of establishing, directing, and assessing early education initiatives, youth programs, family assistance services, and community projects. They will propel forward scholarly inquiry and policy development regarding youth and family matters.