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Child, Youth, Family and Community Studies (MA)

In this program, your learning will be informed by multi-disciplinary theory and practice-based instruction. You’ll gain expertise through coursework and practical experience tailored to your goals. Your final project will be a research thesis or a culminating project.

This program is offered primarily online. There is a mandatory three-week summer institute. 

The MA in Child, Youth, Family & Community Studies may be used as partial fulfilment towards a provincial or national counselling certification or credential.

Expected length Project or thesis Course-based
3 years Yes No

Quick facts

Program options:
Master's
Study options:
Full-time study
Program delivery:
Blended
Dynamic learning:
Co-op optional, Other: Required practicum

Outcomes

By the end of the MA program, graduates will be able to demonstrate:

  • knowledge of decolonial, critical and justice-oriented approaches to research, practice and leadership in diverse local, national and global contexts for the purposes of promoting child, youth, family and community well-being
  • respect for and commitment to the wellbeing, resurgence and self-determination of Indigenous nations globally, with responsibilities to local First Peoples
  • ethical, strengths-based, relational approaches to working with diverse children, youth, families and communities, and ability to respond to intersecting forms of historical and ongoing structural and systemic exclusion based on race, gender, sexuality, class, ability, and citizenship, among others
  • capacity for responsive and collaborative leadership, advocacy, activism and systems-level change in preparation for leadership roles in diverse human service sectors that serve children, youth and families (including organizations, government, private, not-for-profit, community, other)
  • knowledge and application of diverse research methods, methodologies and knowledge mobilization approaches that reflect multiple contexts, knowledges and research paradigms

Find a supervisor

Please note in your application which potential supervisors' research interests align with yours. You do not need to have one to apply.

Alison Gerlach

Associate Director, Associate Professor Advancing equity-oriented policy, organizational, practice changes in early years and childhood dis/ability sectors so they are inclusive of and responsive to structurally marginalized communities, families and children. Principle-based and relational approaches including cultural safety and trauma- and violence-informed care. Critical, relational, and intersectional theorizing, mixed methods; community-engaged and participatory research.

Doris Kakuru

Professor / Graduate Advisor

Jeff Smith

Assistant Teaching Professor Counselling, music therapy, addictions and mental health, harm reduction, settler colonial studies, mindfulness, group work

Jennifer H. White

Professor Youth suicide prevention; ethics; discourses of professionalism; constructionist methodologies; collaborative research; narrative practices; professional development; praxis-oriented pedagogy

Jin-Sun Yoon

Teaching Professor Intersectional diversity training, cultural identity development, racialized settler/Indigenous relations

LJ Slovin

Assistant Professor Queer and trans youth, ethnography, sexual health education, popular culture, qualitative methodologies

Mandeep Kaur Mucina

Director, Associate Professor Family violence, gender-based violence, critical migration studies, South Asian feminisms, anti-racism, intersectionality research, life history research, action-based research, critical diaspora studies.

Morgan Mowatt

Assistant Professor Indigenous legal and political authority/sovereignty; Indigenous-state governance and 鈥渞ights鈥 relating to families, communities, nations and environment; Indigenous youth education, empowerment, and belonging; community and youth arts-based praxes; Indigenous (youth and community) gender, sexuality, and wellness; Indigenous liberation and inter-community relationships; and non-reformist reform relating to Indigenous peoples and our various intersecting identities.

Samantha Corrington

Assistant Teaching Professor

Shanne McCaffrey

Teaching Professor Interests include: Land and Water based learning, teaching, and interconnectedness, Child Welfare, colonialism as a shared experience, environmental nurturing, preservation and activism, and sharing the land with non-human relatives.

Shemine Gulamhusein

Assistant Professor Exploring Muslim migration stories of belonging and identity; lived experiences of marginalized and minoritized people and communities; therapeutic recreational practices in community spaces; outdoor and solution-focused therapies; global perspectives of child, youth, family, and community research and practices; (auto)ethnographic methods; narrative inquiry; and community-arts-based methodologies.

Program details

Providing you accurate admission requirements, application deadlines, tuition fee estimates and scholarships depends on your situation. Tell us about yourself:

Program details

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Application deadlines

September entry – apply by March 15

All supporting documentation, including references, must be received by March 15.

September entry – apply by March 15

All supporting documentation, including references, must be received by March 15.

Admission requirements

Program specific requirements

  • a minimum of 2 years (3,000 hours) relevant human services experience
  • CYFCS application form completed in full and uploaded to the statement of intent field in the online application
  • two professional references: completed on CYFCS professional reference forms. Forms should be emailed to gradrefs@uvic.ca and scycgrad@uvic.ca by March 15
  • sample of academic writing that demonstrates critical engagement with the scholarly literature (may be a paper from your undergraduate degree)
  • current resumé/CV: include work, education and training history and demonstrate how the relevant work experience requirement has been met

Program specific requirements

  • a minimum of 2 years (3,000 hours) relevant human services experience
  • CYFCS application form completed in full and uploaded to the statement of intent field in the online application
  • two professional references: completed on CYFCS professional reference forms. Forms should be emailed to gradrefs@uvic.ca and scycgrad@uvic.ca by March 15
  • sample of academic writing that demonstrates critical engagement with the scholarly literature (may be a paper from your undergraduate degree)
  • current resumé/CV: include work, education and training history and demonstrate how the relevant work experience requirement has been met

Completion requirements

View the minimum course requirements for this program.
View the minimum course requirements for this program.

Funding & aid

Tuition & fees

Estimated minimum program cost*

* Based on an average program length. For a per term fee breakdown view the tuition fee estimator.

Estimated values determined by the tuition fee estimator shall not be binding to the 番茄社区.

Ready to apply?

You can start your online application to UVic by creating a new profile or using an existing one.

Apply now 聽 聽How to apply

The School of Child and Youth Care's PhD program is undergoing a renewal and not accepting applications at this time.

Need help?

Contact Caroline Green at scycgrad@uvic.ca or 250-472-4857.

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