This exploratory analysis examined publicly available assigned course readings from undergraduate degree programs in Family Science within universities across the United States and Canada. It illustrates the constellation of resources used during one semester. Issues related to publication processes, relevance, discipline-specificity, accessibility, and representation are explored. Results demonstrate that five of the eight most frequently textbooks focus on individual development and societal context, one focuses largely on human development and family studies, and one on family and consumer sciences as distinct fields of inquiry and employment. Findings indicate consideration needs to be given to the ways in which reading selection impacts relevant knowledge being disseminated to students in the field of Family Science, particularly given the heavy reliance on commercially published textbooks. Results point to the need for discipline-specific resources, which could be achieved by scholars with interdisciplinary backgrounds and training in family scholarship. Recommendations for enhancing the existing state of Family Science resources through emphasis on accessibility, usability, and inclusion are provided, with implications and suggestions for future research.
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