The Challenge

 translating family scholarship into real-world skills   

Video: The problem in one minute

The gap isn’t research.

It’s translation.

Family scholarship is rich and wide-ranging, but too often it remains compartmentalized within specialized fields, with no clear pathway for translating it into durable skills that all students can use in real-world decision-making and public life.

Challege: Turning Family Scholarship into Teachable Competencies

A Persistant communication gap

Decades of interdisciplinary research affirm the family’s central role in society, yet that knowledge is not being communicated clearly or consistently, especially to younger generations outside of marriage and family studies.  

The missing piece: an educational framework

The problem is not a lack of research. It is the absence of a practical model that translates research into critical skills and competencies that the next generation can apply beyond the classroom.

Existing tools are not designed for broad learning

When knowledge is scattered across disciplines, it is difficult to turn this into practical, teachable skills. Existing approaches do not offer an accessible, transferable form of literacy comparable to media literacy.

The consequences are real 

Public discourse around family is often ambiguous, fragmented, politicized, and oversimplified. When understanding is low and superficial, marriage and family can become devalued in personal and public life.

Challenge: Counteracting misconceptions and cultural messages that
perpetuate family illiteracy

 There is an intergenerational dimension of family literacy: both knowledge and misunderstanding about the family can be transmitted across generations, shaping attitudes, values, and behaviors in lasting ways. 

Video: negative consequences of family illiteracy

The Solution? A Literacy-Based Method & Framework 

Clear, Shared Language

  • A common framework for communicating how families shape human experience

  • Improves clarity, consistency, and effectiveness in teaching and public communication

  • Counters confusion caused by technical jargon, fragmentation, and oversimplification

Teachable Skills and Core Competencies

  • Practical literacy that students can apply across fields and professions

  • Builds the ability to access, analyze, evaluate, and apply family research

  • Translates interdisciplinary scholarship into durable, transferable competencies

Family and public life

  • Connects family life to real-world outcomes

  • Equips learners to discern and explain the family’s role in public life and institutions

  • Elevates the perceived value of marriage and family in both individual and public life

Addressing Family Illiteracy Across Generations

  • Corrects misconceptions that weaken families and distort public understanding

  • Addresses widespread misunderstanding of how stable marriages and families support well-being

  • Recognizes that both knowledge and misunderstanding about family life can be passed down, shaping long-term attitudes and behavior

Video: Turning family research into skills  

Why this matters on high school and college campuses

On campus, students absorb fragmented messages about marriage, and family life. At the same time, public discussion is often unclear, politicized, and oversimplified.

Although family scholarship spans disciplines and decades, too often it remains locked inside specialized fields, hard to access, and difficult to convert into skills students can carry into real-world decision-making.

As a result, it can be difficult to teach why families matter across generations and institutions, and many students are not equipped with the skills and discernment needed to evaluate claims about marriage and family.

We’re committed to equipping the next generation with the knowledge, discernment, and skills required to understand the importance of families in individual and public life.

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