In descending order, by date published.
3/22/2007 (reprinted)
Authors: Sam Quick
Departments: Family and Consumer Sciences
Series: FCS: Human Development and Family Relationships (FCS7 series)
Size: 147 kb
Pages: 2
3/22/2007 (reprinted)
Authors: Sam Quick
Departments: Family and Consumer Sciences
Series: FCS: Human Development and Family Relationships (FCS7 series)
Size: 134 kb
Pages: 4
3/22/2007 (reprinted)
Authors: Sam Quick
Departments: Family and Consumer Sciences
Series: FCS: Human Development and Family Relationships (FCS7 series)
Size: 213 kb
Pages: 8
1/31/2002 (reprinted)
Authors: Sam Quick
Departments: Family and Consumer Sciences
Series: FCS: Human Development and Family Relationships (FCS7 series)
Size: 176 kb
Pages: 8
11/25/2000 (reprinted)
Authors: Sam Quick
Departments: Family and Consumer Sciences
Series: FCS: Human Development and Family Relationships (FCS7 series)
Size: 449 kb
Pages: 2
11/25/2000 (reprinted)
Authors: Sam Quick
Departments: Family and Consumer Sciences
Series: FCS: Human Development and Family Relationships (FCS7 series)
Size: 145 kb
Pages: 8
9/1/2000 (minor revision)
Authors: Sam Quick
Departments: 4-H Programs
Series: 4-H Individual and Family Resources: Babysitting (4JL series)
Size: 836 kb
Pages: 20
4/20/2000 (reprinted)
Authors: Sam Quick
Departments: Family and Consumer Sciences
Series: FCS: Cultural and Miscellaneous (FCS1 series)
Size: 106 kb
Pages: 6
9/12/1998 (reprinted)
Authors: Sam Quick
Departments: Family and Consumer Sciences
Series: FCS: Human Development and Family Relationships (FCS7 series)
Size: 260 kb
Pages: 2
9/1/1998 (reprinted)
Authors: Sam Quick
Departments: Family and Consumer Sciences
Series: FCS: Human Development and Family Relationships (FCS7 series)
Size: 239 kb
Pages: 5
12/1/1997 (minor revision)
Authors: Sam Quick
Departments: Family and Consumer Sciences
Series: FCS: Human Development and Family Relationships (FCS7 series)
Size: 73 kb
Pages: 2
5/20/1997 (reprinted)
Authors: Sam Quick
Living in a family means living with constant change, and change often causes stress. Some families, however, consistently are better than others at coping with the stress that some problems create. Family scientists call these successful families "strong families." Various scales measuring factors such as the quality of the marriage relationship and the quality of parent-child relationships help to distinguish between strong and not-so-strong families.
Departments: Family and Consumer Sciences
Series: FCS: Human Development and Family Relationships (FCS7 series)
Size: 203 kb
Pages: 4