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Cultivating Health Policy Analysis and Communication Skills in Undergraduate Public Health Education: An Active Learning Approach
Author(s) -
Denise D. Payán
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
pedagogy in health promotion
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2373-3802
pISSN - 2373-3799
DOI - 10.1177/23733799211003248
Subject(s) - curriculum , experiential learning , active learning (machine learning) , medical education , health policy , public health , public relations , policy analysis , health education , psychology , medicine , pedagogy , political science , nursing , computer science , artificial intelligence , law
Public health programs are increasingly offering health policy content to meet workforce demand for public health professionals with health policy analysis and communication skills. Undergraduate public health education in health policy and related curriculum is lacking. Existing work describes service- and experiential learning approaches, which may not be feasible in large courses or public health programs with limited administrative or financial resources. This article describes health policy curriculum, learning objectives, and course activities (i.e., individual writing assignment, mock policy debate, and policy analysis exercise) that integrate an active learning approach and use simulation to develop policy analysis and communication skills in an undergraduate classroom setting. An active learning approach can increase teaching effectiveness, critical thinking, peer interaction, and student engagement to cultivate these applied skills. The described curriculum has been used in various modalities (in-person, hybrid, and remote) with positive reception in a public research university with a high percentage of first-generation college students. Student course evaluations and an independent assessment of the policy analysis exercise reflect high student interest, engagement, problem solving, satisfaction, perceived benefits, and application of policy analysis and communication skills, providing support for teaching health policy curriculum to undergraduate students using an active learning approach. The discussion includes strategies to address resistance by public health instructors and students to using active learning techniques.

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