19 results on '"Curriculum and Pedagogy"'
Search Results
2. Isolated Voices: Perspectives of Teachers, School Nurses, and Administrators Regarding Implementation of Sexual Health Education Policy
- Author
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Mark B. Parshall, Elizabeth Dickson, and Claire D. Brindis
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Male ,Rural Population ,Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ,New Mexico ,Nurses ,Human sexuality ,Sex Education ,0302 clinical medicine ,Teenage Pregnancy ,School Nursing ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Research Articles ,Pediatric ,Practice ,Health Knowledge ,Health Policy ,4. Education ,1. No poverty ,adolescent health ,policy implementation ,Public Health and Health Services ,Social ecological model ,Female ,Health education ,Public Health ,Descriptive research ,0305 other medical science ,Psychology ,Adolescent Sexual Activity ,Research Article ,Adolescent health ,Adolescent ,Sexually Transmitted Diseases ,social ecological model ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Education ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Humans ,Curriculum ,Medical education ,030505 public health ,Poverty ,Administrative Personnel ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Philosophy ,Attitudes ,sexual health education ,secondary school ,School Teachers ,Rural area ,3.1 Primary prevention interventions to modify behaviours or promote well-being ,Risk Reduction Behavior ,Curriculum and Pedagogy - Abstract
Author(s): Dickson, Elizabeth; Parshall, Mark; Brindis, Claire D | Abstract: BackgroundComprehensive sexual health education (SHE) reduces risky sexual behavior and increases protective behavior in adolescents. It is important to understand how professionals responsible for implementing SHE policy interpret state and local policy and what influences their commitment to formal SHE policy implementation.MethodsThis descriptive study explored content and delivery of SHE policy in a rural, southwestern state with high levels of poverty, unintended adolescent pregnancy, and sexually transmitted infections. The social ecological model (SEM) was used to better understand levels of influence on the implementation of SHE policy.ResultsWe conducted telephone surveys with 38 teachers, 63 nurses, and 21 administrators in public secondary schools. There was substantial local variability in the scope and content of SHE curricula. Respondents identified significant barriers to the delivery of SHE content and minimal evaluation of whether educational objectives were met. Based on participant responses, community and organizational SEM levels had the greatest influence on SHE policy implementation, although examples of all SEM levels were identified.ConclusionsGiven perceived challenges regarding subject matter, successful SHE implementation at the local level requires committed stakeholders working in concert at the school and community levels, backed by strong policy commitment at the state level.
- Published
- 2019
3. Number of Pregnant Women at Four Dental Clinics and the Care They Received: A Dental Quality eMeasure Evaluation
- Author
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Ana Neumann, Oluwabunmi Tokede, Krisha Kumar Kookal, Muhammad F. Walji, Elizabeth Mertz, Joshua B. Even, Arti Gharpure, Aram Kim, Kristen Simmons, Suhasini Bangar, Joel M. White, Enihomo Obadan-Udoh, Alfa Yansane, Shwetha V. Kumar, Elsbeth Kalenderian, Joanna Mullins, and Sapna Panwar
- Subjects
Quality management ,020205 medical informatics ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,02 engineering and technology ,quality improvement ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pregnancy ,0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering ,Electronic Health Records ,Dental Care ,media_common ,dentistry ,Oral health education ,Prenatal Care ,pregnant patients ,General Medicine ,Health Services ,Quality Improvement ,Dental care ,Dental examination ,Female ,Patient Safety ,Curriculum ,dental quality measure ,Health and social care services research ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Concordance ,Article ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,stomatognathic system ,Clinical Research ,medicine ,Humans ,Quality (business) ,Dental/Oral and Craniofacial Disease ,dental patients ,business.industry ,Prevention ,Dental Clinics ,030206 dentistry ,medicine.disease ,stomatognathic diseases ,dental education ,Family medicine ,Accountable care ,business ,Curriculum and Pedagogy - Abstract
Process-of-care quality measure research can be used to identify gaps in the delivery of dental services to pregnant patients. The aim of this study was to evaluate the types of dental services that pregnant patients received in four dental clinics over five years as documented in the electronic health record (EHR). To accomplish this objective, the authors modified and validated a previously published claims-based dental quality measure for EHR use. After the electronic dental quality measure specifications were defined, the number of pregnant patients was calculated at three academic dental institutions and one large accountable care organization, and the types of dental care services they received over a five-year period (2013-17) were determined. Calibrated reviewers at each institution independently reviewed a sub-sample of patient charts to validate the information obtained from EHR queries, and the concordance between manual chart reviews and EHR query reports was analyzed. Of the 335,078 women aged 15-44 years who received care at the four clinics for the five reporting years, 3.9% (n=13,026) were pregnant. Among these pregnant patients, 48.9% (n=6,366) received a periodic dental examination; 30.0% (n=3,909) received a comprehensive dental exam; and 21.5% (n=2,799) received additional dental services, irrespective of comprehensive or periodic oral evaluations. Overall, the mean proportion of pregnant patients seeking care in these academic dental and group practice clinics was low, but 78.9% of them received either a periodic or comprehensive oral evaluation. Given the importance of oral health care during pregnancy, these findings suggest a need for curriculum development to incorporate prenatal oral health education in the training of dental students.
- Published
- 2019
4. Student reflections on an interdisciplinary pandemics course utilising systems thinking.
- Author
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Shelley K, Osborne NJ, Reid S, Willemsen A, and Lawler S
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- Humans, Students, Public Health education, Systems Analysis, Curriculum, Pandemics, COVID-19 epidemiology
- Abstract
Issue Addressed: The complexity and uncertainty of the COVID-19 pandemic highlights the need to change training of public health professionals in higher education by shifting from siloed specialisations to interdisciplinary collaboration. At the end of 2020 and 2021, public health professionals collaboratively designed and delivered, a week-long intensive course-Public Health in Pandemics. The aim of this research study was to understand whether the use of systems thinking in the design and delivery of the course enabled students to grasp the interdisciplinary nature of contemporary health promotion and public health practice., Research Methods: Two focus group interviews (n = 5 and 3/47) and a course opinion survey (n = 11/47) were utilised to gather information from students regarding experiences and perceptions of course design and delivery, and to determine if students felt better able to understand the complex nature of pandemics and pandemic responses., Major Findings: Students provided positive feedback on the course and believed that the course design and delivery assisted in understanding the complex nature of health problems and the ways in which health promotion and public health practitioners need to work across sectors with diverse disciplines for pandemic responses., Conclusions: The use of an integrated interdisciplinary approach to course design and delivery enabled students used systems thinking to understand the complexity in preparing for and responding to a pandemic. This approach may have utility in preparing an agile, iterative and adaptive health promotion and public health workforce more capable of facing the challenges and complexity in public health., (© 2022 The Authors. Health Promotion Journal of Australia published by John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd on behalf of Australian Health Promotion Association.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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5. The Variety of User Experiences: Literacy Roles and Stances on Story-Sharing Platforms
- Author
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Ksenia A. Korobkova and Penelope Collins
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050101 languages & linguistics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Media studies ,050301 education ,Identity (social science) ,Literacy ,New media ,Education ,Variety (cybernetics) ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Social media ,Narrative ,Sociology ,0503 education ,Social orientation ,Curriculum and Pedagogy ,Qualitative research methodology ,media_common - Abstract
Author(s): Korobkova, KA; Collins, P | Abstract: The authors explored adolescents’ literacy practices and identities on newly popular story-sharing platforms. For budding readers, writers, and designers, these sites represent new media ecologies. With a mixed-method case study of 40 globally dispersed adolescents, the authors chronicled literacy roles, identity stances, and practices on the story-sharing apps Wattpad and Figment. These media-ted practices proved consequential for the participants’ sense of investment in what they did. Findings show that adolescents divergently invested in a social orientation toward writing and an orientation focused on textual output. Different genres of practice came to the forefront, depending on users’ identity stances. Participants in these platforms took on various stances, ranging from friend to fan to reader to novice and expert writer, which cohered with attendant activities. The authors conclude with implications for research, design, and coordination of learning environments for adolescents, given the observed heterogeneity in stances, roles, practices, and experiences.
- Published
- 2018
6. The Influence of Active Gaming on Cardiorespiratory Fitness in Black and Hispanic Youth
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Rebekah A. Richert, Amanda E. Staiano, Ellen Wartella, Sandra L. Calvert, Robbie A. Beyl, and Rachel Flynn
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Male ,Gerontology ,Pediatric Obesity ,Physical fitness ,Overweight ,Oral and gastrointestinal ,0302 clinical medicine ,Heart Rate ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,Cancer ,Pediatric ,African Americans ,cardiorespiratory fitness ,Equipment Design ,Hispanic or Latino ,Health equity ,Stroke ,Cardiorespiratory Fitness ,Public Health and Health Services ,Female ,Public Health ,medicine.symptom ,Positive Youth Development ,Psychology ,Adolescent ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,No Poverty ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Article ,Childhood obesity ,Education ,03 medical and health sciences ,Social support ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,medicine ,Humans ,Obesity ,Exercise ,Metabolic and endocrine ,Nutrition ,6.7 Physical ,business.industry ,Prevention ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,video games ,Cardiorespiratory fitness ,medicine.disease ,Physical activity level ,Black or African American ,Philosophy ,Video Games ,physical fitness ,New York City ,Sedentary Behavior ,business ,Curriculum and Pedagogy - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Youth in the United States have low levels of cardiorespiratory fitness, a risk factor for childhood obesity. Lower levels of physical fitness for black and Hispanic youth contributes to health disparities. In this feasibility study we examined active video games (AVG) as a tool to improve fitness and attitudes towards physical activity during early adolescence. METHOD: A 6-week AVG program took place in a youth development program in a high poverty neighborhood in New York City. Youth aged 10 to 15 years (50% overweight or obese) participated in 2 fitness tests and completed surveys that captured barriers to physical activity pre- and post-intervention. Each week, participants played Wii Fit games for 30-minutes. RESULTS: Participants improved the number of sit-ups and step-ups they completed from pre- to post-intervention (p < .05). Participants also increased their self-efficacy, intention to exercise and perceived social support to exercise (p < .05). Youth reported a high level of enjoyment and perceived Wii Fit as ways to increase physical fitness and increase their physical activity. CONCLUSION: AVGs may be a viable alternative exercise program to increase physical activity for black and Hispanic youth living in poverty-impacted neighborhoods.
- Published
- 2018
7. School Wellness Committees Are Associated With Lower Body Mass Index Z-Scores and Improved Dietary Intakes in US Children: The Healthy Communities Study
- Author
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Patricia B. Crawford, Gail Woodward-Lopez, Klara Gurzo, Lorrene D. Ritchie, Lauren E. Au, Karen L. Webb, and Janice Kao
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,children's diet ,and promotion of well-being ,Cardiovascular ,Oral and gastrointestinal ,Nutrition Policy ,0302 clinical medicine ,health outcomes ,Mass index ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Child ,Cancer ,Pediatric ,Food Services ,Stroke ,Public Health and Health Services ,Female ,Public Health ,Child Nutritional Physiological Phenomena ,Adolescent ,Nutritional Status ,body mass index ,Health Promotion ,Standard score ,Added sugar ,Childhood obesity ,Education ,03 medical and health sciences ,Clinical Research ,wellness policies ,Environmental health ,medicine ,Humans ,Obesity ,Preschool ,Metabolic and endocrine ,School Health Services ,Breakfast ,Nutrition ,Healthy ,030109 nutrition & dietetics ,business.industry ,Prevention ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,school health ,Anthropometry ,Prevention of disease and conditions ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,Diet ,Quality Education ,Philosophy ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,3.1 Primary prevention interventions to modify behaviours or promote wellbeing ,business ,Body mass index ,Curriculum and Pedagogy - Abstract
BACKGROUND Our objective was to examine the association between school wellness committees and implementation of nutrition wellness policies and children's weight status and obesity-related dietary outcomes. METHODS A cross-sectional study was conducted of 4790 children aged 4-15 years recruited from 130 communities in the Healthy Communities Study. Multilevel statistical models assessed associations between school wellness policies and anthropometric (body mass index z-score [BMIz]) and nutrition measures, adjusting for child and community-level covariates. RESULTS Children had lower BMI z-scores (-0.11, 95% confidence interval [CI]: -0.19, -0.03) and ate breakfast more frequently (0.14 days/week, 95% CI: 0.02-0.25) if attending a school with a wellness committee that met once or more in the past year compared to attending a school with a wellness committee that did not meet/did not exist. Children had lower added sugar (p < .0001), lower energy-dense foods (p = .0004), lower sugar intake from sugar-sweetened beverages (p = .0002), and lower dairy consumption (p = .001) if attending a school with similar or stronger implementation of the nutrition components of the school wellness policies compared to other schools in the district. CONCLUSIONS A more active wellness committee was associated with lower BMI z-scores in US schoolchildren. Active school engagement in wellness policy implementation appears to play a positive role in efforts to reduce childhood obesity.
- Published
- 2018
8. Picturing Ethnic Studies: Photovoice and Youth Literacies of Social Action
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Cati V. de los Ríos
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Semi-structured interview ,Ethnic studies ,Teaching method ,05 social sciences ,Educational technology ,050301 education ,Gender studies ,Participant observation ,Education ,Critical literacy ,Photovoice ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Sociology ,0503 education ,Curriculum and Pedagogy ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Social influence - Abstract
© 2017 International Literacy Association This study uses photovoice to examine the ways in which Chicanx youths hone their critical and multimodal literacy skills in a secondary ethnic studies course. While the institutionalization of secondary ethnic studies courses swiftly expands in school districts across the United States, more research is necessary to understand the nature of these courses. This inquiry examines student photovoice compositions, participant observations, and in-depth semistructured interviews to ascertain some of the affordances of an ethnic studies course from the perspectives of participating students. The following question guides this paper: How do students articulate the importance of ethnic studies in their lives? Students’ creations of photovoice compositions allowed them to communicate ideas around ethnic studies in authentic ways that valued their cultural practices and resources. Findings highlight student literacies of social action across three domains: individual, community, and structural.
- Published
- 2017
9. Teachers and Coaches in Adolescent Social Networks Are Associated With Healthier Self-Concept and Decreased Substance Use
- Author
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Mitchell D. Wong, Rebecca N. Dudovitz, and Paul J. Chung
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Male ,Poison control ,Social Environment ,Suicide prevention ,Poverty Areas ,adolescents ,Minority Groups ,Parenting ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,Human factors and ergonomics ,Los Angeles ,self-concept ,Substance abuse ,Intergenerational Relations ,Public Health and Health Services ,Educational Status ,Female ,Public Health ,Psychology ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,Clinical psychology ,social networks ,Adolescent ,Substance-Related Disorders ,education ,Self-concept ,substance use ,Peer Group ,Article ,Education ,Odds ,Young Adult ,Interpersonal relationship ,Risk-Taking ,mental disorders ,Injury prevention ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Mentoring ,Social Support ,medicine.disease ,Self Concept ,Philosophy ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Logistic Models ,Adolescent Behavior ,School Teachers ,0503 education ,Curriculum and Pedagogy - Abstract
BACKGROUND Poor academic (eg, “I am a bad student”) and behavioral (eg, “I am a troublemaker”) self-concepts are strongly linked to adolescent substance use. Social networks likely influence self-concept. However, little is understood about the role teachers and athletic coaches play in shaping both academic and behavioral self-concepts. METHODS We analyzed cross-sectional surveys of 929 9th-12th grade low-income minority adolescents in Los Angeles assessing self-concept, social networks, and 30-day use of alcohol, marijuana and other drugs. We performed generalized estimating equations, accounting for clustering at the school level and controlling for family and peer influences and contextual factors. We also tested whether self-concept-mediated associations between relationships with teachers or coaches and 30-day substance use. RESULTS More perceived teacher support was associated with lower odds of marijuana and other drug use and better academic and behavioral self-concepts. Behavioral self-concept mediated the associations between teacher support and substance use. CONCLUSIONS By facilitating relationships with adults and improving teachers' capacity to build supportive environments, schools may positively shape how adolescents see themselves, which might help reduce adolescent substance use.
- Published
- 2016
10. Public Disclosure to Improve Physical Education in an Urban School District: Results From a 2-Year Quasi-Experimental Study
- Author
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Eric Vittinghoff, Jennifer Linchey, Kristine A. Madsen, and Hannah R. Thompson
- Subjects
Community-Based Participatory Research ,Quality management ,Urban Population ,physical activity ,Community-based participatory research ,Participatory action research ,Disclosure ,public disclosure ,Article ,policy compliance ,Education ,Physical education ,Clinical Research ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Pedagogy ,Humans ,Public disclosure ,Action research ,Child ,Medical education ,Physical Education and Training ,Schools ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Quality Improvement ,Physical activity level ,Quality Education ,Philosophy ,physical education ,Accountability ,Public Health and Health Services ,San Francisco ,Public Health ,Psychology ,Curriculum and Pedagogy - Abstract
BackgroundMany elementary schools have policies requiring a minimum amount of physical education (PE). However, few schools comply with local/state PE policy and little is known about how to improve adherence. We evaluated changes in PE among fifth-grade classes, following participatory action research efforts to improve PE quantity and policy compliance that focused on publically disclosing PE data.MethodsData were collected in 20 San Francisco public elementary schools in spring 2011 and 2013. PE schedules were collected and PE classes were directly observed (2011, N = 30 teachers; 2013, N = 33 teachers). Data on the proportion of schools meeting state PE mandates in 2011 were shared within the school district and disclosed to the general public in 2012.ResultsFrom 2011 to 2013, PE increased by 11 minutes/week based on teachers' schedules (95% CI: 3.0, 19.6) and by 14 minutes/week (95% CI: 1.9, 26.0) based on observations. The proportion of schools meeting the state PE mandate increased from 20% to 30% (p = .27).ConclusionsPositive changes in PE were seen over a 2-year period following the public disclosure of data that highlighted poor PE policy compliance. Public disclosure could be a method for ensuring greater PE policy adherence.
- Published
- 2015
11. Childhood Secondhand Smoke Exposure and ADHD-Attributable Costs to the Health and Education System
- Author
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Yanling Shi, Hai-Yen Sung, and Wendy Max
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Male ,Tobacco smoke ,Models ,Health care ,Cotinine ,Child ,health care economics and organizations ,Cancer ,Pediatric ,Schools ,public health ,General education ,smoking and tobacco ,Health Services ,humanities ,Models, Economic ,Mental Health ,Child, Preschool ,Costs and Cost Analysis ,Public Health and Health Services ,population characteristics ,Female ,Pediatric Research Initiative ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Economic ,complex mixtures ,child and adolescent health ,Education ,Clinical Research ,Environmental health ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Tobacco ,medicine ,Humans ,Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder ,Attention Deficit Disorder ,Preschool ,Secondhand smoke ,Tobacco Smoke and Health ,business.industry ,Prevention ,Public health ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,medicine.disease ,Mental health ,Health Effects of Indoor Air Pollution ,Philosophy ,Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity ,Relative risk ,Tobacco Smoke Pollution ,business ,Curriculum and Pedagogy - Abstract
Author(s): Max, Wendy; Sung, Hai-Yen; Shi, Yanling | Abstract: BackgroundChildren exposed to secondhand smoke (SHS) have higher rates of behavioral and cognitive effects, including attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), but the costs to the health care and education systems have not been estimated. We estimate these costs for school-aged children aged 5-15.MethodsThe relative risk (RR) of ADHD from SHS exposure was obtained from our previous work. SHS exposure was measured using 2 alternative approaches--reported exposure and serum cotinine-measured exposure. RRs and SHS exposure were used to determine the number of children with SHS-attributable ADHD, and mean costs of ADHD-related health care and education services were applied to obtain SHS-attributable health care and education costs.ResultsAnnual health care costs of SHS-attributable ADHD ranged from $644 million (using reported SHS exposure) to $2.05 billion (using cotinine-measured exposure). SHS-attributable costs to the education system ranged from $2.90 to $9.23 billion.ConclusionsThe costs of SHS-attributable ADHD to the education system may total more than 4 times the costs for health care. The huge economic impact of SHS exposure on the education system has not been documented previously, and suggests that reducing childhood exposure to tobacco smoke will release substantial funds that could be used for general education of all children.
- Published
- 2014
12. Assessing Use of a Standardized Dental Diagnostic Terminology in an Electronic Health Record
- Author
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Joel M. White, Nicole S. Kimmes, Muhammad F. Walji, Rachel B. Ramoni, Elsbeth Kalenderian, Paul Stark, Oluwabunmi Tokede, M. Schoonheim-Klein, Ram Vaderhobli, Anamaria Tavares, Parodontologie (OII, ACTA), OWI (ACTA), and Periodontology
- Subjects
Oral ,Current Procedural Terminology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,MEDLINE ,Vocabulary ,Terminology ,Terminology as Topic ,Diagnosis ,Controlled vocabulary ,Humans ,Electronic Health Records ,Medicine ,Medical physics ,Quality (business) ,Dental/Oral and Craniofacial Disease ,media_common ,standardized diagnostic terms ,clinic management ,dentistry ,business.industry ,Dental Records ,Procedure code ,Clinical Coding ,electronic health record ,General Medicine ,Periodontology ,Reference Standards ,stomatognathic diseases ,dental education ,diagnostic terminology ,Family medicine ,Electronic data ,Controlled ,business ,SDG 4 - Quality Education ,Curriculum and Pedagogy - Abstract
Although standardized terminologies such as the International Classification of Diseases have been in use in medicine for over a century, efforts in the dental profession to standardize dental diagnostic terms have not achieved widespread acceptance. To address this gap, a standardized dental diagnostic terminology, the EZCodes, was developed in 2009. Fifteen dental education institutions in the United States and Europe have implemented the EZCodes dental diagnostic terminology. This article reports on the utilization and valid entry of the EZCodes at three of the dental schools that have adopted this standardized dental diagnostic terminology. Electronic data on the use of procedure codes with diagnostic terms from the three schools over a period from July 2010 to June 2011 were aggregated. The diagnostic term and procedure code pairs were adjudicated by three calibrated dentists. Analyses were conducted to gain insight into the utilization and valid entry of the EZCodes diagnostic terminology in the one-year period. Error proportions in the entry of diagnostic term (and by diagnostic category) were also computed. In the twelve-month period, 29,965 diagnostic terms and 249,411 procedure codes were entered at the three institutions resulting in a utilization proportion of 12 percent. Caries and periodontics were the most frequently used categories. More than 1,000 of the available 1,321 diagnostic terms were never used. Overall, 60.5 percent of the EZCodes entries were found to be valid. The results demonstrate low utilization of EZCodes in an electronic health record and raise the need for specific training of dental providers on the importance of using dental diagnostic terminology and specifically how to use the terms in the electronic record. These findings will serve to increase the use/correct use of the EZCodes dental diagnostic terminology and ultimately create a reliable platform for undertaking clinical, outcomes, and quality improvement-related research.
- Published
- 2013
13. Identifying Student Misconceptions in Biomedical Course Assessments in Dental Education
- Author
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Mark Dellinges, Kurt Schroeder, Donald A. Curtis, and Samuel L. Lind
- Subjects
Male ,Therapeutic Misconception ,assessment ,education ,Dental education ,Education ,Mathematics education ,Humans ,Medicine ,Nonparametric ,Patient treatment ,Dental/Oral and Craniofacial Disease ,Student learning ,educational methodology ,Clinical treatment ,Analysis of Variance ,business.industry ,Statistics ,dental students ,General Medicine ,humanities ,dental education ,Dentistry ,Scale (social sciences) ,Dental ,Female ,Educational Measurement ,multiple-choice questions ,business ,Curriculum and Pedagogy - Abstract
Dental student performance on examinations has traditionally been estimated by calculating the percentage of correct responses rather than by identifying student misconceptions. Although misconceptions can impede student learning and are refractory to change, they are seldom measured in biomedical courses in dental schools. Our purpose was to determine if scaling student confidence and the clinical impact of incorrect answers could be used on multiple-choice questions (MCQs) to identify potential student misconceptions. To provide a measure of student misconception, faculty members indicated the correct answer on twenty clinically relevant MCQs and noted whether the three distracters represented potentially benign, inappropriate, or harmful application of student knowledge to patient treatment. A group of 105 third-year dental students selected what they believed was the most appropriate answer and their level of sureness (1 to 4 representing very unsure, unsure, sure, and very sure) about their answer. Misconceptions were defined as sure or very sure incorrect responses that could result in inappropriate or harmful clinical treatment. In the results, 5.2 percent of the answers represented student misconceptions, and 74 percent of the misconceptions were from four case-based interpretation questions. The mean student sureness was 3.6 on a 4.0 scale. The students' sureness was higher with correct than with incorrect answers (p0.05). This study found that scaling student confidence and clinical impact of incorrect answers provided helpful insights into student thinking in multiple-choice assessment.
- Published
- 2012
14. The Absence of Knowledge in Australian Curriculum Reforms
- Author
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Yates, L, Collins, C, Yates, L, and Collins, C
- Abstract
This article draws on a study of Australian curriculum shifts between 1975 and 2005 to take up two themes of this special issue: the question about what conceptions of knowledge are now at work; and the consideration of global influences and national specificities in the reformulations of curriculum. It discusses two important approaches to curriculum in Australia in recent times, the ‘Statements and Profiles’ activity of the early 1990s, and the ‘Essential Learnings’ formulations of the past decade. The global tendencies we see at work in these two major approaches are, first, an increasing emphasis on externally managing and auditing student progress as a key driver of how curriculum policies are being constructed; and, secondly, a growing emphasis on approaching curriculum aims in terms of what students should be able to do rather than what they should know. We argue that in the contexts we discuss here, these approaches offered a way of marrying 1970s progressive views on child development and knowledge‐as‐process (views widely held by influential curriculum professionals in Australia) with late 20th century technologies of micro‐management and instrumental agendas favoured by politicians — but that many questions about knowledge were left off the agenda.
- Published
- 2010
15. The role of feedback from phonology to orthography in orthographic learning: an extension of item-based accounts
- Author
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McKague, M, Davis, C, Pratt, C, Johnston, MB, McKague, M, Davis, C, Pratt, C, and Johnston, MB
- Abstract
Skilled readers were trained to recognise either the oral (n=44) or visual form (n=40) of a set of 32 novel words (oral and visual instantiation, respectively). Training involved learning the ‘meanings’ for the instantiated words and was followed by a visual lexical decision task in which the instantiated words were mixed with real English words and untrained pseudowords, and the instantiated words were to be considered as words. The phonology‐to‐orthography consistency (feedback consistency) of the instantiated words was manipulated to investigate the role of feedback from phonology in orthographic learning. Masked consonant and vowel‐preserving form primes were used in the lexical decision task as probes of orthographic learning. Feedback‐consistent instantiated words were recognised significantly faster in lexical decision than feedback‐inconsistent instantiated words, and facilitation was significantly greater from consonant‐preserving than vowel‐preserving primes for orally but not visually instantiated words. The results support the hypothesis that orthographic representations based on a consonant frame can be generated from the speech signal before encountering the printed forms, and that feedback from phonology is involved in the early stages of orthographic learning.
- Published
- 2008
16. Cognitive modelling and the behaviour genetics of reading
- Author
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Castles, A, Bates, T, Coltheart, M, Luciano, M, Martin, NG, Castles, A, Bates, T, Coltheart, M, Luciano, M, and Martin, NG
- Abstract
While it is well known that reading is highly heritable, less has been understood about the bases of these genetic influences. In this paper, we review the research that we have been conducting in recent years to examine genetic and environmental influences on the particular reading processes specified in the dual‐route cognitive model of reading. We argue that a detailed understanding of the role of genetic factors in reading acquisition requires the delineation and measurement of precise phenotypes, derived from well‐articulated models of the reading process. We report evidence for independent genetic influences on the lexical and nonlexical reading processes represented in the dual‐route model, based on studies of children with particular subtypes of dyslexia, and on univariate and multivariate genetic modelling of reading performance in the normally reading population.
- Published
- 2006
17. Japanese Grammar: The Connecting Point by NOMURA, KIMIHIKO
- Author
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Yoko Hasegawa
- Subjects
Linguistics and Language ,Japanese grammar ,Computer science ,Languages & Linguistics ,Linguistics ,Point (geometry) ,Arithmetic ,Curriculum and Pedagogy ,Language and Linguistics - Published
- 2012
18. In search of pedagogical content knowledge in science: Developing ways of articulating and documenting professional practice
- Author
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Loughran, J, Mulhall, P, Berry, A, Loughran, J, Mulhall, P, and Berry, A
- Published
- 2004
19. Patterns of analogical reasoning among beginning readers
- Author
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Farrington-Flint, L, Wood, C, Canobi, KH, Faulkner, D, Farrington-Flint, L, Wood, C, Canobi, KH, and Faulkner, D
- Abstract
Despite compelling evidence that analogy skills are available to beginning readers, few studies have actually explored the possibility of identifying individual differences in young children's analogy skills in early reading. The present study examined individual differences in children's use of orthographic and phonological relations between words as they learn to read. Specifically, the study addressed whether general analogical reasoning, short‐term memory and domain‐specific reading skills explain 5‐ to 6‐year‐olds' reading analogies (n=51). The findings revealed an orthographic analogy effect accompanied by high levels of phonological priming. Single‐word reading and use of visual analogies predicted young children's orthographic and phonological analogies in the regression analyses. However, different findings emerged from exploring profiles based on individual differences in reasoning skill. Indeed, when individual differences in composite scores of orthographic and phonological analogy were examined, group membership was predicted by word reading and early phonological knowledge, rather than general analogical reasoning skills. The findings highlight the usefulness of exploring individual differences in children's analogy development in the early stages of learning to read.
- Published
- 2004
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