Results - A combined total of 114 volunteers were recruited via the fairs.
- In all, 596 pictures were drawn. 176 were not approved for guessing because they were poorly drawn, unfinished, or because they contained inappropriate content.
- A total of 1,758 guesses were made. 1,488 matched the correct terms, while 270 were incorrect.
Examples Doodle Health Guesses by Community
Community
|
Correct
Guesses
|
Incorrect guesses
|
Total # of guesses made
|
Accuracy
|
American Indian/ Alaska Native
|
23
|
9
|
32
(1.82%)
|
71.88%
|
Asian
|
212
|
46
|
258
(14.68%)
|
82.17%
|
Native Hawaiian/ Pacific Islander
|
43
|
8
|
51
(2.90%)
|
84.31%
|
Black or African American
|
46
|
5
|
51
(2.90%)
|
90.20%
|
Latino
|
221
|
41
|
262
(14.90%)
|
84.35%
|
White
|
878
|
149
|
1027
(58.42%)
|
85.49%
|
Other
|
65
|
12
|
77
(4.38%)
|
84.42%
|
Total
|
1488
|
270
|
1758
(100%)
|
84.64%
| Game Testing Results Rebudd: A Mental Health App for Adolescents - Anxiety is one of the most common, debilitating mental illnesses, especially among youth
- Around 25 percent of American adolescents 13 to 18 years of age are impacted by anxiety
- Affected individuals may experience many symptoms including fear, nervousness, absence from social activities, poor school performance, eating disorders, etc.
App Focus - To meet this gap, students chose to focus on the beneficial effects of calming colors and sounds that have been backed up by supporting literature
- Students decided to develop a sensory-oriented application providing several calming environments and encompassing therapeutic color, sound, and rhythmic gaming mechanics
- This app would assist adolescents with stress, nerves, anxious tendencies, or anxiety
Screenshots Testing Process Discussion The game design was appealing to test users Change in heart rate was inconsistent Improvement in wordsearch performance in Rebudd users was dramatic Small sample size in preliminary testing Insufficient levels and length of game play Future Research - ChildrenLikeMine
- How to improve health? (Starting early?)
- How to attract students to STEM?
Acknowledgements National Institutes of Health (NIH) for grant support of this project (G08 LM011546-03 Graphics to Enhance Health Education Materials for Underrepresented Populations) Summer interns: Emma Goeas, Grace Hogan, Catherine Mellette, Lane McCaslin T.C.Williams HS Biotechnology Hello! Jennifer Ushe Technology Education Teacher T.C.Williams HS Jennifer.Ushe@acps.k12.va.us A Teacher’s Perspective The Work 2016-2017 - Doodle Health
- Application to address medical disparity
- Summer Internship & AMIA
2017-2018 - CITI Program Certification
- Children Like Mine
- “Website”
- Background
- Data
- Prevention
- Patient Experience
Challenges & Successes Challenges - New experience
- Addressing biotechnology standards
- Time to implement
- Relevance to curriculum
Successes - Enhanced Curriculum
- Exposure
- Collaboration
A Student’s Perspective The Work 2016-2017 - Classroom experience
- Field trip and presentations
- Four Students
- Summer Internship
- AMIA Conference
Challenges & Successes Challenges - Learning curve
- Coding
- Time
Successes - Coding
- Creating the game
- Testing the game
The Impact - Exposure to bioinformatics and coding
- Real-world work experience
- Impact on college & career readiness
- Confidence!
Presentation
Linda Zanin, EdD, RDMS GWU SMHS
Laura Evans, RN, MSN
Health & Medical Sciences T.C. Williams High School
GW School of Medicine and Health Sciences
Alexandria City Public Schools
T.C. Williams High School
Academy of Health Sciences
Partnership
Academy Goals
- Prepare students for high-demand, high-wage and high-skill careers in health and medical sciences
- Grow the number of industry certifications awarded to high school students
- Provide internships, mentorships, clinical and cooperative experiences
- Increase program completion, graduation rates, college readiness, transition to postsecondary education and workforce readiness
- Reduce proportion of students requiring remediation in college
Outcomes
- Industry Certifications
-- Post High School Certifications
- Associate’s Degree
- Bachelor’s Degree
-- Guaranteed Admission to GW SMHS
- College Transcript
- Reduce postsecondary costs and time for degree completion
- Workforce Readiness
7 Pathways
Existing
- Surgical Medical Sciences
- Nursing
New
- Biomedical Informatics
- Sports Medicine
- Emergency Medical Services
- Pharmacy
- Medical Laboratory Sciences
Keys to Success
- Access
- Finances
- Ensuring program quality
- Transferability of credit
Eligibility
- Cohort of rising 9th graders
- 150 students in cohort maximum
- Identified through a competitive application process
- Statement of interest
- Transcript
- 3 letters of recommendation
- Parent letter of support
- Committee of ACPS and industry partners review applications
Outreach
- Press releases
- ACPS express
- Information session with community leaders
- Information sessions for parents and students
- Academic advising
- Business and industry collaboration
- INOVA and other health systems
- Professional associations
Counseling and Support Services
- Student counseling
- Family and Community Engagement (FACE)
- Increase program participation among eligible traditionally underserved
- ACPS Support
- Textbooks
- Equipment
- Industry certifications
- Space
Addressing Financial Barriers
- Financial policies can create barriers for middle and low income student participation
- There are no costs or fees to participate in GW SMHS dual enrollment courses
- Funding
- Scholarship
- GW SMHS has committed scholarship funding
Academic Rigor
To ensure program quality and academic integrity:
- Students required to attend Summer Bridge Program
- College readiness preparation
- Taught by ACPS teachers
- Register non-matriculated GW student
- Dual enrollment courses will meet the same level and academic rigor as courses taught on GW’s campus
- Dual enrollment students held to postsecondary standards
- Assessment - College level
Ensuring Program Quality – Teachers
Health Science Academy dual enrollment teachers:
- Hiring criteria - meet ACPS and GW hiring standards and demonstrate readiness
- Adjunct faculty appointments – nonpaid
- Support - faculty liaison and subject matter experts
- Professional development
- Evaluation - Faculty assessment conducted
Ensuring Program Quality – Evaluation
Academic research and data underscore benefits of dual enrollment
- Course evaluations
- Student participation
- Outcomes
- Dual enrollment program will undergo evaluation
- National standards
- Data collection
- Faculty, student and program evaluation
Transferability of Credits
- GW courses transfer to postsecondary institutions that accept dual enrollment credit as transfer credit
- No guarantee - credit transfer depends on college policies and student’s chosen field of study
- Graduates who pursue their bachelor’s degree at GW SMHS are guaranteed transferability and pathways for guaranteed admission
Next Steps
- Virginia Governors Academy
- Advisory Board
- Planning Committees
- Communications
- Students, parents, teachers, high school administration, community and industry partners
- Funding
- Scholarship
Contacts
Linda Zanin, EdD, RDMS
Director of Strategic Partnerships, GW SMHS
lzanin@gwu.edu
Laura Evans, RN, MSN
Health & Medical Sciences Instructor
T.C. Williams High School
Laura.Evans@acps.k12.va.us
Bridging the Silos
Health
Education
Children’s National Internal School Health Collaborative Children’s National is a school-friendly health care system designed to help all children reach optimal health and achieve their fullest academic potential. For Children’s National Employees Only Next Meeting: May 22, 2018 from 9-11am Join us! Email jdeangelo@childrensnational.org JUNE 19, 2018 SCHOOL HEALTH SYMPOSIUM To receive registration information, contact: chai@childrensnational.org Registration is free
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