11 results on '"Bowles, Devin C."'
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2. Obtaining Time-Critical Feedback: Ask for Health Promotion Students for Feedback After Each Class.
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Davies, Patsi, Bowles, Devin C., Fawkes, Sally, and James, Erica L.
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HEALTH promotion , *PSYCHOLOGICAL feedback , *STUDENT health , *STUDENT engagement - Abstract
Health promotion teaching and learning is informed by the competencies of our profession, and importantly, it involves continually improving our practice so that, in turn, we improve the learning experiences of our students. The student voice is pivotal to this teaching and learning opportunity, and while we might seek student feedback after we have finished teaching a course, it is less common to obtain feedback in a regular and routine manner throughout the delivery of the course. This is a lost opportunity for students, teachers, and for health promotion practice. One mechanism to redress this gap is the use of "time-critical-feedback," which involves a teacher undertaking the collection, analysis, and use of information about the learning experiences of students after each in-class or online session. Crucially, as a form of student-to-teacher feedback, time-critical-feedback can enable us to understand the impact of our teaching through the eyes of our learners, resolve concerns more quickly, enhance the joy of teaching, increase student engagement, and strengthen student voice. After all, our learners are the eyes, ears, and hearts of our impact. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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3. Teaching but Not Preaching: Delivering Compulsory Ma-ori Public Health Content in an Undergraduate Health Science Degree.
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Ahuriri-Driscoll, Annabel, Bowles, Devin C., Fawkes, Sally, and James, Erica L.
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PUBLIC health education , *MAORI (New Zealand people) , *UNDERGRADUATES , *PUBLIC health , *CURRICULUM planning , *BACHELOR of science degree - Abstract
Increasingly recognized as an educational domain in its own right, Ma-ori health is a central focus of medical and health sciences curricula in Aotearoa/New Zealand. As part of the Bachelor of Health Sciences offered at the University of Canterbury, Ma-ori health content is taught in a compulsory introductory course "Ma-ori Health Issues & Opportunities" (HLTH 106), positioned at the interface of Ma-ori health and public health. The course follows a trajectory through Ma-ori history, the Treaty of Waitangi, colonization, and the emergence of inequities, ending with structural and Ma-ori-led approaches for redress. Much of the content challenges prevailing public discourses relating to Aotearoa/New Zealand's settlement and status as an egalitarian society, the basis of many students' preconceptions. A social determinants of health frame has supported the navigation of this "tricky" terrain, and the construction of evidence-based counternarratives. Iterative curriculum development demonstrated the value of taking account not only of learner needs but also the characteristics of public health that may hinder learning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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4. COVID-19: The Elephant in the Virtual Classroom.
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Bowles, Devin C. and Sendall, Marguerite C.
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VIRTUAL classrooms , *COVID-19 - Published
- 2020
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5. Cross-Cultural Scholarship of Pedagogy in Health Promotion.
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Bowles, Devin C., Fawkes, Sally, and James, Erica L.
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HEALTH promotion , *TEACHING , *SCHOLARSHIPS , *SCHOLARLY method , *TEACHER-student relationships - Abstract
Highlights from the article: Scaffolding on the work of [1], [4], and others, [5] contend that the scholarship of teaching and learning must adhere to key characteristics of scholarship more generally. The best health promotion pedagogy accounts for the needs of specific students, and specific cohorts of students, and is therefore varied. Many classes already have students from a variety of national, ethnic, class, and religious backgrounds, so many health promotion pedagogy scholars are already accustomed to cross-cultural communication. Examination of student heterogeneity is important in pedagogical scholarship because it recognizes that student perspectives will not be uniform.
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- 2019
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6. Conferences as Coaching Opportunities: A Case Study of an Assignment Incorporating Student-Produced Videos.
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Hickling, Siobhan, Bhatti, Alexandra, Bowles, Devin C., Fawkes, Sally, and James, Erica L.
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COACHING (Athletics) , *PUBLIC health education , *TEACHER effectiveness , *STUDENT engagement , *CASE studies , *VIDEOS , *GRADUATE students - Abstract
To ensure student engagement and optimal preparation of the future workforce, academic educators frequently and repeatedly update curricula and pedagogic approaches. Evaluation of these updates often focuses on how well the chosen educational technique achieves its goal. For updates that add a new learning goal, it is important that evaluation considers the value of the goal in a crowded curriculum. Peer-to-peer feedback and coaching provides a low-investment and timely method of evaluation and can be facilitated by conferences focused on pedagogy. This coaching article uses a case study of an assignment for postgraduate students incorporating student-produced videos developed independently at three Australian universities. The authors learned of one another's work in preparation for delivering presentations at a conference focused on teaching public health and decided to collaborate on a single workshop. In the process, they reinforced and expanded their understanding of the benefits and important considerations for a video assignment and engaged in two-way coaching with conference delegates from across Australasia. Benefits include teaching students skills that will become increasingly important in their future careers, the potential for enhanced student engagement due to novelty, and resistance to plagiarism. Important considerations include explaining the aim and parameters of the assessment as well as minimizing student anxiety. Preparation for the workshop led to refinements in some of the assessments. This article is simultaneously an affirmation of the value of peer-to-peer coaching opportunities that can arise at pedagogy conferences and an argument for the value of video assignments in public health education. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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7. Message From the Co–Guest Editors: Scholarship of Teaching and Learning in Public Health Education in Australasia.
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James, Erica L., Fawkes, Sally, and Bowles, Devin C.
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SCHOLARLY method , *PUBLIC health education , *HEALTH facilities - Abstract
Highlights from the article: Message From the Co-Guest Editors: Scholarship of Teaching and Learning in Public Health Education in Australasia The Council of Academic Public Health Institutions Australasia (CAPHIA) is the umbrella organization representing public health in universities throughout Australia, New Zealand, and surrounding island nations (referred to as Australasia [see [1]]). In addition to orienting a global audience to public health higher education in Australasia, [7] highlight the need for renewed efforts in evaluating undergraduate public health education across the region and raise the important issue of accreditation standards.
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- 2019
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8. Adapting to Teaching During a Pandemic: Pedagogical Adjustments for the Next Semester of Teaching During COVID-19 and Future Online Learning.
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Hickling, Siobhan, Bhatti, Alexandra, Arena, Gina, Kite, James, Denny, Justin, Spencer, Nancy L. I., and Bowles, Devin C.
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COVID-19 , *PUBLIC health education , *COVID-19 pandemic , *COMMUNICABLE diseases , *PANDEMICS , *SOCIAL distancing - Abstract
COVID-19 has altered public health higher education and its impact on pedagogy will be felt long into the future. In response to social distancing measures, teaching academics implemented a number of changes to curricula. It is important to better understand and begin to evaluate these changes, as well as set a course for future changes to public health curricula both during and after the pandemic to best enable transformative learning. Teaching academics have an understanding of academic hierarchies and student perceptions and are well placed to provide insights into current and future changes to pedagogy in response to the pandemic. A survey was developed to examine changes that academics had made to their teaching in response to COVID-19. Responses were received from 63 public health teaching academics from five universities in Australia, the United States, and Canada. Public health teaching academics rapidly implemented a number of changes to their teaching, including alterations that enabled online teaching. The great majority of changes to teaching were related to tools or techniques, such as synchronous tutorials delivered in a video meeting room. There remains further work for the public health pedagogy community in reevaluating teaching aims and teaching philosophies in light of the COVID-19 pandemic. This could include examination of the weighting of different topics, including communicable diseases, in curricula. A series of questions to assist academics reformulating their curricula is provided. Public health teaching evolved rapidly to meet the challenges of COVID-19; however, ongoing adaptation is necessary to further enhance pedagogy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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9. Does Increasing the Experiential Component Improve Efficacy of the "This Is Public Health" Photo Essay Task? A Nonrandomized Trial.
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Dundas, Kate, Johnson, Natalie A., Paras, Lorraine, Hancock, Stephen, Barker, Daniel, Chiu, Simon, James, Erica L., Bowles, Devin C., and Fawkes, Sally
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PUBLIC health education , *PUBLIC health , *EXPERIENTIAL learning , *DEMOGRAPHIC characteristics , *ACTIVE learning - Abstract
Opportunities for evaluating experiential learning activities in tertiary public health education are growing. It has previously been shown that utilizing the "This is Public Health" (TIPH) sticker campaign as an experiential photo essay task led to increased understanding of public health. Emerging mobile technologies such as geocaching, which provide an opportunity to increase the experiential component of the TIPH photo essay task, have not been evaluated. This study aimed to determine whether adding geocaching to the TIPH photo essay task increased the efficacy of learning about public health, when compared with the TIPH photo essay task alone. A two-arm nonrandomized trial was conducted with 785 allied health and preprofessional teaching students studying first-year public health courses. Students were allocated to either the TIPH photo essay task (n = 210) or the TIPH photo task plus geocaching (n = 92) according to the course they were enrolled into. The primary outcome was the quality of the definition of public health provided by students, which was assessed using the Definition of Public Health Rating Scale. Data were analyzed using a linear mixed model. Of 302 (39%) students who consented to participate, 212 (70%) provided baseline and follow-up data. After adjusting for baseline demographic differences, the geocaching group had improved knowledge of public health at follow-up according to the Definition of Public Health Rating Scale (increasing 0.29 units more than the traditional group; p =.03). As this increase in knowledge score is unlikely to be of practical significance, the additional burden of implementing geocaching may not be justified. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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10. Differences in Student Performance in Epidemiology Depending on Study Mode.
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Mathieu, Erin, Killedar, Anagha, Driscoll, Tim, Bowles, Devin C., Fawkes, Sally, and James, Erica L.
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ACADEMIC degrees , *LOW-income students , *STUDENT health , *CURRICULUM , *ACADEMIC ability - Abstract
Studies regarding the effectiveness of online learning compared with that of face to face (F2F) learning are conflicting. Some studies show students studying online have better outcomes, some show they have worse outcomes, and others show there is no difference. This retrospective cohort study compares competence in epidemiological concepts at the end of a graduate unit between Masters of Public Health students who studied F2F and those who studied online. In this unit, F2F students attended a 1-hour lecture (which was recorded) and a 2-hour tutorial each week. Online students listened to the recorded lecture and covered the same tutorial material through a facilitated asynchronous discussion board or a weekly synchronous 2-hour webinar. Students completed the same optional in-semester assignment and end of semester open-book exam. The results from 442 students (55% F2F) who completed the unit between 2015 and 2018 inclusive were included. The analysis compared final unit marks, controlling for prior academic performance. Results indicate that competence was reasonable in both formats of the unit but higher in F2F students, who after adjustment for prior degree academic performance achieved an average of 4.6 (95% confidence interval [2.2, 7.1]) more marks than online students. The better performance for F2F students was particularly true for students with poorer prior academic performance. These results suggest that F2F mode was more effective than online mode, particularly for students with a lower prior academic performance. Course instructors could usefully focus on enhancing student–instructor interaction and targeting students with lower academic ability when delivering online units of study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2019
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11. Opportunities and Challenges for Undergraduate Public Health Education in Australia and New Zealand.
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Luu, Xuan, Dundas, Kate, James, Erica L., Bowles, Devin C., and Fawkes, Sally
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PUBLIC health education , *UNDERGRADUATES , *GRADUATE students , *U.S. states , *CURRICULUM implementation , *CURRICULUM planning - Abstract
The international emergence of undergraduate education in public health has transformed the public health education landscape. While this shift is clearest and most widely evaluated in the United States, efforts in other parts of the world—such as Australasia—have not kept pace. This article aims to redress the evidence gap by identifying and discussing the different approaches through which Australian and New Zealand universities deliver public health education at the undergraduate level. A content analysis was conducted of online handbook information published by 47 universities across Australia and New Zealand, to gauge the various ways in which these universities implement undergraduate public health education. Each offering identified was assigned to one of four predetermined categories. Of the 47 universities, 45 were found to offer some form of undergraduate coursework in public health. Offerings took primarily the form of single subjects. Less commonly implemented were specializations (n = 20), stand-alone undergraduate degrees (n = 11), and double degree combinations (n = 6). This breadth of activity highlights the need for renewed efforts in evaluating undergraduate public health education across the region. Further research is recommended into three areas: (1) emerging best practices in curriculum development and implementation, (2) explorations of public health accreditation in the region, and (3) the outcomes achieved by students and graduates of undergraduate public health degrees across Australia and New Zealand. These efforts will ultimately strengthen the operationalization and contribution of this education in helping shape the future public health workforce in Australasia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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