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When minutes matter: A university emergency notification system dataset.

Authors :
Menn M
Payne-Purvis C
Chaney BH
Chaney JD
Source :
Data in brief [Data Brief] 2021 Feb 26; Vol. 35, pp. 106910. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Feb 26 (Print Publication: 2021).
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The data presented in this data article were collected at three points in the 2012-2013 academic year; Fall 2012, Spring 2013, and Summer 2013 from undergraduate students enrolled in an introductory health education course at a large university in the United States. The data regarding undergraduate students' perceptions of and experiences with the campus emergency notification system were ascertained using a self-administered online-delivered survey instrument. The data included in the Mendeley Data repository affiliated with this data article encompass closed- and open-ended responses from 746 undergraduate students. Closed-ended questions included items based on central constructs from Technology Acceptance Model research-perceived usefulness, perceived ease of use, attitudes toward use, and behavioral intention. Survey questions also assessed students' actual use of emergency notification messages, students' perceived self-efficacy to respond to future potential emergency notifications, and demographics and technology use characteristics. This research team asked open-ended questions to collect students' ideas for systematic improvement in their own words. Descriptive statistics for demographic variables, participant characteristic variables, and scale variables were conducted in SPSS 27 and are provided in tables. The open-ended question response frequencies were also calculated in SPSS 27 and are provided within a supplemental PDF. To date, no data pertaining to an institution of higher education's emergency notification system are published for open access use. This article provides open access data and surveys that campus emergency planners, researchers, and health education specialists can use to inform emergency communication plans, improve the content of critical campus alert messages, structure future emergency notification studies, and frame future emergency notification system evaluations. This research team anticipates these data will help campus emergency personnel craft more effective messages and optimize their channel mixture to make emergency notifications reach and resonate with students in situations when minutes matter. The data for this article are hosted in a .csv file for widespread access in the following Mendeley Data repository: https://data.mendeley.com/datasets/6jdwfbwzk5/1.<br />Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships, which have, or could be perceived to have, influenced the work reported in this article.<br /> (© 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2352-3409
Volume :
35
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Data in brief
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33816727
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dib.2021.106910