| Literature DB >> 28919668 |
Jeffrey Olivet1, Suzanne Zerger2, R Neil Greene1, Rachael R Kenney1, Daniel B Herman3.
Abstract
This study examined the effectiveness of online education to providers who serve people experiencing homelessness, comparing online and face-to-face training of Critical Time Intervention (CTI), an evidence-based case management model. The authors recruited 184 staff from 19 homeless service agencies to participate in one of two training conditions: (a) Online Training + Community of Practice or (b) Face-to-Face Training + Telephone Consultation. Each group received 24 hours of instruction and support. Through baseline, follow-up, and nine-month post-training surveys, the authors examined satisfaction, knowledge gains, knowledge retention, and readiness to implement CTI. While satisfaction rates were higher among participants in the face-to-face group, the two training conditions produced comparable pre/post knowledge gains. Furthermore, both groups showed increased knowledge retention scores at nine-month follow up, with the online group scoring higher than the face-to-face group.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28919668 PMCID: PMC5596928 DOI: 10.1080/08923647.2016.1232107
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Distance Educ ISSN: 0892-3647