| Literature DB >> 29226120 |
Justin D Shanks1, Betty Izumi2, Christina Sun2, Allea Martin3, Carmen Byker Shanks4.
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to explore the degree to which an infographic assignment facilitated student learning around health science issues, as well as the ways in which the assignment was an effective teaching tool. The objectives of the assignment were to (1) understand the purposes of and potential uses for infographics, (2) cultivate creative visual communication skills, and (3) disseminate a complex health topic to diverse audiences. The infographic assignment was developed at Montana State University and piloted at Portland State University. Students were assigned to small groups of three or four to create an infographic focused on a health science issue. The assignment was divided into four steps: brainstorming, developing, designing, and finalizing. Focus groups were conducted to assess how learning occurred throughout the assignment and identify any opportunities for modification of the assignment. This study was conducted with freshman students enrolled at Portland State University, a public university located in downtown Portland, OR, USA. Thirty four students completed the assignment and 31 students participated in one of three focus groups. Four themes emerged from focus groups: (1) Communicating Science-Related Topics to Non-experts, (2) Developing Professional Skills, (3) Understanding Health Issues, and (4) Overall Experience. This article outlines the assignment, discusses focus group results, and presents assignment modifications. It is clear that the infographic assignment facilitated learning about accessing and translating data. This assignment is ideally suited for use with diverse college-age audiences in health education and health promotion fields.Entities:
Keywords: communicating science; health education; infographics; pedagogy; undergraduate education
Year: 2017 PMID: 29226120 PMCID: PMC5705557 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2017.00315
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Semi-structured focus group questions about infographic assignment.
How would describe your overall experience with this project? What was the easiest part of developing your infographic? What resources, tools, or support were helpful to you in developing your infographic? What was the hardest part of developing the infographic? What challenges did you experience when developing your infographic? How did you group overcome these challenges? Did this project help you increase your understanding of health? [If yes] Which aspects of this project were useful in helping you to better understand course material? Would you recommend this assignment for future students in this course? Why or why not? What advice would you give to future students about developing an infographic for this course? How would you recommend that a group effectively and efficiently accomplishes an infographic assignment together? What else would you like to share about the project or your experience with the project? |
Student focus group quotes about infographic assignment.
| Theme | Subtheme | Select student quotes |
|---|---|---|
| Communicating science-related topics to non-experts | Translation | “[Infographics] helped show how to put a lot of information into a really short, concise statement, and make it very easy for people who don’t necessarily read medical jargon… to understand.” |
| Visual representation | “One of the challenges was trying not to add too much information because [the infographic is] mostly visual. So sometimes you’re used to explaining things a lot, but on the infographic you can’t really do that, it’s just the main points.” | |
| Market-testing | “[Infographics] helped everyone to look at practicing new skills. For example, the market testing that we did…helped me contact other professors, other people that I don’t talk to face to face but through the internet, and try to ask for feedback for the infographic.” | |
| Developing professional skills | Infographic | “I remember I’d seen infographics before but…there’s actually a process to this whole thing, it’s not just a bunch or random facts put on a piece of paper.” |
| Professional articles | “[Reading professional articles] was cool; you’re reading what actual medical professionals read and stuff. It got me, at least, more used to understanding their lingo.” | |
| Resources | “We’d reserve a [study] room that just had a white board so we wrote out planning our presentation, and the last time we met we got a projector room and we were practicing our presentation in there so that was interesting to actually do that. I think that’s what I took away from [the infographic assignment] the most, actually having to go in and reserve a study room.” | |
| Team work | “[The infographic assignment] helped me communicate more with my peers as as partners, and helped me manage my time a lot too.” | |
| Understanding health issues | Understanding | “[The infographic assignment] kind of opens your mind. You’re focused this whole time on your specific health disparity, but then you realize there’s a lot of other ones out there that we should be concerned about.” |
| Depth | “I feel like this was an opportunity for us to get a little more in depth and find out about topics that aren’t really talked about.” | |
| Breadth | “There were a lot of interesting health topics covered that every group covered with their infographics, and that was actually pretty interesting. It was pretty interesting to learn what they researched, and it was nice to learn from those students, from their hard work.” | |
| Overall experience | Positive | “I liked how [the infographic assignment] mixes research and artistic stuff and design, and [you] also learn how to put stuff together in a short thing that people can understand. It’s a good project, in my opinion.” |
| Negative | “I kinda want to be thrown into [the infographic assignment] a little more. I mean, I’m lazy, I like to be lazy, but at the same time, this is something cool. This is a cool design project. And I wish instead of being handed something, we were thrown out there a little bit more.” |