| Literature DB >> 35646764 |
Sarah E Gollust1, Kathleen T Call1, J Robin Moon2, Bonnie Cluxton3, Zinzi Bailey4.
Abstract
Health inequities in the United States are well-documented. However, research that is focused on solutions, rather than just describing the problem, and research that is designed explicitly to inform needed policy and practice change, is still too rare. The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Interdisciplinary Research Leaders (IRL) program launched in 2016 with the goal of filling this gap: to generate community-engaged research to catalyze policy action in communities, while promoting leadership among researchers and community partners. In this paper, we describe the creation and implementation of a curriculum for IRL program participants over the first 5 years of the program. The curriculum-spanning domains of leadership, policy, communication, community engagement, and research methodologies-was designed to cultivate leaders who use research evidence in their efforts to promote change to advance health equity in their communities. The curriculum components implemented by IRL might be applied to other educational programs or fellowships to amplify and accelerate the growth of leaders nationwide who can use research and action to respond to grave and ongoing threats to community health.Entities:
Keywords: curriculum; education; health equity; leadership; policy
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35646764 PMCID: PMC9136100 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2022.876847
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Pillars of the IRL curriculum (2016–2021).
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| Community change leadership | Community organizing trainings; equity diversity and inclusion trainings; resilience coaching |
| Policy and communication | Dissemination planning; messaging and communications training; media training; data visualization; op-ed writing support |
| Collaboration and community engagement | Equitable collaboration partnership planning; community-based participatory action principles; team coaching |
| Credible and transparent research | Research methods; focus groups; research workshops (e.g., research questions, logic models) individualized research support and mentoring |
Adult learning principles incorporated into IRL program curriculum.
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| Adult learners want to be involved / collaborators in learning | • Solicit ideas for webinars and mini-courses annually and encourage continuous feedback |
| Adult learners want to know why they are learning what they are learning | • Consistently communicate learning objectives and rationale for curriculum, including in in-person meeting agendas |
| Adult learners want flexibility and self-direction | • Online course content is organized into small modules that are labeled so learners can self-navigate |
| Adult learners have a large foundation of knowledge and experience | • Communicate the IRL program as a “learning community” and emphasize co-learning and for fellows to contribute their expertise for their cohort |
| Adult learners are practical and goal-oriented | • Require only deliverables with practical utility (i.e., dissemination plan, collaboration agreement for team, research brief) |
| Adult learners demand respect | • Develop community-accepted “ground rules” to communicate expectations of respect, mutual learning, and growth for all program participants, known as the IRL Community Agreements for Learning and Practice |
Figure 1Schema depicting the IRL program fellowship years.
Video-Based mini-courses as part of the IRL curriculum.
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| Equitable collaboration: core concepts, tools and approaches | Year 1 through fall Year 2 | CCE |
| Community-Engaged research: rationale, principles, steps and strategies | Mainly year 1, some modules in year 2 & 3 | CCE / CTR |
| Advancing health equity in research | Fall, year 1 | CCL / CTR |
| Research literacy and introduction to causal inference | Fall, year 1 | CTR |
| Planning for dissemination and use of evidence in policymaking | Spring, year 1 | PC |
| Data visualization | Fall year 2 | PC / CTR |
| Media training | Fall year 2 | |
| Introduction to health impact assessment | Fall year 2 | PC / CTR |
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| Focus group interviewing | Spring year 1 | CTR |
| Social media research dissemination | Summer Year 1, after DC meeting | PC |
| Implementation science | Summer year 1, after DC meeting | CTR |
| Program evaluation: a tool for community change | Spring year 2 | CTR |
| Documenting community engagement in promotion and tenure | Spring year 2 | CCE |
| The evolution of federal Native American policy | Anytime | CCL |
| A life course perspective on partnership sustainability | Fall year 3 | CCE |
CCL, community change leadership; PC, policy and communication; CCE, collaboration and community engagement; CTR, credible and transparent research.