Abstract

In the twenty-first century, the dynamics of health and health care are changing, necessitating a commitment to revising traditional public health curricula to better meet present day challenges. This article describes how the College of Public Health at the University of South Florida utilized the Intervention Mapping framework to translate revised core competencies into an integrated, theory-driven core curriculum to meet the training needs of the twenty-first century public health scholar and practitioner. This process resulted in the development of four sequenced courses: History and Systems of Public Health and Population Assessment I delivered in the first semester and Population Assessment II and Translation to Practice delivered in the second semester. While the transformation process, moving from traditional public health core content to an integrated and innovative curriculum, is a challenging and daunting task, Intervention Mapping provides the ideal framework for guiding this process. Intervention mapping walks the curriculum developers from the broad goals and objectives to the finite details of a lesson plan. Throughout this process, critical lessons were learned, including the importance of being open to new ideologies and frameworks and the critical need to involve key-stakeholders in every step of the decision-making process to ensure the sustainability of the resulting integrated and theory-based curriculum. Ultimately, as a stronger curriculum emerged, the developers and instructors themselves were changed, fostering a stronger public health workforce from within.

Highlights

  • AND RATIONALEIn the twenty-first century, the dynamics of health and health care are changing dramatically

  • Informed by recent reports from the Institute of Medicine and the Association of Schools and Programs of Public Health which called for the revision of public health curricula to better meet twenty-first century challenges, the University of South Florida’s (USF) College of Public Health (COPH) committed to revising the traditional MPH core curriculum into an integrated, theory-based, and practice based curriculum that includes content and skills to meet evolving needs [4,5,6,7]

  • Holding true to the Intervention Mapping framework, once competencies were developed, the phase focused on methods and processes used to translate the revised MPH core competencies into an integrated, theory-based, practice based curriculum that allowed for varying stages of faculty readiness for curricular change, with the goal of better preparing our workforce [8]

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Summary

Frontiers in Public Health

This article describes how the College of Public Health at the University of South Florida utilized the Intervention Mapping framework to translate revised core competencies into an integrated, theory-driven core curriculum to meet the training needs of the twenty-first century public health scholar and practitioner. This process resulted in the development of four sequenced courses: History and Systems of Public Health and Population Assessment I delivered in the first semester and Population Assessment II and Translation to Practice delivered in the second semester.

AND RATIONALE
COMPETENCIES AND STANDARDS UNDERLYING THE ACTIVITY
THE LEARNING ENVIRONMENT
EMPLOYING INTERVENTION MAPPING TO GUIDE A REVISED PEDAGOGICAL FRAMEWORK OVERVIEW
Health disparities Cultural competence
DISCUSSION
CONCLUSION
Full Text
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