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Learner Verification: A Methodology to Create Suitable Education Materials

BACKGROUND: Learner verification and revision (LV&R) is a research methodological approach to inform educational message design with the aim of producing suitable, actionable, and literacy appropriate messages to aid in awareness, adoption of healthy behaviors, and decision-making. It consists o...

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Autores principales: Chavarria, Enmanuel A., Christy, Shannon M., Simmons, Vani N., Vadaparampil, Susan T., Gwede, Clement K., Meade, Cathy D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SLACK Incorporated 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8075101/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34251862
http://dx.doi.org/10.3928/24748307-20210201-02
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author Chavarria, Enmanuel A.
Christy, Shannon M.
Simmons, Vani N.
Vadaparampil, Susan T.
Gwede, Clement K.
Meade, Cathy D.
author_facet Chavarria, Enmanuel A.
Christy, Shannon M.
Simmons, Vani N.
Vadaparampil, Susan T.
Gwede, Clement K.
Meade, Cathy D.
author_sort Chavarria, Enmanuel A.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Learner verification and revision (LV&R) is a research methodological approach to inform educational message design with the aim of producing suitable, actionable, and literacy appropriate messages to aid in awareness, adoption of healthy behaviors, and decision-making. It consists of a series of participatory steps that engage users throughout materials development, revision, and refinement. This approach is congruent with Healthy People 2030 communication objectives to improve access to information among diverse, multicultural, multilingual populations, and enhance health care quality toward health equity. BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF ACTIVITY: To illustrate LV&R, we describe its use in three cancer education projects that produced targeted information about (1) inherited breast cancer among African Americans (brochure); (2) colorectal cancer screening among Latinos (photo novella and DVD); and (3) smoking-relapse prevention among patients receiving cancer treatment (video). We discuss rationale for its application in the three exemplars and extrapolate lessons learned from our experiences when using this approach. IMPLEMENTATION: A qualitative approach entailing individual or group-based discussions helped to examine the elements of learner verification (i.e., attraction, comprehension, self-efficacy, cultural acceptability, persuasion). The following steps are reported: (1) preparation of materials, interview guide, and recruitment; (2) interviewing of participants; and (3) evaluation of responses. Data were analyzed by use of a coding system that placed participant responses from each of the elements into data summary matrices. Findings informed revisions and refinement of materials. RESULTS: LV&R was effectively applied across the three cancer education projects to enhance the suitability of the materials. As a result, the materials were improved by using clearer, more salient language to enhance comprehension and cultural acceptability, by integrating design elements such as prompts, headers, and stylistic edits to reduce text density, incorporating preferred colors and graphics to improve aesthetic appeal, and including actionable terms and words to bolster motivation and self-efficacy. LESSONS LEARNED: Results suggest that LV&R methodology can improve suitability of education materials through systematic, iterative steps that engage diverse, multicultural, multilingual populations. This approach is a critical participa-tory strategy toward health equity, and is appropriate in a variety of education, research, and clinical practice settings to improve health communications. [HLRP: Health Literacy Research and Practice. 2021;5(1):e49–e59.] PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARY: This article describes the use of a systematic approach called “learner verification” used for developing educational materials. This approach involves obtaining feedback from audience members to ensure that the information is understandable, attractive in design, motivating, and culturally relevant.
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spelling pubmed-80751012021-04-28 Learner Verification: A Methodology to Create Suitable Education Materials Chavarria, Enmanuel A. Christy, Shannon M. Simmons, Vani N. Vadaparampil, Susan T. Gwede, Clement K. Meade, Cathy D. Health Lit Res Pract Best Practice BACKGROUND: Learner verification and revision (LV&R) is a research methodological approach to inform educational message design with the aim of producing suitable, actionable, and literacy appropriate messages to aid in awareness, adoption of healthy behaviors, and decision-making. It consists of a series of participatory steps that engage users throughout materials development, revision, and refinement. This approach is congruent with Healthy People 2030 communication objectives to improve access to information among diverse, multicultural, multilingual populations, and enhance health care quality toward health equity. BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF ACTIVITY: To illustrate LV&R, we describe its use in three cancer education projects that produced targeted information about (1) inherited breast cancer among African Americans (brochure); (2) colorectal cancer screening among Latinos (photo novella and DVD); and (3) smoking-relapse prevention among patients receiving cancer treatment (video). We discuss rationale for its application in the three exemplars and extrapolate lessons learned from our experiences when using this approach. IMPLEMENTATION: A qualitative approach entailing individual or group-based discussions helped to examine the elements of learner verification (i.e., attraction, comprehension, self-efficacy, cultural acceptability, persuasion). The following steps are reported: (1) preparation of materials, interview guide, and recruitment; (2) interviewing of participants; and (3) evaluation of responses. Data were analyzed by use of a coding system that placed participant responses from each of the elements into data summary matrices. Findings informed revisions and refinement of materials. RESULTS: LV&R was effectively applied across the three cancer education projects to enhance the suitability of the materials. As a result, the materials were improved by using clearer, more salient language to enhance comprehension and cultural acceptability, by integrating design elements such as prompts, headers, and stylistic edits to reduce text density, incorporating preferred colors and graphics to improve aesthetic appeal, and including actionable terms and words to bolster motivation and self-efficacy. LESSONS LEARNED: Results suggest that LV&R methodology can improve suitability of education materials through systematic, iterative steps that engage diverse, multicultural, multilingual populations. This approach is a critical participa-tory strategy toward health equity, and is appropriate in a variety of education, research, and clinical practice settings to improve health communications. [HLRP: Health Literacy Research and Practice. 2021;5(1):e49–e59.] PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARY: This article describes the use of a systematic approach called “learner verification” used for developing educational materials. This approach involves obtaining feedback from audience members to ensure that the information is understandable, attractive in design, motivating, and culturally relevant. SLACK Incorporated 2021-03-08 /pmc/articles/PMC8075101/ /pubmed/34251862 http://dx.doi.org/10.3928/24748307-20210201-02 Text en © 2021 Chavarria, Christy, Simmons, et al.; licensee SLACK Incorporated. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) ). This license allows users to copy and distribute, to remix, transform, and build upon the article non-commercially, provided the author is attributed and the new work is non-commercial.
spellingShingle Best Practice
Chavarria, Enmanuel A.
Christy, Shannon M.
Simmons, Vani N.
Vadaparampil, Susan T.
Gwede, Clement K.
Meade, Cathy D.
Learner Verification: A Methodology to Create Suitable Education Materials
title Learner Verification: A Methodology to Create Suitable Education Materials
title_full Learner Verification: A Methodology to Create Suitable Education Materials
title_fullStr Learner Verification: A Methodology to Create Suitable Education Materials
title_full_unstemmed Learner Verification: A Methodology to Create Suitable Education Materials
title_short Learner Verification: A Methodology to Create Suitable Education Materials
title_sort learner verification: a methodology to create suitable education materials
topic Best Practice
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8075101/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34251862
http://dx.doi.org/10.3928/24748307-20210201-02
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