PBS NewsHour STEM StoryMaker: Project-based learning for youth health literacy and biomedical career awareness through journalism and storytelling

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R25 · $270,000 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

Project Summary/Abstract The need for health literacy and a diverse, socially-conscious health workforce is more evident than ever after two and a half years navigating a global pandemic, and growing mental health and environmental health crises. This proposal from PBS NewsHour Student Reporting Labs (SRL), a teen-driven program from the nation’s most trusted news source, builds from the successes of previous SEPA work to provide high school youth with: 1.) tools to create evidence-based and ethically responsible journalism (primarily 1-4 minute videos) about critical health issues that impact their communities; 2.) introductions and inroads to health science careers that use storytelling to engage a diverse range of students; and 3.) strategies for effective communication around health science, including intergenerational dialogue and social media best-practices, for the general public. The initiative will provide a strong foundation of support for teens, educators, and other SEPA program leaders to produce high-quality content distributed to peers through an extensive student journalism network, online learning platforms, and traditional and digital broadcasting. A previous SEPA summative evaluation largely serves as the front-end evaluation for this proposed project. Researchers at Knology will use Year 1 to update all evaluation instruments and create a mixed-methods evaluation with students and educators in years 2-4 of the grant for both formative and summative purposes. Findings will measure the impact on programs and participants, including other SEPA projects, and result in a map of the full ecosystem of health learning opportunities created during the grant period and their effectiveness, including student-created stories, health practitioner profiles, lesson plans and other learning opportunities. Student-produced videos will be supplemented with expertly- crafted educational resources distributed to a wide national audience of teachers, formal and informal educators, and STEM program leaders. Through these elements – student health journalism, health science career content, and storytelling strategies for science communication – the project will drive engagement and understanding around health science and public health in young people to support an informed, inquisitive, and involved citizenry.

Key facts

NIH application ID
10890031
Project number
5R25GM150172-02
Recipient
WETA TV 26
Principal Investigator
Leah Clapman
Activity code
R25
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2024
Award amount
$270,000
Award type
5
Project period
2023-07-20 → 2025-04-01