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Introduction to Participatory Approaches in Public Health

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Introduction to Participatory Approaches in Public Health

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Gain insight into a topic and learn the fundamentals.
4.5

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2 weeks to complete
at 10 hours a week
Flexible schedule
Learn at your own pace

Gain insight into a topic and learn the fundamentals.
4.5

12 reviews

Beginner level

Recommended experience

2 weeks to complete
at 10 hours a week
Flexible schedule
Learn at your own pace

Build your subject-matter expertise

This course is part of the Participatory Approaches in Public Health Specialization
When you enroll in this course, you'll also be enrolled in this Specialization.
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  • Develop job-relevant skills with hands-on projects
  • Earn a shareable career certificate

There are 4 modules in this course

This course will introduce you to participatory approaches to public health. You will learn about the history of participatory health research and why it is essential to solving contemporary public health challenges. The course will help you to understand the social and cultural context of public health, before introducing you to essential concepts for working with communities: knowledge and power. Finally, you will engage with critical analyses of participatory approaches, to help you to determine if and when such strategies are appropriate. Throughout the course you will analyse real-world case studies of community-based health projects, including historical HIV social movements, public health projects with sex workers, and participatory approaches to the COVID-19 pandemic. The course will equip you to practice public health in partnership with local communities. It is followed by a second course, Applying Participatory Approaches in Public Health Settings, which builds upon the theoretical foundations of this introductory course.

This week you will be introduced to participatory approaches to public health. What are they? Where do they come from? And why are they essential to solving contemporary public health challenges? Firstly, you will meet the team and get an idea of how this course is structured. We also want you to share your own experiences with other learners - in this way, you'll identify what you already know about participatory approaches, share useful insights and make connections with one another. In Lesson 1 you'll learn the key principles and characteristics of a participatory approach and learn about the history of participation in HIV social movements. In Lesson 2, you'll focus on the case study of Ebola, to explore how participatory approaches can be used in pandemics. Take note - we'll be returning to this discussion in Week 4 to see what lessons from Ebola can be applied to COVID-19.

What's included

6 videos8 readings3 discussion prompts3 plugins

6 videosβ€’Total 34 minutes
  • Introduction to the Specialisation β€’6 minutes
  • Principles & Characteristics of Participatory Approaches: Part 1 β€’6 minutes
  • The History of Participatory Approaches in Public Health and Beyondβ€’8 minutes
  • Case Study: The History of HIV and the Evolution of Participatory Approachesβ€’7 minutes
  • The Importance of Participatory Approaches in Public Health: Ebola Example β€’5 minutes
  • Principles & Characteristics of Participatory Approaches: Part 2 β€’2 minutes
8 readingsβ€’Total 105 minutes
  • About Imperial College Londonβ€’10 minutes
  • Meet the Participatory Approaches Teamβ€’10 minutes
  • How to Be Successful in this Courseβ€’20 minutes
  • Grading Policyβ€’10 minutes
  • Glossaryβ€’10 minutes
  • Course 1: Introduction to Participatory Approaches in Public Health β€’10 minutes
  • Further Reading on Participatory Health Researchβ€’30 minutes
  • Wrapping Things Upβ€’5 minutes
3 discussion promptsβ€’Total 90 minutes
  • Nice to meet you!β€’20 minutes
  • Sharing your Experiencesβ€’30 minutes
  • Participatory Approaches to the Ebola Responseβ€’40 minutes
3 pluginsβ€’Total 45 minutes
  • Pride, Milk, and the Dallas Buyers Clubβ€’15 minutes
  • What Have You Learnt So Far...β€’15 minutes
  • Results - What Have You Learnt So Far...β€’15 minutes

This week will help you to understand the social and cultural context of public health. In Lesson 1, you will think about how to understand culture and society and their relationship with health, drawing upon readings from anthropology and sociology. You will then apply that thinking to the importance of culture for participatory public health. You will read and analyse studies in Malaysia and London, before hearing an interview with a researcher about how culture affects participation in health research Singapore. In Lesson 2, you will explore some of these concepts further through an in-depth case study of participatory projects with sex workers.

What's included

3 videos4 readings1 assignment1 discussion prompt1 plugin

3 videosβ€’Total 54 minutes
  • How do socio-cultural factors affect health and participation? β€’8 minutes
  • Social and Cultural Factors in Singapore β€’20 minutes
  • The Sonagachi Project β€’26 minutes
4 readingsβ€’Total 135 minutes
  • The social and cultural context of public healthβ€’60 minutes
  • Social and Cultural Factors in Singaporeβ€’5 minutes
  • Case study: Sex workβ€’10 minutes
  • Participatory Approaches with Sex Workersβ€’60 minutes
1 assignmentβ€’Total 30 minutes
  • End of Module Quiz β€’30 minutes
1 discussion promptβ€’Total 45 minutes
  • Participatory Approaches with Sex Workersβ€’45 minutes
1 pluginβ€’Total 15 minutes
  • The Sonagachi Project: Transcriptβ€’15 minutes

Welcome to Week 3. In Lesson 1, you will reflect further on what it means to create knowledge in a participatory way. You will learn about different epistemological approaches to knowledge creation, before doing an exercise exploring your own positionality in the social field. In Lesson 2, you will study the case of Participatory Action Research (PAR), as a way of introducing you to the concepts of action and power. You will watch a video introducing you to PAR, before undertaking readings and activities to explore these in more depth. This will help you to think about the forms of action you could take to help improve the health and well-being of the communities you work with.

What's included

2 videos5 readings1 discussion prompt1 plugin

2 videosβ€’Total 16 minutes
  • Introduction to Epistemology β€’8 minutes
  • Participatory Action Researchβ€’8 minutes
5 readingsβ€’Total 98 minutes
  • Key Characteristics of Positivist and Interpretivist Epistemologiesβ€’20 minutes
  • Further Readings on Epistemologyβ€’3 minutes
  • Putting the Action into PARβ€’40 minutes
  • Power Relations and Participatory Researchβ€’30 minutes
  • End of Lesson 2β€’5 minutes
1 discussion promptβ€’Total 30 minutes
  • Reflexivity Exercise: Positionality Statementβ€’30 minutes
1 pluginβ€’Total 20 minutes
  • Epistemology - Positivist or Interpretivistβ€’20 minutes

In Week 4, you will take a step back and place participation in context. In Lesson 1, you will be introduced to some ways of thinking about and evaluating participation, including some of the popular typologies of participation. You will start to consider if participatory approaches are always a good thing, and some of the dangers participation might pose. In Lesson 2, you will explore how participatory approaches could be used to tackle the COVID-19 global pandemic.

What's included

4 videos5 readings1 peer review2 discussion prompts

4 videosβ€’Total 36 minutes
  • Arnstein’s Ladder and Analysing Participatory Approaches β€’5 minutes
  • Are Participatory Approaches Always a Good Thing?β€’5 minutes
  • The Ebola Outbreak in West Africa: Perspectives and Lessons for COVID-19β€’12 minutes
  • Podcast: Perspectives on Community Engagement in the UKβ€’13 minutes
5 readingsβ€’Total 155 minutes
  • Reflection: What Have You Learnt? What Comes Nextβ€’10 minutes
  • Unpacking Participationβ€’60 minutes
  • Reflection: Putting It All Togetherβ€’5 minutes
  • Further Learnings from Ebola β€’40 minutes
  • Follow-up About PERC Reports β€’40 minutes
1 peer reviewβ€’Total 120 minutes
  • Proposal: A Participatory Action Research Project in Response to Covid19 β€’120 minutes
2 discussion promptsβ€’Total 60 minutes
  • Challenges and Critiques of Participatory Approachesβ€’30 minutes
  • Let's Look at Some Community Engagement Research PERC Reportsβ€’30 minutes

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4.7 (10 ratings)
Imperial College London
9 Coursesβ€’165,902 learners

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