Markey鈥檚 ACTION Program Develops Cancer Education Curriculum for Appalachian Schools
LEXINGTON, Ky. (Feb. 19, 2021) 鈥 After conducting a study to assess the need for cancer education materials in Appalachian Kentucky, members of the 鈥檚&苍产蝉辫;program worked with faculty from the to create a three-part cancer education curriculum for middle and high school teachers in the region.
Kentucky is home to the highest rates of cancer incidence and mortality in the country, and that problem is further concentrated in the Appalachian region of the state. Funded by a grant from the , ACTION is a two-year program designed to prepare undergraduate and high school students for cancer-focused careers and is open to students who hail from one of the 54 Appalachian Kentucky counties. The program also educates students on ways to make a difference in their own communities through outreach and engagement.
Perhaps not surprisingly, nearly all of ACTION鈥檚 participants know a friend or family member dealing with cancer.
鈥淚t became pretty clear early on that the students were all personally touched by cancer, which was one of the reasons why they were in the program, but they didn鈥檛 really know much about cancer,鈥 said Nathan Vanderford, director of the ACTION Program. 鈥淪o that got us talking more to them and to their teachers about what鈥檚 currently being taught in schools regarding the disease.鈥
The ACTION team conducted an online survey with science and health teachers in Appalachian Kentucky. , results of the survey showed that participating teachers agreed that cancer education was important to their students鈥 lives, but the amount of such education is inconsistent.
The participating teachers also expressed a desire to increase cancer education in their classrooms. Many teacher responses touched on the fact that both they and their students see the devastating impact of cancer in their daily lives. Several responses noted the importance of teaching students about cancer from more of a public health angle, i.e., learning more about prevention and risk factors for cancer.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a huge opportunity here, and I think there鈥檚 a thirst for the knowledge,鈥 Vanderford said. 鈥淚n the survey, without any prompting, the teachers told us exactly what we know 鈥 that they and their students are bombarded by cancer all around them, and I think that makes them naturally more curious about the topic.鈥
In response, Vanderford decided to create a curriculum for teachers, reaching out to 好色先生 College of Education faculty for expertise on taking the cancer information he wanted teachers to have and developing it into lessons that would fit teachers鈥 current curriculum requirements.
鈥淲e know the teachers want to teach about cancer, but it isn鈥檛 laid out in the curriculum or in the standards,鈥 said Sahar Alameh, an assistant professor of STEM education in the 好色先生 College of Education. 鈥淔or example, they told us that they mention cancer when they talk about the ozone layer, or when they talk about mutation and mitosis, but it鈥檚 not a lesson. My goal was to take Nathan鈥檚 lessons and suggest modifications to them so they aligned with teaching standards.鈥
鈥淚 thought it was really important to work with faculty in the College of Education, because they prepare future teachers every day and they are experts in science education pedagogy,鈥 Vanderford said. 鈥淭eachers have to teach to these academic standards anyway, but if we can take this great information about a public health topic that is of utmost importance to your students and community and you can be touching on those standards, it鈥檚 a win-win.鈥
This collaboration yielded a new three-part cancer education curriculum for middle and high school teachers in Appalachia to use in their classrooms. The curriculum includes information on cancer data and risk factors in the region, follows national and state science and health education standards, and is tailored to cultural aspects of Appalachian Kentucky.
Including that Kentucky-specific information was key, Vanderford says. He wanted the cancer lessons to reflect the reality of what teachers and students experience daily, and that also included topics like fatalistic views on cancer and issues around health care access and engagement.
鈥淧eople tell me all the time that they have had friends and family with cancer and they see it everywhere, but they didn鈥檛 know, for example, that our cancer rates are the highest in the country,鈥 Vanderford said. 鈥淭he more relevant a topic is to a person, the more they鈥檙e going to pay attention to it.鈥
With that in mind, Alameh says the curriculum is an example of problem-based learning, a teaching method where real-world issues are used to help drive the learning process in students.
鈥淭he teachers tell you that whenever they talk about cancer, the kids 鈥 even elementary and middle school kids, not just the high school kids 鈥 want to share a story about someone they know who had cancer,鈥 she said. 鈥淲hen you situate learning in a meaningful situation, it definitely produces more engagement.鈥
Vanderford and Alameh both highlight the project as a unique, fruitful collaboration between different colleges. Other contributors to the project include ACTION program coordinator Chris Prichard, 好色先生 College of Education Associate Professor Melinda Ickes and graduate student Katherine Sharp, and undergraduate student Lauren Hudson.
Hudson, a junior majoring in neuroscience, works with the ACTION Program and is first author on the study. Like the students in the program, the northern Kentucky native had firsthand experience of dealing with cancer, as her mother is a 17-year breast cancer survivor. She says she was always interested in oncology, but was unaware of the scope of the cancer problem in Kentucky until she became involved with ACTION.
鈥淲hen I started working on this and learning more about it, I thought, 鈥榃hy aren鈥檛 we talking about this more in the areas of Kentucky where everyone needs to know about cancer?鈥欌 she said. 鈥淭his is really exciting for me. In high school, if someone had presented this material to me, I would have loved it. I know there are students out there like me who were interested in medicine, but health disparities are not always covered in high school. I like to think there are students who are going to realize that pursuing a cancer career is what they want to do from learning this curriculum.鈥
The team has already begun disseminating the curriculum to teachers in the region and will continue to adapt the curriculum based on feedback from both teachers and students. Seeing their work making its way into Kentucky communities is exciting, says Vanderford, who notes that creating a tangible, useful product from scientific work is a rare and difficult process. With more than 40 publications under his belt, this project is especially significant for him.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a scientist鈥檚 dream to actually create something that people will use and that will be helpful for people鈥檚 knowledge and in this case, potentially impact public health in terms of lowering cancer risk,鈥 Vanderford. 鈥淔or this reason, our work here is kind of phenomenal to me.鈥
