Integrated Health Literacy Program (IHLP)
"The
Integrated Health Literacy program provides our students with
meaningful opportunities to learn and understand a healthy lifestyle and
to be able to advocate for their own health. We are teaching them
lifelong skills and strategies to be healthy adults. Hopefully this
will permit them to strengthen the health of our community."
- Dr. Jerry Wilson, Superintendent
Each WCPS student in grades one through five will experience
Integrated Health Literacy lessons. These lessons are written by
Worcester County teachers, with the help of medical professionals and
are integrated into Reading Language Arts, Mathematics, Science and
Social Studies curriculum. The lessons do not compromise the integrity
of the content or the standards being addressed by the classroom
teacher, but rather are tailored to address reading, math, science
and/or social studies as well as naturally infusing Health Literacy
standards and content into the class. The integrated lessons can vary
depending on grade level – for example having students calculate their
calorie intake based upon information on a food label or the proper
medication dosage depending on their weight during a math lesson. For
kindergarten, principles may be as simple as a hand washing exercise.
This does not negate, nor diminish the effective health instruction
taught by our health and physical education teachers, but rather
supplements and enhances the content knowledge that they already teach,
giving our students even more health information.
What is Health Literacy?
Health literacy is the ability to obtain, process, understand,
utilize and apply basic health information, allowing an individual to
make appropriate health decisions. According to the U.S. Department of
Education’s National Assessment of Adult Literacy, only 12 percent of
adults have proficient health literacy. The study found that individuals
with a health literacy level below basic were much more likely to
report their health as being poor and less likely to use preventive
health services than their peers. Atlantic General Hospital has
developed a partnership with the Herschel S. Horowitz Center for Health
Literacy at the University of Maryland College Park School of Public
Health, who drafted a set of health literacy standards for the Worcester
County K-8 public school curriculum. No approved health literacy
standards for public schools currently exist in the U.S.
Currently, in the 2015-16 school year, we are piloting 6th grade
curriculum in Snow Hill Middle School. Please click here to see the Health Literacy for All – A Parents’ Guide to Integrated Health Literacy
for details about the program. If you have additional questions, please
feel free to contact Tamara Mills, Coordinator of Health Instruction,
WCPS.
To find out how Worcester County Public Schools is doing in their health and wellness improvement process, please click here.
Looking for more information about the Integrated Health Literacy partnership with Atlantic General Hospital?
Click here for more!