Skip Navigation Links
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

 CDC Home Search Health Topics A-Z
National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion
EXCITE

EXCITE Home  |  Contact Us
Menu Contents



Epidemiology in the Classroom


On this Page

Background Material

Suggestions for Classroom Use
Exercises

Background Material

Use the following background material to familiarize yourself with epidemiology and the methods used to investigate community health problems.

Suggestions for Classroom Use

At a minimum, before beginning a case study, students will need to know the basic scientific steps for investigating an outbreak. Here are some classroom approaches that have worked well:

To Present a case study

  • Divide the class into small work groups of five to ten students. Ask each group to assign a facilitator, a recorder, and a reporter.
  • Hand out Part I and call on individual students from the class at large to read the narrative and questions out loud.
  • Then have students work in their small groups to answer the questions.
  • Finally, have the groups report their responses to the whole class.
  • Move through the remaining sections in the same fashion.

Note that to avoid giving away answers, you should give students the parts of a case study sequentially, as indicated. The slides related to the case study could be shown during the work session or used in a wrap-up session.

To Evaluate What Students Have Learned

  • Use traditional testing on specific knowledge points regarding epidemiology and outbreak investigation
  • Use the sample problems and the national event problems found in Science Olympiad.

To enrich your class' study

  • Invite local experts to speak to the class. These could include a public health official from the local health department, a physician specializing in infectious diseases, or an infection control nurse from a local hospital.
  • Introduce students to the MMWR, CDC's weekly publication featuring breaking news in national and international health.
  • Have students read The Hot Zone, The Cobra Event, or other health-related literature.
  • Show the movie Outbreak.
  • Have students research the pioneers of public health, such as John Snow, John Graunt, and William Farr.
  • See the Resource Library and Careers in Public Health for more ideas.

Exercises

Suspected Legionnaires' Disease in Bogalusa

 
Cigarette Smoking and Lung Cancer [pdf 80K]

 
A series of more than 30 middle and high school lesson plans covering a variety of epidemiologic topics including hypothesis generation and testing, study design, and decision making. Developed by Drs Mark Kaelin and Wendy Huebner, at Montclair State University, these materials have been extensively tested and evaluated in the New Jersey area. http://www.montclair.edu/detectives/*

Back to Top

* Links to non-Federal organizations are provided solely as a service to our users. Links do not constitute an endorsement of any organization by CDC or the Federal Government, and none should be inferred. The CDC is not responsible for the content of the individual organization Web pages found at these links.


One or more documents on this Web page is available in Portable Document Format (PDF). You will need Acrobat Reader to view and print these documents.





This page last reviewed October 31, 2008

EXCITE Home | Contact Us
CDC Home | Search | Health Topics A-Z
Privacy Policy | Accessibility

United States Department of Health Human Services
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion