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[HealthLiteracy 2469] Re: Experience using Photonovels

Susan Auger

sauger at mindspring.com
Tue Nov 18 11:18:52 EST 2008



Thanks for your post Julie!
I know that in clinic settings, whether it's hopsitals, health departments
or community health centers, time and staff resources are limited. How much
time in terms of preparation and implementation is involved with
facilitating a group using photonovels? Also,can you say a bit about what
prompted you to make a switch to using this type of approach and what keeps
you motivated to stay with it now that it's been a year and half?
Susan


-----Original Message-----
From: healthliteracy-bounces at nifl.gov
[mailto:healthliteracy-bounces at nifl.gov] On Behalf Of Julie Smithwick-Leone
Sent: Tuesday, November 18, 2008 8:36 AM
To: healthliteracy at nifl.gov
Subject: [HealthLiteracy 2466] Experience using Photonovels

Good morning. I am the director of a program called PASOs, which works to
increase perinatal health awareness and access to care among Latino
communities in South Carolina. I facilitate a prenatal class in Spanish for
Latinas that covers a large variety of topics related to perinatal, women's
and child health and I began using photonovels as part of my curriculum
about a year and a half ago. The demographics of the women in the classes
vary, but many of them are newer immigrants, speak more Spanish than
English, and over 50% have a 6th grade education or less. When using the
photonovel, I ask women (and/or men) in the class to take on the roles of
the characters, and they seem to enjoy doing so. After each page, we stop
and discuss the contents, which invariably leads to a tangential discussion
around a related topic. The women have expressed to me that they like the
photonovels because they can see themselves in the situations described,
because the characters "look like the m and talk like them" and because
they're fun. I appreciate the photonovel format because it allows the women
to really teach themselves, without too much involvement from the
facilitator.

Julie Smithwick-Leone, LMSW
Program Director- PASOs Program
South Carolina Public Health Institute
2221 Devine Street, Suite 216
Columbia, SC 29208
(803) 777-5466 office
(803) 312-1723 cell


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