A process for converting an in-person training to increase church capacity to implement physical activity and healthy eating practices and policies to an online format

Author:

Wilcox Sara12ORCID,Saunders Ruth P13,Stucker Jessica1,Kaczynski Andrew T13,Day Kelsey R12,Kinnard Deborah1,Decker Lindsay12,Bernhart John A13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Prevention Research Center, Arnold School of Public Health, University of South Carolina , Columbia, SC 29208 , USA

2. Department of Exercise Science, Arnold School of Public Health, University of South Carolina , Columbia, SC 29208 , USA

3. Department of Health Promotion, Education, and Behavior, Arnold School of Public Health, University of South Carolina , Columbia, SC 29208 , USA

Abstract

AbstractThe implementation of evidence-based public health programs into practice is critical for improving health, but trainings for organizational change agents are often not scalable.To describe the process of converting a training that targets faith-based organizational capacity development from an in-person to an online format.We engaged in an iterative process to convert the training delivery mode from in-person to online that included assessing stakeholder support, consulting the literature on best practices, seeking a design team, consolidating content, designing engaging lessons, and building an online site. Feedback from end-users and other audiences was incorporated throughout. Pilot participants with characteristics like intended training users were then recruited via community and faith-based partner networks. They rated their agreement with statements about the effectiveness as well as design and functionality of each lesson and the overall training (1 = strongly disagree, 5 = strongly agree) and participated in a structured follow-up interview.Nine pilot participants (representing 9 churches in 7 states; 6 African American, 5 with health ministries) rated the online lessons favorably (all ratings ≥ 4.5). Most (90.4%) perceived the lesson duration to be “just right” and spent 52.5 ± 9.9 minutes/lesson. Participants evaluated the overall training positively (all ratings ≥ 4.7). Lesson content, resources, multimedia, and program ideas were most-liked aspects of lessons, while content, staff responsiveness, discussion board, and pace were most-liked aspects of the overall training in open-ended and interview responses.This paper shares a replicable process for converting training modalities from in-person to online with the goal of increased scalability.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience,Applied Psychology

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