SunWise School Program Guide

9 Marked improvement for all knowledge variables Improved attitudes and beliefs about tanning Fewer sunburns Stronger intentions to avoid adverse sun exposure The SunWise School Program Guide How Will SunWise Be Evaluated? The SunWise School Program recognizes a particular challenge in measuring the effectiveness of its effort to create sustained SunWise behavior, especially given the latency period associated with the onset of UV-related health effects. Therefore, the careful and consistent evaluation of program effectiveness through a variety of interim measurements—including student survey and teacher evaluation data—is integral to SunWise’s success. As of 2002, data from over 6,000 student pretests and posttests has been analyzed and the results are promising, with four major findings. Children ages 5-12 receiving SunWise education have: a) . Identifying that wearing a hat and shirt outside were ways to keep the skin safe from the sun improved overall from 60 percent to 75 percent. Student knowledge of the need for SPF 15 improved from 50 percent at pretest to 78 percent at posttest. Awareness of the UV Index reading that best correlated with the most optimal sun protection also improved overall from 28 percent to 57 percent. b) . In particular, from pretest to posttest, youngest children (ages 5 to 9) experienced a 10 percent decrease in the attitude that a tan is healthy. These findings in students receiving education are in stark contrast to more than 1,000 students in control schools (receiving no education) who had no changes in knowledge or attitudes during this comparable period. c) . School nurses at 11 schools in six states surveyed the same children during the 2000-01 and 2001-02 school years. Among the 477 children completing three surveys, gains in knowledge and attitudes were maintained and sunburning rates were lower in the most recent summer (55 percent in summer 2001 compared with 66 percent for summer 2000). d) . Overall, intentions to play in the shade increased significantly from 70 percent to 76 percent from pretest to posttest with more substantial differences noted in younger children.

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