Developmentally‐based AIDS/HIV Education
- 1 August 1990
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of School Health
- Vol. 60 (6) , 256-261
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1746-1561.1990.tb05928.x
Abstract
A growing number of health and education professionals argue that AIDS/HIV education curricula should be developmentally‐based. They suggest the principles of developmental psychology be used to design curricula based on the sequentially ordered ways children of different ages understand AIDS. Relying on findings of research on development of children's conceptions of illness, a specific developmentally‐based approach to educating school‐age children about AIDS/HIV is presented in this paper. For each of three major age groups, the paper describes general characteristics for children's thought processes, ways in which children assimilate information about various aspects of AIDS, and implications for educating children about causes, prevention, and fear of AIDS. The focus of AIDS/HIV education can move from reducing fear in the younger group, to identifying and differentiating causes and noncauses of AIDS in the intermediate groups, to articulating strategies for AIDS prevention in the older group.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Adolescents, AIDS, and HIV: The Future Starts NowJournal of School Health, 1989
- A Theoretical Approach to School-based HIV PreventionJournal of School Health, 1989
- HIV Education Within Comprehensive: School Health Education: What Does It Mean?Journal of School Health, 1989
- Instruction about AIDS Within the School CurriculumJournal of School Health, 1988
- Children's Knowledge and Attitudes about AIDSJournal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 1988
- Reasoning about Illness in III and Healthy Children and AdolescentsJournal of Developmental & Behavioral Pediatrics, 1987
- Children's concepts of physical illness: A review and critique of the cognitive-developmental literature.Health Psychology, 1986
- Children's Perceptions of Chronic Illness: The Roles of Disease Symptoms, Cognitive Development, and InformationJournal of Pediatric Psychology, 1984