Language,
Literacy and Healthy Development: The Work of CAPC and CPNP Projects
2. Literacy education
and support: it's in everything we do!
Introduction
The title for this section came from Gail Wylie, project
director of the CPNP Healthy Start for Mom & Me
project. "Literacy education and support?" she said,
"It's in everything we do!"
In order to communicate information on maternal health and
healthy infant/ child development, practitioners have to consider
the language and literacy strengths and needs of the participants.
Otherwise there would be no real access to health information. In
fact, as one practitioner remarked, "there would probably be
no program participants!"
In recognizing that literacy is embedded in everything we do,
Gail Wylie reflects the views of many CPNP and CAPC project staff
who responded to the Literacy Matters survey. Denny
Taylor, a leading authority in family literacy, also expresses the
idea that literacy is an ever-present feature of everyday life.
Literacy is not usually the focus of attention. The primary
focus is on the accomplishment of the task in which literacy plays
a part (Taylor, 1997). |
Whether the task is shopping for nutritious food, understanding
pre-natal development, singing to babies, or learning new parenting
skills, language and literacy invariably play a part. Sometimes the
part that literacy plays is obvious. For example, it's clear
that accurately reading ingredients on product labels is important
for healthy eating, essential for pregnant women, and life-saving
when pregnant women have diabetes.
Sometimes the literacy connection is more subtle and less
direct, but no less important. For example, programs that help
forge bonds between parents and their newborns help cultivate the
relationship that is essential for early language development.
In any event, language and literacy infuse every CPNP and CAPC
program so that even when other health matters claim priority,
staff must always be conscious of the impacts.
Ensuring access to information on health, parenting and safety:
A learner-sensitive approach
At Healthy Start for Mom & Me we think
carefully about: |
Things that isolate... |
Things that connect... |
- communicating with every person in the same style (your
style)
|
- mirroring the communication style of each individual
|
- referring to people as "clients"
|
- referring to people as "participants"
|
- questions that box into a corner: "Do you plan to
breastfeed?"
|
- questions that open a discussion: "how have you decided to
feed your baby?"
|
- focussing on people's deficits
|
- focussing on people's strengths; celebrating
accomplishments
|
- expecting people to fit the program
|
- making the program fit the people
|
- judgement and 'zero tolerance'
|
- understanding and "harm reduction"
|
Excerpted from a longer
list produced by Healthy Start for Mom & Me, a
collaborative pregnancy and new parent outreach program in Winnipeg
sponsored by Dietitians of Canada and funded by Health Canada
(Canada Prenatal Nutrition Program and Healthy Child Manitoba
(Healthy Baby program) Revised: October 2003 |
CAPC and CPNP program staff use a variety of methods and
strategies to ensure participants can access health information.
The strategies they identified in the Literacy Matters
survey are most typical of a learner sensitive approach:
- Choice and adaptation of program materials to match the reading
skills of the participants
- Mediation of print
- Highlighting key messages
Many of our current staff are former participants who have
struggled with life circumstances. We find this helps staff relate
to the life circumstances of participants. |
Michelle Ward, Kids First Association |
|
Choosing program materials to match the reading skills of the
participants
Many practitioners begin with the idea that clear simple
messages are well suited to their program participants. They choose
print materials that are:
- Short and to the
point
- Simple with large print and visual supports
- Written in plain language
To make print more inviting and less intimidating,
practitioners:
- Use lots of white
space
- Communicate the main message with pictures and
diagrams
- Include an audio, visual or hands-on component
To ensure that program materials are pitched at an appropriate
reading level, practitioners:
- Consider their
effectiveness elsewhere
- Preview materials carefully
- Solicit similar programs' suggestions
- Choose through partnerships with other
organizations
- Subject print to 'readability' tests
There are over one hundred factors that affect how easy, or
hard, a given document is to read and understand. These factors
include sentence length, word choice, layout, tone, organization,
use of illustrations and appeal to the reader. |
Helene Osborne
Health Literacy Consulting Dec.2000 |
|
Motivation to read depends on the appeal of the content. It is
easier for readers to engage with and understand print that is of
high interest to them and relevant to their lives. Project staff
therefore give consideration to materials that are:
- Age appropriate
- Culturally diverse
- Available in multiple languages
- A good match for the participants' social and cultural
experiences
To adjust materials to better fit participants' reading
skills, staff will:
- Adapt materials for
both high and low literacy levels
- Simplify and shorten text
- Supplement with audio and visual components from the start
of the program
- Provide written translations in the first language of
participants
Looking for good, plain language health information on
birth control or breastfeeding? Cancer or children? Febrile
seizures or foot care? Pap tests or poverty? Tattooing or
tuberculosis? Weight loss or workplace health and safety?
You'll probably find a supplier in the Directory of
Plain Language Health Information. You'll also find
clear directions on how to assess the readability of program
materials you are thinking of using. And great tips for how to make
the fact sheets and pamphlets you design more inviting and easy to
read. |
This resource was published by the
Canadian Public Health Association and the National Literacy and
Health Program. It is freely available on the Internet
<www.pls.cpha.ca>. |
|
Mediating print
Many CAPC and CPNP participants need personal help with
understanding the printed word. While some may have a low level of
skill when it comes to reading, others can read in their first
language, but not in English. Sometimes a crisis has compromised
the ability to make sense of a printed text; or unfamiliar medical
terms may pose a problem. In all cases, project staff approach
participants with the utmost tact to preserve the dignity of the
individual yet ensure that essential information is conveyed.
We never assume people can read. We ask if they would like
us to do paperwork WITH them. |
Gail Wylie, Healthy Start for Mom &
Me |
|
Often literacy support is given in the context of the home
visiting program. Project staff noted that home visits are very
important:
- Home visitation allows for one-on-one interaction with
participants, so pamphlets about programs and sessions are
explained and/or read together (Laurie Lafortune, Healthy
Families)
- We use home visitors who are from those cultures and who
support the integration into this society (Jim Howes, Babies
Best Start)
- Will do one-to-one to accommodate literacy needs if
necessary. (Diane Hill, Better Beginnings)
- I also model behaviour by reading to the children whenever
possible (Rhonda Ginther, Egadz Teen Parent Program)
Centre based programs offer different kinds of opportunities for
participants who are able to mediate print for each other as part
of their involvement in parenting and health education groups.
Staff are able to structure these group activities so that
participants who struggle with reading and writing can be included
without embarrassment.
We have community boards in which local events (including
literacy) are advertised. Staff seeks out information to be placed
on the board. In addition staff also point out these events to
participants and through verbal communication provide the
details. |
Michelle Ward, Kids First Association |
|
- In circles we offer people the opportunity to read aloud
but never pick people out to read. When questions are asked to be
put onto paper, we ask the participants to use pictures and/or
words, but never say "if you are uncomfortable
writing..." (Barb Desjardins, In A Good Way)
- Any activities that do involve having the participants read
something we structure in such a way that they have the option of
having someone else read it (Lorraine Makus, Anna's
House)
- We always put them in pairs or trios so that they can
support each other in reading, even with simple children's
books (UNB and Fredericton Regional Family Resource
Center)
- Some of our fathers cannot read, but we always find ways to
communicate through hands-on education. (S. Bauer, Liard Basin
Task Force CAPC Programs (Rural))
Highlighting key messages
In health and safety education, lives can depend on how well key
messages are understood. Staff of CPNP and CAPC projects cannot
rely solely on print to communicate crucial messages. Therefore
they employ a variety of approaches that combine print with
pictures and other media to ensure that participants know what they
need to know.
Combining talk, pictures and print
Sometimes a three-pronged approach is needed where print is
minimized and pictures and discussion supplement the written word.
The idea is to use whatever it takes to get key messages
across:
- Many of our participants have low literacy levels and
therefore we are always cognizant of using minimal verbal and
maximum amount of visual content to get important messages
across (Yvette Nechvatal-Drew, Pre & Post Natal Nutrition
Project)
- We do not use a lot of written materials, but, when we do,
we incorporate pictures and simple language (Barb Desjardins,
In A Good Way)
Making posters
Posters can deliver a single key message effectively, leaving a
lasting impression with only brief exposure. When participants make
the posters themselves, they begin to think more critically about
how posters work to get their message across. In one project:
Many pamphlets and poster displays are in the Centre, usually
created by a student, for example FASD Display on September 9,
National FASD Awareness Day (Lynne Cornish-Braun, Saskatoon
Friends of Students and Kids).
|
A Healthy Start... one of nine posters from a prenatal
poster set produced by parents and staff and available for purchase
from Healthy Start for Mom & Me. Winnipeg, MB. |
|
|
This and other posters on diabetes are also available in
English on the Health Canada website . Source:
Aboriginal Diabetes Initiative, Health Canada, April 2002 ©
Reproduced with the permission of the Minister of Public Works and
Government Services Canada, 2004. |
|
|
Nutrition Memory Game: Players flip the tokens to
make a pair! Playing games combines talk, pictures and
print with pleasure. Nutrition Memory Game: Based on the Northern
Food Guide. Created by Brenda Hall for Growing Together. Hay River,
NT.
Photographed by Joy Cummings, UNB Integrated Technology
Services |
|
|
Above: Poster Display of prenatal development. Submitted by
Mary Ann Meagher, Brighter Futures. Peterborough Family Resource
Centre. |
|
|
Playing Pregnancy Balderdash helps de-mystify
medical terms for expectant moms. Submitted by Gail Wylie, Healthy
Start for Mom and Me. Winnipeg, MB |
|
|
A Healthy Start... one of nine posters from a prenatal
poster set produced by parents and staff and available for purchase
from Healthy Start for Mom & Me. Winnipeg, MB. |
|
Using multi-media
Increasingly, Canadians access information through television,
videos, and the Internet. Project staff maximize these options
by:
- Showing health videos on a regular basis
- Offering CDs, tapes, and books on tape via toy and parent
lending libraries
- Making programs available in a variety of mediums (print,
audio, video)
The fathers are interested in learning more about
technology; computers will be used in our future
classes." |
Robin Hicken, Gesundheit Für
Kinde |
|
Providing reading materials to take home
Apart from the flyers and pamphlets thrust relentlessly into our
mailboxes, reading materials are not free. Books, newspapers and
magazines are an unlikely budget priority for families on limited
income. Knowing this, many projects provide current magazines and
pamphlets on good housekeeping and parenting, as well as books for
parents and children.
Parenting magazines and books
- Current Parenting and Youth magazines are available in the
Centre (Lynne Cornish-Braun, Saskatoon Friends of Students and
Kids)
- I hand out literature and recommend books . . . age
appropriate to share with their children. And I offer other
resource books to the parents if they need information on a certain
topics, for example on parenting, anger management, crafts and so
on (Rollanda Chezick, Brighter Futures Society)
- We have developed Readiness to Learn manuals (low literacy,
curriculum-based workshops) handouts, resource booklets (e.g.
Helping Dads Figure Out Breastfeeding) (Cathy Constantino,
SIRCH / Bright Starts for Haliburton, Kawartha Lakes and
Northumberland Counties)
Cooking recipes (in pictures and words) along with the food
- We have created a "picture dictionary" of common
cooking terms, ingredients etc. to facilitate easier use of
recipes. We create recipes to complement our group program that use
pictures to help women to follow them at home (Robin Hicken,
Gesundheit Für Kinder)
50 "Idea Kits" are in the process of being
developed at the centre and all materials have been reviewed by the
Adult Network. The Kits contain videos and easy to read manuals and
handouts to reinforce learning outcomes. |
Michelle Margrait, Maggie's Place - A
Resource Centre for Families |
|
Book giveaways
- Many projects collaborate with other organizations to ensure
that books are freely available to families that might otherwise
have few or none. See p 42-43 for more detail on where projects get
books from and how they distribute them
Collaboration with public libraries to ensure easier access to
books
- We partner with local libraries
- We have also arranged with the library for participants to
get no-cost library cards if money is an issue (name withheld
by request)
We have had a range of fathers attend programs. They have
different levels of literacy and different levels of commitment to
changing their literacy levels. But I feel any programs they attend
are beneficial for bonding and interaction with their
children. |
Waltraud Grieger, Growing Years Family
Resource Centre |
|
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