PUBH6815: Community-based Participatory Research

2 CreditsHistorical PerspectiveResearch

This introductory course is intended for junior faculty, post-docs, graduate students and community practitioners interested in adding CBPR to their repertoire of effective approaches to understanding and addressing social and health disparities. Topics will explore the purpose and applications of CBPR; partnership formation and maintenance; issues of power, trust, race, class, and social justice; conflict resolution; ethical issues; CBPR's relationship to cultural knowledge systems, and funding CBPR projects. This is NOT a methodology course. CBPR is an approach to conducting research that is amenable to a variety of research designs and methodologies and will NOT cover topics such as survey design, quantitative methods, qualitative methods, focus groups, community needs assessment procedures, etc.

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All Instructors

A Average (3.873)Most Common: A (70%)

This total also includes data from semesters with unknown instructors.

47 students
SFDCBA
  • 4.78

    /5

    Recommend
  • 4.65

    /5

    Effort
  • 4.75

    /5

    Understanding
  • 4.83

    /5

    Interesting
  • 4.25

    /5

    Activities


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