Florida’s Creative Class Thesis

  • Moss G
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Abstract

Introduction: With the rising threat of HIV in India, youth are an important group to reach for prevention education. This pilot study tested the efficacy of STEP (School-based Teenage Education Program focusing on HIV Prevention) for school children. Method: This pilot study randomized 25 schools in Mumbai to receive STEP (n=51 846). We trained forty two undergraduates from local colleges to deliver the (six-session) programme over a six-week period to eighth graders (age 13-15 years). Outcome measures collected at six weeks were HIV knowledge, attitudes toward abstinence/condom use, peer pressure, and confidence in dealing with risky social situations. A repeated measures analysis of variance was conducted with pretest and posttest scores with knowledge, beliefs, attitudes, and confidence as the within-group measures and gender as the between-group measure. Results: Both boys and girls significantly improved on knowledge, attitudes, and beliefs regarding HIV/AIDS and in their confidence level in dealing with risky behaviour. However girls increased more on knowledge (P<0.05), agreement with abstinence (P<0.05), and agreement with condom use (P<0.001). Girls had significantly less need to follow peers (P<0.05), better understanding of precautions against HIV (P<0.001), and a higher confidence level in dealing with risky social situations (P<0.05). Conclusions: Overall, girls benefited more from the STEP intervention than boys. The literature documents strong gender disparities in HIV/AIDS knowledge, information sources, and consequences of sex for youth in India. However, more work is needed to define and document the reasons for the differences.

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Moss, G. (2017). Florida’s Creative Class Thesis (pp. 13–22). https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-55264-4_2

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