"I'm interested in whiteheads, blackheads,"
said Showell, whose teenage complexion, by the way, is clear of all of the
above.
Too bad U.S. Health and Human Services official J. Nadine
Gracia wasn't at Philadelphia's Roxborough High School last week to meet
Showell, who, as a freshman, personifies the aims of a $6.4 million federal
project spearheaded by her office.
"I like medicine, but deep-down surgery, I can't
stand that," Showell said. "I like science, and I'm interested in
helping people."
Last year, HHS's Office of Minority Health launched its
National Workforce Diversity Pipeline Program in hopes of attracting more young
people like Showell, who is African American, into health and health-related
tech professions.
Of the 14 grants handed out, one, for $474,500, came to
Philadelphia, to the District 1199C Training and Upgrading Fund and its
partnership with Roxborough High.
The fund is a labor-management education enterprise
involving 50 area health-care and human-service employers and District 1199C of
the National Union of Hospital and Health Care Employees, which is part of
AFSCME.
"It's important that the health workforce is
responsive to the needs of the communities it serves," Gracia, who directs
the Office of Minority Health, said in a statement. "Diversity in the
workforce improves quality of care and communications between providers and
patients and helps to reduce health disparities."
The idea "is to not only entice people, but to
qualify people of color, to spark their motivations that this is something they
can do, and then make sure they can do it," said Cheryl Feldman, executive
director of the Training Fund.
Here's how it works:
Roxborough High School is already an
"academies" high school, meaning that its students are divided into
schools within the school based on their interests in broad career sectors,
while employer partners contribute expertise and mentoring.
The 1199C program is incorporated into Roxborough's
science, biotech, and kinesiology academy. The more students that get into
science, technology, engineering, and math, the more will find their way into
health professions, the thinking goes.
Project-based learning, in which concepts are taught in
conjunction with specific projects rather than in the abstract, is already an
academies hallmark. But the 1199C program puts it on steroids, with grant money
supplying extra resources - tutoring, mentoring, and visits to hospitals and
labs. And the grant lasts five years, following students to college.
Exposure is first.
Last year, for example, students visited the
medical-simulation lab at Drexel University's medical school. They talked to an
actress playing a patient who "fainted" and had to be diagnosed. They
even delivered babies from a birth-giving mannequin.
The money also refurbished a classroom, turning it into
the "Rox-CITe laboratory."
Last week, under the guidance of a Drexel
electrical-engineering doctoral student hired by the program, a handful of
Roxborough juniors were wiring an Arduino "breadboard," used for
making an experimental model of an electric circuit.
Arduino is open-source software, an electronic
prototyping platform, that can be used to create electronic objects.
The goal Thursday was to teach the juniors how to write
software that would tell a light to flash at intervals when a button was
pressed.
When the bulb on Onyea Cropper's breadboard lit up, her
eyes did, too.
"If I wanted to study this in college, would I go
for computer science?" Cropper, 16, of North Philadelphia, asked the
instructor, Jeff Gregorio.
"Either that or electrical engineering," he
replied.
"I think I know what I'm going to do," she
said, her face bright with excitement.
When Cropper does get into college, 1199C's program will
follow her.
Research shows, Feldman said, that young people enter
college but often lose their way in freshman year.
"Have you heard of the posse model?" she asked.
It's "where there is a cohort" of students,
who, by staying together, support one another and are more successful, she
said.
Mentoring will continue, as will programming and
get-togethers, especially for those who stay local.
In North Philadelphia, John Lasky, chief human-resources
officer for the Temple University Health System, already has his eye on the
Roxborough graduates.
The millennial workforce, he said, is used to diversity,
and expects it. Employers who don't have it are at a disadvantage when it comes
to attracting top talent.
Beyond that, "there's currently a physician
shortage, and there will soon be a nursing shortage. There's a shortage in all
of health care," Lasky said, "so now is a perfect time for 1199C's
program."
Source: Philly.com
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