AIDS on the College Campus


Book Description







Understanding HIV and STI Prevention for College Students


Book Description

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, young people aged 18 to 25 are at a significant risk for acquiring and transmitting HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus) and other STIs (sexually transmitted infections). Primary developmental processes that place college students particularly at risk include the experience of intimacy, sexual desires and the centrality of the peer group. During these routine developmental processes, college students experiment with unprotected sex, multiple sex partners and alcohol and illicit drugs, all of which are contributing risk factors for HIV/STI infections. Early diagnosis, treatment and prevention of HIV and other STIs is germane to promoting the sexual health of college students and reducing high HIV/STI infection rates among young people. This edited volume will provide innovative and cutting-edge approaches to prevention for college students and will have a major impact on advancing the interdisciplinary fields of higher education and public health. It will explore core ideas such as hooking up culture, sexual violence, LGBT and students of color, as well as HIV and STI prevention in community colleges, rural colleges and minority serving institutions.










Effective AIDS Education on Campus


Book Description

This is a book of enhancements. In its chapters, the authors offer analysis, rationale, justification, and guidelines for focusing, evaluating, and improving HIV education and sexual health-promotion programs on college and university campuses. Our purposes are to demonstrate and model the value of thinking carefully, repeatedly, and deeply about audiences, needs, formats, content, and impact in health-promotion programs; to combine theoretical constructs and research data with practical implications; to raise some important questions for future study; and most of all, to prompt and support educators and clinicians to take the next significant steps in building health for campus communities. This is the 57th issue of the quarterly journal New Directions for Student Services. For more information on the series, please see the Journals and Periodicals page.




Humanizing Pedagogy Through HIV and AIDS Prevention


Book Description

This book explores the power of educators to serve as HIV and AIDS prevention agents. The definitive text represents the work of a distinguished panel of teacher educators and health scientists who identify core information and skills effective educators of HIV and AIDS prevention should learn as they are prepared to attend to the academic and human needs of students. It assigns to teachers, in the US and abroad, the novel role of prevention agents, given their extraordinary ability to access and affect young people -- to influence their behavior. Humanizing Pedagogy considers the social, economic, racial, gender and other variables that impact the prevention of HIV and AIDS. The authors collectively assert that the process of preventing HIV and AIDS, when it considers historic and social context, can compel educators to serve not only as practitioners of knowledge, but as community agents of health and well being. Attending to HIV and AIDS issues advances the capacity and ability of educators to see and attend to the complete learner. Humanizing Pedagogy is a single volume resource for educators, in the US and abroad, interested in attending to the whole needs of the learner-and saving lives.




Effective AIDS Education on Campus


Book Description

This is a book of enhancements. In its chapters, the authors offer analysis, rationale, justification, and guidelines for focusing, evaluating, and improving HIV education and sexual health-promotion programs on college and university campuses. Our purposes are to demonstrate and model the value of thinking carefully, repeatedly, and deeply about audiences, needs, formats, content, and impact in health-promotion programs; to combine theoretical constructs and research data with practical implications; to raise some important questions for future study; and most of all, to prompt and support educators and clinicians to take the next significant steps in building health for campus communities. This is the 57th issue of the quarterly journal New Directions for Student Services.




AIDS on College Campus


Book Description




AIDS on Campus


Book Description