Curriculum
The importance of classroom instruction on sun safety cannot be overly stressed. A single intervention in a child's life, such as a one-time school assembly, is insufficient. Ideally, children should receive age-appropriate instruction at every grade level.
Primary school
Young children will benefit from learning how
the sun’s invisible UV rays can damage the skin.
They can be taught the basic skills for personal
sun safety, and can be motivated to protect
against overexposure.
Secondary school
Teenage students will learn about skin cancer,
what causes it, and how it can be prevented.
The glamour of sun tanning can be debunked by
demonstrating the very ugly effects of chronic
overexposure.
School policy reinforcement
Classroom sun safety education can include a
review of the school’s sun safety policies and
recommendations. Discussion might center
on whether the students could do a better job of
protecting themselves.
Resources
Fortunately, excellent instructional materials
already exist, designed specifically for use by
classroom teachers. Check our [link:
Resources - Curriculum page] for a list and
description of available products.
Ideas For Secondary School Projects Involving Sun Safety
One of
the best ways to learn a subject is to teach it.
Here are a few ideas for projects that could be
undertaken by secondary school students with the
objective of teaching or promoting sun safety to
others:
PowerPoint®: Design a
supervised project for a few students interested
in a health career. Ask them to develop a
talk on sun safety which they will present to
their classmates or to an assembly of all the
incoming freshmen students. (Mixed in with the
scientific information, a couple of images of
skin cancer projected on the big screen really
gets their attention!) A supplemental
handout should be created which highlights the
important points. One of the most important
goals should be for the presenters to convince
their audience that sun tanning is really
stupid. Reference material for the
students to use can be found on the Project
S.A.F.E.T.Y. CD, or among the references on this
website.
Video: Have a few students design and tape an educational video, documentary, or mock news program on the subject of sun safety. The video can be entered in an awards contest.
Webpage: One or more students could create a mock (or real) internet webpage.
Journalism: Develop a sun safety story. It might be based on a local case involving skin cancer.
Health: Design and conduct a study of teen attitudes or behavior concerning sun safety before and after some intervention, such as one of the above activities or the study of sun safety in class.
Art/Advertising: Create the original work for posters that will discourage suntanning.
For any of the above projects, a student should contact a local dermatologist to request his/her involvement in reviewing their material for accuracy prior to presentation. If the students are making a video, they might wish to include a taped interview with the dermatologist. In case your dermatologist is not already familiar with Sun Safety For Kids, refer them to this website and perhaps the students could convince the dermatologist to speak with your school district administrators to encourage sun safety program development at all the schools in the district. There's yet another project!
If you have another project suggestion, please contact us so we may add it to this page.