Spring 2018  |  PA 5290 Section 003: Topics in Planning -- Urban Planning and Health Equity (65859)

Instructor(s)
Class Component:
Lecture
Credits:
3 Credits
Repeat Credit Limit:
4 Credits
Grading Basis:
Student Option
Instructor Consent:
No Special Consent Required
Instruction Mode:
In Person Term Based
Class Attributes:
Topics Course
Times and Locations:
Regular Academic Session
 
01/16/2018 - 05/04/2018
Mon, Wed 01:00PM - 02:15PM
UMTC, West Bank
Hubert H Humphrey Center 60
Enrollment Status:
Open (12 of 30 seats filled)
Also Offered:
Course Catalog Description:
Selected topics.
Class Notes:
http://classinfo.umn.edu/?yingling+PA5290+Spring2018
Class Description:
This interdisciplinary course examines the causes and consequences of place-based health disparities in cities, explores how health disparities can be mitigated and exacerbated by urban planning decisions, and introduces best practices in urban planning for achieving community health equity. The course will involve extensive readings, guest lectures, field-based assignments, data-collection activities, and local community involvement. Twin Cities has one of the largest disparities in health outcomes in the nation and local practitioners are pioneering new urban planning solutions to reduce place-based health disparities. The course will utilize this location advantage and use the region as an immersive learning environment. Students are expected to apply knowledge and skills learned in the class locally in the Twin Cities region.

There is no textbook required in this course.
Who Should Take This Class?:
Graduate students from the urban planning or public health program.
Learning Objectives:
At the end of the course, students will be able to:
Understand the historical foundations, current trends and challenges, and international perspectives in connecting urban planning to health equity issues.
Investigate how various planning sectors and urban environment dimensions, including land use, transportation, open space, housing, food systems, and community social capital, interact to affect health disparities in cities.
Critically evaluate how existing planning processes and decisions respond to the needs of vulnerable populations and contribute to health equity.
Develop skills to engage communities and identifying community-sensitive solutions for reducing place-based health disparities.
Grading:

Class Participation (10%): Class participation includes physical attendance and active participation in classroom discussion. You are required to read the assigned readings before each class to have active and informed participation in classroom discussion.

In-Class Quizzes (15%): There will be two in-class quizzes: one on foundational knowledge in Week 4 and another on tools and approaches in Week 8. The first quiz will account for 10% of the final grade and the second one will be shorter and account for 5% of the final grade. Both quizzes mostly contain multiple-choice and sentence completion questions.

Individual Activity and Well-Being Diary Project (30%): This individual project involves using the DaynamicaTM Smartphone App (see daynamica.umn.edu) to keep a week-long activity and well-being diary. This is to increase awareness of how the built environment offers activity opportunities and constrains activity options at the same time, and how these opportunities and constraints shape individual travel behavior, physical activity, leisure time use, and emotional well-being on a daily basis. Students will be asked to analyze the location- and time-stamped activity and well-being data, and write a reflection paper with critique of how the built environment affects activity-travel patterns, emotional well-being, and health outcomes.

Large-Group Photovoice Project (15%): This group project involves using the photovoice approach developed by Caroline Wang in 1994 to identify important community health issues and facilitate effective communication. Students will be assigned into groups and each group will assigned to work on a specific neighborhood in the Twin Cities region. Each group is required to present six photos reflecting the most critical health equity issues in the assigned neighborhood. Short narratives should be provided for each photo describing when and where the photo was taken and why the photo was selected for presentation.

Final Small-Group Paper Project (30%): In small groups, students are required to integrate the knowledge and skills learned throughout the semester, apply current evidence and best practices out there, and complete a healthy communities plan on a neighborhood of particular interest in the Twin Cities region. The plan is expected to guide a planning and/or public health agency on ways to create, retrofit or maintain a healthy community in the selected neighborhood. The plan should at least include: (1) a critique of the current state of the area's built environment and health disadvantages with relevant data, and (2) recommended solutions for reducing health disadvantages in the area.

Textbooks:
https://bookstores.umn.edu/course-lookup/65859/1183
Syllabus:
http://classinfo.umn.edu/syllabi/yingling_PA5290_Spring2018.pdf
Past Syllabi:
http://classinfo.umn.edu/syllabi/yingling_PA5290_Fall2017.pdf (Fall 2017)
Instructor Supplied Information Last Updated:
13 October 2017

ClassInfo Links - Spring 2018 Public Affairs Classes Taught by Yingling Fan

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