|
Introduction.
How to Use This Guide
Chapter
I. The Need for HIV/STI Prevention Peer Education—Reviews
young people's need for HIV/STI prevention education
and summarizes the research that shows peer education
works.
Chapter
II. Building Support for a Peer Education Program—Highlights
the importance of strong support from many different
groups in the community. The chapter tells you
who you can find to support the program and outlines
nine reasons why teens need education to prevent
HIV and STI and why peer education fills that
need. The chapter also presents convincing arguments
to counter possible opposition to the program.
Chapter
III. Planning the Program and Finding Funding—Focuses
on comprehensive planning. You need money
and a plan. This chapter shows you how to get
started.
Chapter
IV. Selecting and Training Staff and Recruiting
TAP Members—Focuses on important
qualities to look for in recruiting staff and
provides guidelines for recruiting youth.
Chapter
V. Training Youth to Be Peer Educators—Outlines
12 sessions, amounting to about 22 hours of activities
that will provide information and skills relating
to HIV/STI prevention.
Chapter
VI. Youth Developing Activities to Educate Their
Peers—Describes some educational
efforts that peer educators can design and implement
and suggests approaches to supporting their efforts.
Chapter
VII. Evaluating the Peer Education Program—Provides
guidelines for assessing the success of the TAP
program and a sample evaluation instrument.
Chapter
VIII. Taking the Message to the Media—Provides
basic guidelines on how to interact with the
media.
Appendix—Provides
resource organizations and web sites for more information.
Forms contained in the Guide to Implementing
TAP—such as permission slips, tests, and data
gathering forms—are duplicated in the appendix.
|