Prof adapts CPR certification skills test to online, students certify
May 14, 2020 | UHCL Staff
When Assistant Professor of Public Health Isabelle Kusters heard that the University of Houston-Clear Lake might have to close to because of
the COVID-19 virus, she knew she needed to act quickly to make changes to her courses.
She was teaching a Health, Emergency Care, and First Aid class, which was in an online
format to start with, but would have culminated in an in-person skills test and certification.
“How was I supposed to test students without ever seeing them?” wondered Kusters,
who shared her concerns with her colleagues in the department. “I heard from other
professors that sometimes, students submit videos of themselves demonstrating the
skills they’re supposed to know.”
Kusters came up with scenarios, outlined in a detailed instruction sheet, requiring
students to submit seven videos of themselves demonstrating the skills they’d learned
in class, including how to intervene in adult and pediatric choking, first aid, and
adult and pediatric CPR. “I had many different scenarios, and students were required
to make videos in which they show themselves acting out the steps they would do in
each situation, according to American Red Cross guidelines,” she said.
Students submitted their videos, and Kusters said they’d done a great job. “Students
were ‘saving’ their kids, their husbands, stuffed animals, or pillows,” she said.
Andrea Gamarra, who is about to receive her Bachelor of Science in Healthcare Administration, took the online course believing the certification would be in person. “It did not
work out that way,” she said. “But Dr. Kusters made it really simple. She gave detailed
instructions and scenarios, and I took everything I learned in class about how to
help someone choking, unconscious, or needing CPR, and I made all the videos showing
my ability to respond to each scenario.”
Gamarra said she would rather have been able to show her skills and to do chest compression
on a real CPR mannequin in front of her professor, but adjustments had to be made
under the circumstances. “She provided us with everything we needed to learn,” she
said.
Kusters said it was great to see how students rallied the people they are quarantined
with to help get their assignments done. “Most of my students are Fitness and Human Performance students, but many students take this course as an elective as well,” she said. “This
is one of the first classes our students in our degree program take, but it’s applicable
to other colleges as well.”
Although students expressed the wish to come in and actually use the mannequins, Kusters
said each student took the assignments seriously. “I think they still got the full
benefit,” she said. “They completed the online tests and assignments. This is about
teaching in the time when instructional innovation is needed. We have to do things
differently in a time of crisis.”
Gamarra is CPR certified now, and feels the information will be useful as she proceeds
into her career in hospital administration. “I do feel that I learned everything I
needed despite not being able to do anything in person.”
Read more about UHCL’s Fitness and Human Performance program online.
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