Outline of the state of Rhode Island
State
Rhode Island
Addressed

Category
Health Education K-12 Curriculum—Personal Health and Wellness—ES

Category
Health Education K-12 Curriculum—Personal Health and Wellness—ES

State law addresses personal health and wellness.

200-RICR-20-10-1.2.1 A Guaranteed and Viable Curriculum

  1. Each LEA shall ensure that the coherent and coordinated K-12 curriculum for health includes a. Instruction in all content areas: personal health, mental and emotional health, injury prevention (including violence prevention), nutrition, sexuality and family life, disease prevention and control, and substance use and abuse prevention - including specific topic areas required by state statute; b. An emphasis on developing the key skills (i.e., accessing information and services, analyzing social influences on health, assessing personal risks, goal-setting, decision making, communication, negotiation, and advocacy) that cut across all health content areas and on practicing health-enhancing behaviors; c. Sequential, comprehensive, and developmentally appropriate instruction K-12; d. Medically accurate information; and e. Compliance with statutory requirements for instructional time as well as with other requirements in the Rules and Regulations for School Health Programs.
Policy Type
Regulation

216-RICR-20-10-4.7 Mandated Health Instructional Outcomes

  1. Human Growth and Development: growth and development as a process of natural progression influenced by heredity, environment, culture, and other factors and which encompasses the continuum from conception to death;
Policy Type
Regulation

216-RICR-20-10-4.7 Mandated Health Instructional Outcomes

  1. Prevention and Control of Disease: the causes, effects, treatment, and prevention of chronic and communicable diseases, with exclusion of instruction thereof pursuant to R.I. Gen. Laws § 16- 21-7(a).
Policy Type
Regulation

The Rhode Island Health Education Framework

In order to demonstrate the relationship between the Standard and health education outcomes, the outcomes need to be reviewed and assigned to the most appropriate standard (or Standard) and performance descriptions. A committee of educators and others has accomplished this task. They have aligned the outcomes with the Standard and performance descriptions. The result of this alignment can be seen in the Comprehensive Health Instructional Outcomes. It is essential that all students engage in health education programs that include all of the process and content Standard depicted in this Framework.

Figure 4

The Weaving of Content and Health Education Standard

(7 health education Standard are weaved with 10 health education content areas:)

Health Education Standard:

  1. Health promotion and disease prevention concepts
  2. Valid health information, products and services access
  3. Health enhancing and health risk reduction behaviors
  4. Influence of culture, media and technology
  5. Interpersonal communication skills
  6. Goal-setting and decision-making
  7. Personal, family, community and environmental advocacy.

Content areas:

  1. Personal Health
  2. Mental and Emotional Health
  3. Injury Prevention and Safety
  4. Nutrition
  5. Family Life
  6. Environmental Health
  7. Disease Control and Prevention
  8. Substance Use and Abuse
  9. Consumer Health
  10. Community Health
Policy Type
Standard