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How To Sell Kids on Nursing:
Think like a kid!
-www.MinorityNurse.com
An African-American nurse zooms through the air
on jet-propelled shoes while a poem tells the
story of "nurses with rocket shoes" who "flew
to Mars and went faster than cars."A racially
and gender-diverse group of costumed superheroes
invites boys and girls to join the
Nurse Force, where they can "save lives and
pick up awesome skills." A similarly diverse
group of teenagers smiles knowingly, because they've
just found out that "nurses earn more than accountants
and have more job choices than Web engineers."
A stark photo of a car crash sends a literally
hard-hitting message to teens that nurses are
important people with the power to save lives.
Whether it's trying to sell the idea that nursing
is a really cool career to elementary school kids,
middle schoolers or high school students, the
Virginia Partnership for Nursing (VPN)'s "Nurses
Change Lives" education campaign manages to press
exactly the right buttons for every age level.
There's a simple reason why this award-winning
campaign, developed in association with Bernard
Hodes Group, a recruitment communications and
staffing solutions agency, is so on target: It
was based on child development research to determine
the messages and visuals that would resonate most
effectively with kids.
Nurses Change Lives, which is being promoted to
every school in Virginia, consists of three thematic
campaigns targeted to grades K-3, 4-8 and 9-12,
respectively. Each has its own poster, collateral
materials and interactive Web site for kids. According
to Karen Grimes, branch manager of Bernard Hodes
Group's Richmond office, the "Nurses with Rocket
Shoes" theme was chosen for the youngest kids
because "the research shows this age group grasps
concepts like nursing more easily when they're
based on fantasy rather than reality. "The Web
site includes activities like written and audio
versions of the poem, downloadable coloring pages
and fun facts about nurses and health.
For grades 4-8, Hodes created the comic book-inspired
"Nurse Force" theme because "the thought process
for this age group is more coherent, organized
and abstract,"Grimes explains. "They';re able
to comprehend the principle of concrete problem
solving and they relate easily to identifiable
icons like superheroes, like Spiderman." On the
Web site, kids can meet nurse superheroes ("Code
Name: Sentinel; Super Power: Empathic"), explore
links to health and fitness sites, and vote for
what they"d do if they were in the Nurse Force
(e.g., work with kids, work in the ER).
Because teenagers are the toughest sell of all,
the high school campaign uses a two-pronged attack.
The car-crash theme is designed to reach teens
on an emotional level-"we knew we had to
create a message that would jolt them into action,"
says Grimes-while the "nurses earn more" message
appeals to their intellectual side. "If we're
going to be competing for kids who are considering
becoming lawyers and Web engineers," Grimes notes,
"we need to give them the message that there's
really a career ladder in nursing, there's a lot
of opportunities and the money's good." To see
these campaigns in action, and order the posters
for your own use, point your rocket shoes toward
www.nurseschangelives.com.
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