Reserve your webinar seat now!
CEU and CHEC Credit Available for Webinar Attendance
Continuing education (CE) credit, as well as continuing education contact hour credit (CECH) in health education from the National Commission
for Health Education Credentialing, Inc., are available for this activity through the CDC Training and Continuing Education Online system only. Please follow the instructions below to receive 0.2 CEU credits or 1.5 CHEC credit.
To complete online evaluation:
- Go to the
CDC Training and Continuing Education Online at
www.cdc.gov/tceonline/. If you have not registered as a participant, click on
New Participant to create a user ID and password; otherwise click on
Participant Login and log in.
- Once logged on to the
CDC/ATSDR Training and Continuing Education Online website, you will be on the
Participant Services page. Click on
Search and Register. Use either search method to locate the course and click on
View.
- Click on the course. The course information page will come up. Scroll down to
Register Here. Click on the type of CE that you would like to receive and then
Submit. Three demographic questions will come up. Complete the questions and then
Submit.
- If you have already completed the course you may choose to go right to the evaluation. Complete the evaluation and
Submit. A record of your course completion and your CE certificate will be located in the
Transcript and Certificate section of your record.
If you have any questions, please contact:
CDC/ATSDR Training and Continuing Education Online
1-800-41TRAIN
Email at
[log in to unmask]
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The last in a series of five webinar trainings provided by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) will discuss program evaluation
as part of a comprehensive worksite health program, the definition of program evaluation, how to decide on the program evaluation focus, how to design a program evaluation, and key evaluation areas and metrics for worksite health. Webinar attendees will also
have the opportunity to hear the latest updates on the National Healthy Worksite Program (NHWP).
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Laurie Cluff, PhD
Organizational Psychologist,
RTI International
Laurie Cluff, an RTI research psychologist, has a primary area of expertise in industrial organizational psychology, though her training in
research methodology is applicable to any field. Her responsibilities at RTI include directing projects, conducting process and outcome evaluations of workplace programs, providing evaluation technical assistance, developing core measures for work-site health
promotion interventions, leading occupational data analysis efforts, and coordinating data collection from occupational experts. Her duties have also included engaging in RTI's own organizational and workforce development initiatives, as well as monitoring
project budgets, projecting staffing needs, and working with clients to develop data collection and evaluation methodologies.
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James C. Hersey, PhD
Principal Scientist,
RTI International
Dr. James Hersey is a senior scientist and evaluation methodologist at RTI International.
A developmental psychologist, Hersey has more than 30 years of experience working in a variety of settings to implement and evaluate public
health programs, including those at the national, state and local levels. He brings more than 20 years of project management of evaluation contracts to the CDC, overseeing more than 100 projects and $50 million of research. An evaluation expert, Hersey is
skilled at multi-method evaluation approaches, survey design and evaluation of worksite health programs and social marketing campaigns. An emphasis of his research has been nutrition and obesity control, tobacco control, diabetes, and heart disease and stroke
prevention. He is particularly adept at translation of practical evaluation into actionable policy to improve programs.
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For more information about the National Healthy Worksite Program visit www.cdc.gov/NHWP
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