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The 2003 National Social Norms Conference: An
Overview
pdf
version
With about 300
attendees and nearly thirty sessions, the 2003 National Social Norms
Conference, held July 16-18 in Boston, MA, was both large and extremely
varied. One of the real pleasures for the program selection committee
was struggling to accommodate the large number of excellent proposals.
It is a testament to how much the social norms approach has evolved
in the last few years that so many people are doing so good work, and
in so many areas. Unfortunately, given the limitations of space I can
only discuss a fraction of the presentations in any detail. I therefore
want to focus on the number of projects that reported positive outcome
data, and close with a discussion of several innovative efforts.
Middle and
High School Interventions: The Research Background
As we know, an increasing
number of conference presentations, case studies, and published articles
continue to show that the social norms approach can be an effective
method of promoting health and reducing harm among college students,
especially as it concerns heavy episodic alcohol consumption. Positive
results have been documented at large schools and small, both public
and private, and in all parts of the country. Inspired by the positive
impact achieved in the higher education setting, a growing number of
middle schools, high schools, and communities have begun to actively
investigate the possibility of implementing their own social norms campaigns,
most often focused on the prevention of adolescent alcohol and tobacco
use. As is the case for all proposed norm interventions focused on substance
use, one critical question is whether the target population possesses
both a positive norm and exaggerated perceptions of peer use. This is
a particularly important consideration as regards alcohol, where normative
messages of moderate and responsible use—routinely disseminated
in social norm campaigns on college campuses—are impermissible
among middle and high school populations for whom abstinence is the
only acceptable message.
One ongoing study
presented at this year's conference continues to find clear norms of
peer abstinence for tobacco and illicit drugs, as well as viable norms
of nonuse of alcohol, among both middle and high school students in
a range of schools across the nation. The work of Wes Perkins and David
Craig (presented during the session "Using a Web-Survey Strategy
to Expose Actual and Perceived Social Norms Among Middle and High School
Students") has now grown to comprise a data base of over eight
thousand students from thirty schools in states such as Massachusetts,
New York, Colorado, Montana, and Washington. This important work documenting
what they have termed "the imaginary life of peers" (Perkins
and Craig, 2003) significantly extends the findings of other researchers
who have also reported the overestimation of peer alcohol, tobacco,
and illicit drug use among students of middle and high school age (Botvin
et al., 2001; D'Amico et al., 2001; Sussman et al., 1988; Thombs, Wolcott,
and Farkash, 1997; Bech and Treiman, 1996; Graham, Marks, and Hansen,
1991).
Interestingly, one
of the presenters at this year's conference was among the very first
researchers to report that adolescent onset of use can be significantly
delayed by correcting overestimations of alcohol and cigarette use among
peers. William Hansen's work on "norm setting," published
more than twenty years ago (Hansen and Graham, 1991), pre-dated much
if not all of the work that we now routinely think of as fundamental
to the implementation of the social norms approach. In his conference
presentation ("Lessons Learned about Norm Setting from Middle School
Interventions") he reflected at length on the findings of his ongoing
research project, the Adolescent Alcohol Prevention Trial, which is
designed to test norm setting versus resistance skills training as an
approach to alcohol use prevention. This research suggests that normative
beliefs are highly correlated with three other variables among adolescent
non-users and successful quitters: personal commitments to avoid drug
use, strong beliefs about the social and personal consequences of drug
use, and the belief that drug use is incongruent with one's desired
lifestyle. In a sense, these findings suggest how correct our response
has been to those critics who allege that the social norms approach
simply promotes conformity. Hansen's analysis suggests that, quite to
the contrary, the promotion of true norms actually empowers individuals
to live and act in greater congruence with their personal beliefs and
values.
Much of Hansen's
current research is focused on infusing normative messages into curricula,
blending them with other programmatic elements not obviously linked
to norm setting, and attempting to measure the disparate impact of these
variables on youth resilience. This is important work that, like his
previous research, is sure to have important implications for those
using social norms in college and community health as well.
High School
Interventions: Three Case Studies
Building on some
of the research described above, several presenters offered sessions
relating their successful use of the social norms approach in reducing
alcohol and cigarette use among high school students. These efforts
represent important advances for the field of health promotion, since
they confirm that the social norms approach can indeed be used effectively
in a variety of normative contexts where substance use is concerned.
Two of these case
studies were presented in tandem, since one is essentially a replication
of the other. The DeKalb/Sycamore DCP SAFE high school project was the
first to document positive impact in reducing alcohol and cigarette
use among adolescents in a community-wide setting using a social norms
media approach. It did so by correcting not only the misperceptions
of students, but those of parents and teachers as well.
Based on data gathered
during the marketing research stage of the project, various methods
and media channels were employed to communicate accurate information
about the student norms of nonuse to all three target populations. A
number of basic messages were developed, market tested, and refined
so as to be school specific. Newspaper ads and direct mailings on school
letterhead were used to reach parents; institute days and inter-office
mailings were used to communicate with teachers; and in-school posters,
direct mail flyers and promotional postcards, as well as radio spots
on one specific station were used to reach students.
After two years
of campaign implementation, all of the data trends were in a positive
direction:
- Parents, teachers,
and students more accurately perceived the student norms of nonuse;
- Parents and
teachers reported increasing use of true norm messages in their interactions
with students;
- Students reported
receiving more alcohol and tobacco-related information from parents,
teachers, posters, flyers, and radio; and
- Students use
of alcohol and tobacco declined significantly.
Specifically, the 30-day measure of alcohol use dropped from 43.7% at
Time 1 (1999) to 30.4% at Time 2 (2001), a 13.3 percentage point decline
that in effect represents a 30.4% reduction in prevalence. Similarly,
the 30-day measure of cigarette use dropped from 25.6% at Time 1 to
16.8% at Time 2, an 8.8 percentage point drop that translates into a
34.4% reduction. These are astonishing results, especially given that
prior to the implementation of the social norm campaign a number of
traditional prevention programs, such as D.A.R.E., had been instituted
at each of the high schools with no demonstrable positive impact.
Following the model
established by the DCP SAFE project, the ETHS coalition embarked on
a campaign to increase the accurate perception of student norms of nonuse
by parents, school staff, and students. The primary objective of this
intervention, stated as a specific, measurable and time-limited outcome,
was:
- To increase the
nonuse of alcohol and cigarettes among ETHS students by
3-7% in year one and by 20% in year five (2006).
With approximately
three thousand students and over three hundred teachers, staff, and
administrators, Evanston Township High School is not only large but
extremely diverse. Using a wide array of royalty-free, commercially
purchased images of young people, project staff were able to create
normative media reflective of the school's tremendous diversity and
its inclusive ethos. Messages were specifically designed to support
the concepts of power and choice—especially appealing notions
to developing adolescents—and to promote the competence, care,
and healthy behavior of the clear majority of students.
After the first
year of implementation, most of the key data points had trended in the
desired direction; after two years, the data trends were even more broadly
positive, such that:
- School staff
reported increasing use of true norm messages to students regarding
alcohol and cigarettes
- School staff
reported more accurate perceptions of the norms of nonuse by students
Parents reported increasing use of true norm messages regarding alcohol
to students
- Parents reported
more accurate perceptions of the nonuse norms of students
- Student perceptions
of peer use of alcohol and cigarettes consistently declined, and
- Student use of
alcohol and cigarettes was reduced.
Specifically, the 30-day measure of alcohol use dropped from 46% at
Time 1 baseline to 41% at Time 3 (2003), a 5 percentage point decline
that represents an 11% reduction in prevalence. Similarly, student 30-day
use of cigarettes went from 16% at baseline to 12% at Time 3, a 4 percentage
point drop equaling a 25% reduction in prevalence.
Finally, in another
session, the Naperville Social Norms Marketing Coalition presented information
about its own successful intervention that is currently focused solely
on the reduction of cigarette use. The Naperville Township system comprises
four high schools with a combined enrollment of approximately 11,800
students. Baseline data from their Drug Perception and Use survey revealed
the familiar finding of a misperceived norm of health regarding cigarette
use. Specifically, while fully 75% of students reported that they never
smoked, the students thought that only 9% of their peers never did so.
Based on this data normative messages of non-use were developed and
market tested. The Resulting "Reality is…" campaign
featured a number of posters with slightly varying but thematically
consistent messages.
After three years
of implementing the social norm campaign, the data revealed the following
statistically significant findings:
- Decrease in
perceived peer use of cigarettes across as well as within grade levels.
- Decrease in cigarette
use across grade levels.
With the three-year
costs for printing posters and related items totaling $6500, this has
been an extremely cost-effective method of achieving large-scale, positive
results in four fairly large suburban high schools.
Together, the sessions
devoted to these three projects provided a wealth of information to
the many conference attendees seeking to broaden their understanding
of how such interventions can be conducted effectively, and with fidelity
to the model.
The Social
Norms Model: Roadmaps for Positive Change
The theme of this
year's conference—"Roadmaps for Positive Change"—was
inspired in large part by the generous financial support provided by
the Governor's Highway Safety Bureau of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
Given that, it was especially appropriate that Robert Foss presented
the findings from his 2 Out of 3 .00 BAC project at the University of
North Carolina (UNC) at Chapel Hill, since this work was funded in part
by that state's Governor's Highway Safety Program. The positive results
of this study have garnered a great deal of press attention since the
conference, and for good reason.
The innovative aspect
of this work is that it is based, not on student self reports of drinking,
but on breathalyzer readings gathered in the field as students returned
home late in the evening or early morning. A preliminary study conducted
in 1997 using this direct measurement of blood alcohol concentration
(BAC) level found that fully two-thirds of UNC students returning home
on traditional "party" nights registered .00 BACs, and this
data generated the normative message that became the basis of the campaign:
- "Whether
it's Thursday, Friday, or Saturday night, 2 out of 3 UNC students
return home with a .00 blood alcohol concentration.
Initially targeted
solely at freshmen, the campaign was subsequently expanded so as to
address the entire student body.
Variations of this
message were employed over the course of the campaign and delivered
via a number of media channels, though posters were the principal mechanism.
Evaluative data indicated a growing awareness of the campaign from 1999
to 2002, with increasing percentages of students understanding and believing
the message. Breathalyzer samples gathered in the field in 1999 and
2002 showed a number of positive changes in student drinking, among
the most notable (as detailed in the final project report: Foss et al.,
2003):
- "Among respondents
who had been drinking on the night of the interview, the proportion
with a BAC above .05% decreased from 60% to 52%
- The percentage
of respondents who could be classified as heavy drinkers on the night
of the interview dropped from 14% to 10%
- Among those drinking
on the night of the interview, the mean number of self-reported drinks
consumed decreased from 5.1 to 4.3."
This is important
work that provides further evidence of the effectiveness of the social
norms approach. It also adds to the growing body of research revealing
that the 5/4 measure inappropriately classifies large numbers of students
(and others as well) as heavy episodic drinkers despite the fact that
their BAC levels remain well within safe limits (Thombs, Olds, and Snyder,
2003; Perkins, DeJong, Linkenbach, 2001).
The Prevention
Collaborative
A more traditional
intervention with positive outcome data was described by David Hellstrom,
who presented information about a group of seven colleges in the Twin
Cities that formed a collaborative with the goal of achieving a quantifiable
reduction in the number of students reporting impaired driving. This
DWI prevention campaign—funded with a three-year grant from the
Minnesota Department of Transportation—used the social norms approach
to communicate the fact that the clear majority of students were making
safe and healthy choices about drinking a driving. The Collaborative
achieved a 13% reduction in student reported DWI over the course of
the project.
Many of the methods
employed to disseminate the very simple normative message—"Most
students prevent DWI"—were very traditional: posters, table
tents, stickers, etc. In the third year of the campaign, specific data
about the reduced incidence of DWI were also incorporated into the media
("That's an 18% improvement. Way to go!"), as were specific
tips for preventing DWI, such as walking home, calling a cab, and using
a designated driver.
Interestingly, the
outcome data also showed significant reductions in other measures as
well, such as excessive drinking, underage drinking, and alcohol-related
negative consequences. Such reductions occurred even though they were
not stated objectives of the campaign and, more importantly, no messages
were disseminated regarding these particular issues.
Most Valuable Players: Targeting A Sub-Population
A question that
is frequently asked in the field concerns the possibility of conducting
a social norms intervention that is targeted at a sub-population. One
of the conference presentations provided an exemplary model of how such
a project can be carried out in the context of an existing campus-wide
campaign. Wes Perkins' and David Craig's "Most Valuable Players:
Using Social Norms to Target Student-Athletes As a High-Risk Sub-Population"
offered a comprehensive overview of a campaign whose express goal was
to produce a new and more integrated athletic, academic, and social
climate, where athletes and the general student body had a more realistic
awareness of peer disapproval of alcohol abuse, a more responsible level
of conversation about alcohol use norms, and a lower level of high-risk
drinking among athletes.
Baseline data was
gathered in November 2001 using a comprehensive and anonymous web-based
survey of Hobart and William Smith (HWS) Colleges' student athlete population.
A total of 414 athletes participated in the survey, which represents
86% of all intercollegiate athletes on the HWS campus. Among the numerous
advantages of using this customized web-based survey is that it reduces
data collection costs and greatly increases the rapidity with which
data can be made available for use in the campaign.
A wide variety of
normative messages were generated from the data. Here are some examples:
- 78% of HWS senior
athletes, when thinking about a career, say "intellectual challenge"
is very important to them.
- The majority
of HWS athletes in season consume alcohol only once or twice a month
or do not drink at all.
- Two-thirds of
athletes participate in campus organizations other than their sport.
- 88% of athletes
believe that one should never drink to an intoxicating level that
interferes with academics or other responsibilities.
- Two-thirds of
all HWS senior athletes participate in volunteer service each week
with one-third contributing at least three hours weekly.
A variety of methods
have been employed to promote these messages, including a print campaign
that includes newspaper ads and an MVP Factoids column, a poster campaign,
and a two-pronged electronic mass media campaign. One component of the
latter campaign uses flat screen computers that have been mounted into
9 custom wall-mounted cabinets in high traffic areas of athletic facilities;
each computer offers students access to athlete and general student
data bases through the Campus Factoids and MVP Factoids software applications.
The other component utilizes MVP E-Bits, which are brief summaries of
results from recent surveys of student athletes.
A program media
exposure survey revealed high levels of saturation. For example, 70%
of respondents had seen a wall poster about student athletes multiple
times, 65% had read an MVP Factoid on a screen saver multiple times,
and 40% had read an MVP Factoid in a campus newspaper multiple times.
Post-test data was
gathered the following year using the same comprehensive and anonymous
web-based survey of the HWS student population. An analysis of this
data shows reductions in the extent to which both male and female athletes
misperceive team-mate drinking as being high in frequency (2 or more
days per week). Concurrent significant reductions were also found in
the percentage of male and female athletes drinking two or more days
per week as well as numerous negative consequences due to drinking,
such as inefficiency in homework, cutting class, and late papers/missed
or poor exams. Additionally, female athletes reported significant reductions
in injuries to self and others, whereas males reported significant reductions
in unintended sexual activity as a result of drinking.
These are astonishing
initial results from an intense and highly innovative intervention.
What they clearly suggest is that the range of options for communicating
normative messages to populations (or sub-groups thereof) is really
quite broad: your ingenuity is the limit. And yet, as always, the basic
principle remains the same: that correcting a misperception with consistently
delivered normative messages can lead to positive behavior change.
College
Student Drinkers: Celebrating Protection
Two presentations
were fundamentally similar in their theoretical outlook, and they perhaps
point to one of the ways in which the social norms approach may be evolving
as it addresses the issue of college student drinking.
In one session ("The
Personal Protective Behaviors of College Student Drinkers: Evidence
of Indigenous Protective Norms"), Gregory Barker and Rich Rice
presented evidence, based on an analysis of aggregate National College
Health Assessment (NCHA) data, that college student drinkers regularly
employ a number of strategies or behaviors in order to reduce their
risk of injury and to promote personal safety when they consume alcohol.
Our analysis reveals that a number of these behaviors correlate significantly
with reduced harm; by contrast, a number of other behaviors do not appear
to provide significant protection.
Interestingly, it
appears that students regularly employ more than one protective behavior
while drinking, and that this clustering of behaviors has an additive
effect; i.e., the more protective behaviors one employs the less harm
one incurs. Indeed, one of our most important findings is how normative
it is for student drinkers to invoke protection. Nearly three-quarters
(73%) of student drinkers in the sample regularly employ at least one
protective behavior, and well over half (64%) of the students who use
protective behaviors routinely employ two or more. Our analysis strongly
suggests that these "indigenous protective norms" account,
at least in part, for the relatively low incidence of alcohol-related
harm among college student drinkers.
Another noteworthy
finding is that fully 50% of college student drinkers choose "sometimes"
not to drink alcohol when they socialize, while another 18% report that
they "usually" choose not to do so. Thus, college student
drinkers can be said to employ situational abstinence as an effective
protective behavior, a phenomenon that does not appear to have been
previously documented in the literature.
Of course, these
findings are significant for those in college health who are already
using various methods to model and promote effective safer drinking
skills to students. Given their higher correlation with protection,
certain behaviors warrant promotion, whereas others do not.
All of the behaviors
included in the NCHA are consumption-based, and have therefore to do
with limiting the quantity of alcohol consumed. Additional research
has already begun to identify other, non-consumption based behaviors
that appear to correlate with reduced harm as well, and another conference
session ("Specialized Social Norm Message Strategies Focusing on
Celebratory Drinking") conducted by Charles Atkin, Jasmine Greenamyer,
and Dennis Martell, presented interesting information in this regard.
In examining the
behaviors and motivations of student drinkers at Michigan State University
(MSU) during certain celebratory events (such as Welcome Week, Halloween,
St. Patrick's Day), these researches discovered the following:
- The top reasons
MSU students gave for partying are to have fun (65 percent); to meet
up with friends (60 percent); and to celebrate (40 percent).
- Only 5 percent
of students said that the reason they party is to get drunk.
- Some 7% of student
drinkers reported that they chose not to drink during the celebrations
in question.
- Some actions
that students take are likely to protect them when they drink: Go
out as part of a group and stay with the same group; stay in one place
the entire time while drinking; and drink only one kind of alcohol.
The work presented
in both of these sessions suggests that there are many aspects of the
competence, health, and resilience of college students that remain to
be fully explored and effectively used in our social norm interventions.
The Social
Norms Approach to Sexual Assault Prevention
An innovative application
of this solution-focused approach to violence prevention was presented
by Patricia Fabiano, Wes Perkins, Alan Berkowitz, and Jeff Linkenbach
in their session "Ending Violence Against Women: Evidence for a
Social Norms Approach." As these researchers pointed out, much
is known in the sexual assault prevention field about "rape proclivity,"
whereas very little is understood about the attitudes and behaviors
of the presumed majority of men who are unlikely to rape and are uncomfortable
with stereotypical masculinity.
Based on a survey
conducted at Western Washington University in spring 2002, these researchers
made a number of findings that are sure to have important implications
for the field. Their analysis revealed that:
- Both males and
females show strong commitment to obtaining and honoring consent in
sexual relationships;
- Men typically
underestimate the importance to male and female peers of consent before
sexual activity, with greater misperception of male peer norms;
- Men who perceive
such consent to be highly normative for male and female peers are
more likely to report that consent was necessary for them, but the
strongest predictor of male's personal importance of consent was their
perception of the women's norm for consent; and
- The sole predictor
of men's willingness to intervene in a situation that may lead to
sexual violence is the extent to which they perceived other men as
willing to intervene.
These findings replicate
those of other studies that have documented the extent to which men
misperceive the norms of their peers regarding issues of sexual intimacy.
They also clearly suggest that the necessary condition obtain for normative
interventions to correct men's potentially rape-supportive misperceptions.
Sexual Risk-Taking among Urban Middle Schoolers
This summary of
some of the key conference presentations began with an examination of
three interventions targeted at high school students, a relatively new
but quickly emerging area in the field. Indeed, it often seems that
high schools and community-based interventions are now where college-based
interventions were a decade ago: poised to create great interest and
to expand rapidly. Given that, I wan to close with a brief look at a
session that was devoted to an innovative intervention.
William Bacon and
Tracy Smith's presentation "A Social Norms Approach to Reducing
Sexual Risk-Taking Among Urban Middle Schoolers described an effort
to extend the social norms approach into a domain with a target population
that is quite different from one traditionally selected. As a component
of its pregnancy prevention work, Planned Parenthood of New York City
(PPNYC) has embarked on a well researched and implemented effort that
uses the social norms approach to reduce adolescent sexual risk-taking
(Bacon and Smith, 2003).
There is already
evidence in the literature documenting misperceptions and correlative
increased sexual risk-taking among adolescents (Robinson et al., 1999;
Kinsman, 1998; Romer et al., 1994), and the PPNYC project's baseline
data has confirmed these findings among its own target group of urban
middle schoolers. Indeed, they have found misperceptions of both attitudinal
(injunctive) and behavioral (descriptive) norms, suggesting that the
necessary conditions exist for a normative, perception-correcting intervention.
The PPNYC project
has adopted an essentially two-pronged approach. First, whenever possible,
it has infused accurate norm-related information into the existing sex
education curricula. Some of this work has included components that
seek to define and clarify for the children the very concepts on which
the intervention is based, i.e., actual norms ("What's really going
on.") perceived norms ("What we think is going on."),
and the potential harmfulness of misperceptions ("Because we might
feel pressure to do things that go against our beliefs and values.")
Second, they have researched, developed, and begun to implement a poster
campaign to promote accurate norm information.
The experience of
the PPNYC project staff has confirmed what other social norm projects
have found to be the case as well: initial market data collection and
message testing are critical. Focus groups with the children, parents
and teachers yielded rich information that aided immeasurably in preliminary
message development. The desire was to avoid a message such as "Most
8th graders aren't having sex." The resulting "Think Again…The
Truth Is…" campaign focused instead on the clear attitudinal
norm to delay sexual activity.
Initial process
evaluation conducted thus far has indicated a high level of student
exposure to the message, with impressive understanding of it and reasonably
good levels of believability. At the time of the presentation, an analysis
of the perception, attitude, and behavior change was still underway.
This presentation
was compelling for its demonstration of how adaptable the social norms
approach is to a wide variety of issues. But it also served to demonstrate
the importance of the conference itself, since these two engaging and
committed presenters had attended the previous year's conference, gaining
enough insights and skills there to return to their own work with the
fresh and health-based outlook that the social norms approach provides.
Conclusion
The sessions described
here share a common focus on the analysis of health and protective behaviors
of the clear majority of students. They incorporate a wide variety of
issues and range across a number of different settings, including middle-schools,
high schools, colleges and universities, and athletic programs. In their
totality they provide impressive evidence for the importance of the
social norms paradigm shift to the field of health promotion. An essentially
solution-based methodology, the social norms approach seeks to consistently
shift the focus to an ever sharper perception of the attitudinal and
behavioral norms of health and safety. These studies add to the growing
body of evidence suggesting that by doing so risk and harm are reduced
and wellness grows.
(Note: A version
of this article was originally published in The Report on Social Norms,
Volume 3, Issue 4, Working Paper #13, in December 2003. Alan Berkowitz
composed the section "The Social Norms Approach to Sexual Assault
Prevention.")
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