Evanston
Township High School (ETHS)
Strength in Numbers
Project
Description
Evanston Township
High School has approximately 3,033 students (2000-2001 enrollment figures)
and 313 teachers and administrators. In April, 2001, Evanston Township
High School (ETHS), in collaboration with the Evanston Substance Abuse
Prevention Council, began a social norms marketing campaign targeted
primarily at reducing the use of alcohol and tobacco among ETHS students.
Project
Funding Sources
- The Chicago Community
Trust (FY03 and FY04)
- The Evanston
Community Foundation (FY02)
- Illinois Tobacco-Free
Communities Evanston Health Department Grant (FY02 and FY03)
- The Illinois
Department of Human Services (Staff support)
- The Rotary Club
of Evanston Lighthouse (FY02 and FY03)
- First Congregational
Church of Evanston (FY03)
In addition, 17
Evanston business have generously provided in-kind support to this project.
Project
Objectives
The Strength in
Numbers project objectives are to:
- Increase accurate
perceptions among ETHS students, school staff, parents and other community
members about the percentage of ETHS students who are not using tobacco
and alcohol.
- Increase non-use
of tobacco and alcohol among ETHS students.
- Increase positive,
healthy behaviors among ETHS students.
- Increase the
reinforcement of positive, health behaviors by parents and school
staff.
The Strength in
Numbers project goals are to:
- Achieve a 3-7%
increase in reported non-use of alcohol and tobacco by ETHS students
after the first year of the campaign.
- Achieve a 20%
increase in the reported non-use of alcohol and tobacco by ETHS students
after year 5 of the campaign.
Baseline
Data
Baseline data collected
from ETHS students (n = 2,010) in May 2001 indicate that:
- 83% of ETHS students
do not smoke cigarettes, but ETHS students perceive that only 15%
of their high school peers do not smoke.
- 53% of ETHS choose
not to consume alcohol, but ETHS students perceive that only 8% of
their high school peers do not drink.
Other baseline survey
results include:
- 72% of ETHS students
choose options other than drinking when they hang out with their friends.
- 95% of ETHS students
have never used smokeless tobacco.
- 71% of ETHS students
choose not to smoke marijuana.
- 73% of ETHS students
have never smoked cigarettes.
Other important
findings includes:
- School is the
most widely used and most believable source of alcohol, tobacco and
other drug information for ETHS students.
- Parents are the
2nd most believable source of ATOD information.
Normative
Messages
With approximately
three thousand students and over three hundred teachers, staff, and
administrators, Evanston Township High School is not only large but
also extremely diverse. Using a wide array of royalty-free, commercially
purchased images of young people, project staff have been able to create
normative media reflective of the school's tremendous diversity and
its inclusive spirit. Messages have been 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.
A typical example
of the posters created is one with the message "Support
your friends' healthy choices!" which includes specific avoidance
tips derived from the students themselves: "Make a pact ahead of
time not to drink. Leave parties together if there's drinking. Stand
your ground—together." This upbeat message with its concrete
behavioral suggestions is accompanied by the normative statement: "72%
of ETHS students choose healthy options other than drinking when they're
with their friends." Detailed information regarding the source
of the normative data—such as the administration date and sample
size of the survey—is also provided. Finally, the accompanying
image of two smiling, teenage girls warmly embracing serves to visually
reinforce the message.
(To view other examples of the ETHS media, select one of the following
links.
Note: files in pdf format are designated pdf.)
Marketing
Methods Employed
The marketing methods
employed by the Evanston Social Norms campaign include:
- Posters
- Flyers
- Mailers
- Community Presentations
- Print/visual
advertising
- Radio
- Promotional items
(magnets, pens, water bottles, key chains, stress balls, screen savers)
Evanston Township
High School students are of course the primary target audience for the
normative messages. Additionally, ETHS parents, community members (n
= 60,086) and middle school students have been identified as secondary
target audiences for related normative messages.
Click here for a
PDF version of the the Evanston Social Norms Marketing Campaign's Marketing
Plan, Year 1 (Fiscal Year 2002).
Click here for a
PDF version of the the Evanston Social Norms Marketing Campaign's Marketing
Plan, Year 2 (Fiscal Year 2003).
For a copy of the
campaign brochure, see: The
Evanston Social Norms Marketing Campaign: Strength in Numbers - Preventing
Alcohol and Tobacco Use Among Evanston Teens
Evaluation
After the first
year of implementation, most 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.
One notable aspect
of this intervention is that the Center
for Prevention Research and Development was contracted by the Illinois
Department of Human Services to independently evaluate its effectiveness.
Data for evaluation has been collected using self-report surveys, as
well as perception of youth use survey administered to teachers, staff
and parents.
The outcome data
provided above was reported in the following conference session:
Haines, M. and Christensen, S. "Communities Use a Social Norms
Approach to Reduce Teen Alcohol and Tobacco Use: Two Case Studies."
Conference presentation at The National Conference on the Social Norms
Model, Boston, MA, July 17, 2003.
Project
Coordinator
Sara Christensen
Peer Services, Inc.
906 Davis Street
Evanston, Illinois 60201
(847) 492-1778
schristensen@peerservices.org
Further
Information
For further information
see The Peer Services, Inc. Social Norms Marketing web page. Contents of this site include a description
of the concept of social norms marketing, as well as information about
social norms objectives, marketing strategies,
survey results, marketing materials, and funding.
**Portions
of the information presented on this page were originally prepared by Michael
Haines and Richard Rice and are printed here with their permission.
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