Social Norms Approach

Social Norms Approach

The social norms approach is an environmental strategy gaining ground in health campaigns Perkins, H. W. (2003). The Social Norms Approach to Preventing School and College Age Substance Abuse: A Handbook for Educators, Counselors, and Clinicians. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2003.] . While conducting research in the mid 1980s, two researchers, H.W. Perkins and A.D. Berkowitz, discovered that students at a small U.S. college held exaggerated beliefs about the normal frequency and consumption habits of other students with regard to alcohol. These inflated perceptions were later found in universities of all types, with varying populations and locations. Despite the fact that college drinking is at elevated levels, the perceived amount almost always exceeds actual behavior The social norms approach has been used to correct misperceptions, predominantly as a means to reduce extreme drinking, but it is increasingly applied to other social issues Berkowitz, A. D. (2005). An overview of the social norms approach. In L. Lederman & L. Stewart (Eds.), Changing the culture of college drinking: A socially situated health communication campaign (193-214). Creskill, NJ: Hampton Press.]

Constructs of the Social Norms Approach

The Social Norms Approach is founded upon the belief that individuals incorrectly perceive that the attitudes or behaviors of others are different from their own, when in reality they are similar. This phenomenon is known as pluralistic ignorance . It is largely because individuals assume the most memorable and salient, often extreme, behavior is representative of the behavior of the majority. This may lead individuals to adjust their behavior to that of the presumed majority by adhering to the pseudo-norms created by observing such memorable behavior. These exaggerated perceptions, or rather misperceptions, of peer behavior will continue to influence the habits of the majority, if they are unchallenged . This means that individuals may be more likely to enact problem behaviors and suppress healthier practices, making support for healthy behaviors much less visible at an aggregate level. This effect has been documented for alcohol, illegal drug use, smoking, other health behaviors, and attitudes, such as prejudice .

A phenomenon known as false consensus is closely related to the idea of pluralistic ignorance, and refers to the incorrect belief that others are similar, when in reality they are not. For example, heavy drinkers will think that most others consume as much as they do, and will use this belief to justify their behavior. Berkowitz describes false consensus and pluralistic ignorance as "mutually reinforcing and self-perpetuating…the majority is silent because it thinks it is a minority, and the minority is vocal because it believes that it represents the majority" (p. 194).

These phenomena both have the potential to be addressed by a social norms intervention. Berkowitz Berkowitz, A. D. (2004). The Social Norms Approach: Theory, Research and Annotated Bibliography. Retrieved 1 July 2008 from http://www.alanberkowitz.com/articles/social_norms.pdf.] describes this possibility in relation to reducing alcohol use:

…social norms interventions have been found to be effective in changing the behavior of the moderate or occasional-drinking majority (pluralistic ignorance) as well as confronting and changing the behavior of the heavy drinking minority (false consensus) (p. 9)

Thus, the social norms approach predicts that an intervention which aims to correct misperceptions by exposing actual norms will benefit society as well as individuals, because it will lead people to reduce problem behaviors or increase participation in healthy behaviors. . There have been multiple studies which have indeed shown that social norms campaigns can have such positive effects on target populations. One study in particular, which utilized 18 different colleges over a three year period, found that social norms campaigns were associated with lower perceptions of student drinking and lower consumption levels [DeJong, W., Schneider, S. K., Towvim, L. G., Murphy, M. J., Doerr, E. E., Simonsen, N. R., et al. (2006). A multisite randomized trial of social norms marketing campaigns to reduce college student drinking. Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 67, 868-879.] . Another intervention designed to reduce drinking amongst student athletes had similar results, reducing misperceptions of alcohol consumption. Also, within the time period of the intervention, there were declines in personal consumption, high risk drinking, and alcohol-related consequences [Perkins, H. W. & Craig, D. W. (2006). A successful social norms campaign to reduce alcohol misuse among college student-athletes. Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 67, 868-879.] . A recent trial of a live, interactive, normative feedback program in which students used keypads to input information had positive effects in terms of reducing misperceptions and drinking behavior [LaBrie, J. W., Hummer, J. F., Neighbors, C., & Pedersen, E. R. (2008). Live interactive group-specific normative feedback reduces misperceptions and drinking in college students: A randomized cluster trial. Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, 22, 141-148.] . There are many other examples of successful social norms campaigns, which cover various topics, population sizes, and mediums through which normative messages are conveyed.

Types of Norms

There are two types of norms that are relevant to the Social Norms Approach: descriptive norms and injunctive norms. Descriptive norms are concerned with what people actually do. They refer to the perceptions of "the most common actions actually exhibited in a social group," (p.165)Perkins, H. W. (2002). Social norms and the prevention of alcohol misuse in collegiate contexts. Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 14, 164-172.] such as the quantity and frequency of drinking, and are largely formed from observations of others' alcohol consumption Borsari, B. & Carey, K. B. (2003) Descriptive and Injunctive Norms in College Drinking: A Meta-Analytic Integration. Journal of Studies on Alcohol, 64, 331-341. ] . Park and Smith Park, H. S., & Smith, S. W. (2007). Distinctiveness and influence of subjective norms, personal descriptive and injunctive norms, and societal descriptive and injunctive norms on behavioral intent: A case of two behaviors critical to organ donation. Human Communication Research, 93, 194-218.] found that descriptive norms can be perceived at both a personal and societal level, and define them as "individuals’ beliefs regarding the popularity of the behavior in question," (p. 196) either among valued others or society at large. Conversely, injunctive norms are concerned with what people feel is right based on morals or beliefs. Perkins defines them as "widely shared beliefs or expectations in a social group about how people in general or members of the group ought to behave in various circumstances" (p.165). Park and Smith note that injunctive norms can also be perceived at a personal or a societal level, defining them as "individuals’ beliefs regarding approval or disapproval of the behavior in question," (p.196) either by valued others or societal members.

Borsari and Carey's meta-analysis of studies showed that people misperceive injunctive norms more than they do descriptive norms, and that injunctive norms are more likely to predict drinking behavior and negative consequences of drinking. However, the use of both in social norms campaigns has shown that it is unclear which type of norm is more likely to change behavior .

Assumptions of The Social Norms Approach

There are seven assumptions of the social norms approach :

  1. Actions are often based on misinformation about or misperceptions of others' attitudes and/or behavior.
  2. When misperceptions are defined or perceived as real, they have real consequences.
  3. Individuals passively accept misperceptions rather than actively intervening to change them, hiding from others their true perceptions, feelings, or beliefs.
  4. The effects of misperceptions are self-perpetuating because they discourage the expression of opinions and actions that are falsely believed to be nonconforming while encouraging problem behaviors that are falsely believed to be normative.
  5. Appropriate information about the actual norm will encourage individuals to express those beliefs that are consistent with the true, healthier norm, and inhibit problem behaviors that are inconsistent with it.
  6. Individuals who do not personally engage in the problematic behavior may contribute to the problem by the way in which they talk about the behavior. Misperceptions thus function to strengthen beliefs and values that the "carriers of the misperception" do not themselves hold and contribute to the climate that encourages problem behavior.
  7. For a norm to be perpetuated it is not necessary for the majority to believe it, but only for the majority to believe that the majority believes it.

A History of the Social Norms Approach

Since the 1986 study in which Berkowitz and Perkins discovered the misperceptions about alcohol consumption amongst college students, the use and study of the social norms approach has grown immensely. It has been used successfully for all three levels of prevention: universal, with large populations like entire college campuses, selective, with targeted subpopulations, and indicated, with individuals .

The first social norms intervention was implemented in 1989 by Michael Haines at Northern Illinois University, which targeted a universal campus population and over the years has shown significant success in terms of increasing healthy behaviors [Haines, M. P, Barker, G. P. & Rice, R. (2003). Using Social Norms to Reduce Alcohol and Tobacco Use in Two Midwestern High Schools. In H. W. Perkins (Ed.), The Social Norms Approach to preventing school and college age substance abuse: A handbook for educators, counselors, clinicians (Chapter 14). San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.] . Many other universities have since followed suit and have had similar success in the reduction of high-risk drinking behaviors, such as Hobart and William Smith Colleges [Perkins, H. W. & Craig, D. A. (2003). The Hobart and William Smith Colleges experiment: A synergistic social norms approach using print, electronic media and curriculum infusion to reduce collegiate problem drinking. In H. W. Perkins (Ed.), The Social Norms Approach to preventing school and college age substance abuse: A handbook for educators, counselors, clinicians (Chapter 3). San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.] , the University of Arizona [Johannessen, K. & Gilder, P. (2003). The University of Arizona's campus health social norms media campaign. . In H. W. Perkins (Ed.), The Social Norms Approach to preventing school and college age substance abuse: A handbook for educators, counselors, clinicians (Chapter 4). San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.] , University of North Carolina [Foss, R., Deikkman, S., Bartley, C. & Goodman, A. (2004). Social norms program reduces measured and self-reported drinking at UNC-CH. The Report on Social Norms: Working Paper #14, Little Falls, NJ, PaperClip Communications. (Available from alan@fltg.net)] , and Michigan State University [Social Norms at Michigan State University. Retrieved July 1, 2008 from http://socialnorms.msu.edu] , to name a few.

Since these achievements have become well known, the social norms approach has been used successfully to reduce smoking [Hancock, L. & Henry, N. (2003). Perceptions, Norms and Tobacco Use in College Residence Hall Freshmen: Evaluation of a Social Norms Marketing Intervention. In H. W. Perkins (Ed.), The Social Norms Approach to preventing school and college age substance abuse: A handbook for educators, counselors, clinicians (Chapter 8). San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.] , seat belt use [Perkins, H. W. & Linkenbach, J. (2004). Most of Us Wear Seatbelts: The process and outcomes of a three-year statewide adult seatbelt campaign. The Report on Social Norms: Working Paper #14, Little Falls, NJ, PaperClip Communications. (Available from alan@fltg.net)] , drinking and driving [Hellstrom, D. (2004). State of Minnesota Department of Public Safety project: The Prevention Collaborative’s positive social norming campaign. The Report on Social Norms: Working Paper #7, Little Falls, NJ, PaperClip Communications. (Available from alan@fltg.net)] , and HIV risk behaviors [Chernoff, R. A., & Davison, G. C. (2005). An evaluation of a brief HIV/AIDS prevention intervention for college students using normative feedback and goal setting. AIDS Education and Prevention, 17, 91-104. ] . It has also gained widespread use targeting adolescents and high school students, and has been used effectively to reduce drinking and smoking behaviors amongst those populations [Christensen, S. & Haines, M.P. (2003). Communities use a social norms approach to reduce teen alcohol and tobacco use: Two case studies. In “Selected Abstracts from the 2004 National Conference on the Social Norms Model.” The Report on Social Norms: Working Paper #14, Little Falls, NJ: PaperClip Communications. (Available from alan@fltg.net)] [Haines, M. P, Barker, G. P. & Rice, R. (2003). Using Social Norms to Reduce Alcohol and Tobacco Use in Two Midwestern High Schools. In H. W. Perkins (Ed.), The Social Norms Approach to preventing school and college age substance abuse: A handbook for educators, counselors, clinicians (Chapter 14). San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.] . Recently, interventions have been tested to reduce sexual assault, and the results are promising [Berkowitz, A. D. (2007). Fostering healthy norms to prevent violence and abuse: The Social Norms Approach. Retrieved 1 July 2008 from http://www.alanberkowitz.com/Preventing%20Sexual%20Violence%20Chapter.pdf] .

The Social Norms Lifecycle

A social norms approach determines the exaggerated and actual norms of a population through formative research, and then informs the population of the actual norms through a message campaign. The next step is determining the effectiveness of the messages through a summative evaluation. Finally, the results from the evaluative research can also be used to craft new messages to revise the message campaign, and thus the campaign is cyclical. The following provides a more in-depth description of the steps involved in a social norms campaign.

Formative Evaluation

Formative evaluation is the first step in a social norms campaign and consists of surveying the population, as well as message creation based on the survey results. The formative evaluation phase is the time when information regarding perceived norms and actual behaviors is garnered from the audience. In order for a social norms approach to be the appropriate means for intervention, two conditions must first be satisfied:

  1. There must be misperceptions between actual behavior and perceived behavior - This simply means that there must be a difference between what people do and what they think other people do or believe. This difference must be a misperception in the direction of overestimation of problem behavior. If there is no difference, the social norms approach is not appropriate. A caveat is that there is almost always a difference. Sometimes a more sensitive instrument is necessary to uncover the misperceptions.
  2. At least half of the population must behave “correctly” – If over half of the population behaves in a way that is contrary to the intervention, a social norms approach is not the best interventional strategy. Because a social norms approach assumes that individuals want to be normal, if most of the individuals (i.e., over 50%) behave in a way that is harmful, a social norms message campaign might encourage the harmful behavior. It is important to ask questions about both descriptive and injunctive norms.

Surveying

The most effective way to establish the baseline levels of behavior and perceptions is through the use of surveys. Web surveys, for example, are an often-used method of generating a substantial response rate. They are especially suited for college students because of their familiarity with the technology, the containment of the population (i.e., all are part of a specific community), and the ability of the students to take the survey at their own pace and during the time that works best for them. Not only are web surveys ideal for students, but they are also highly advantageous for researchers. They provide quick turnaround for data analysis, higher response rates, less missing data, and they eliminate interviewer effects. Other possible methods of administering a survey are pencil and paper surveys, phone surveys, or personal interviews.

The following describes a typical and thorough process used to survey a population:

  1. Plan
    1. Decide what topics will be covered.
    2. Decide when to administer the survey.
    3. Develop useful questions.
  2. Acquire incentives to provide for respondents -There are two different types of incentives: Individual rewards and lottery rewards. Individual rewards are given to every person who completes the survey (e.g., a coupon for a free pizza). Lottery rewards are awarded to individuals at random (e.g., 10 people receive a $50 gift certificate). Individual rewards are more expensive but provide higher response rates.
  3. Survey Design
  4. Notifying the Sample - Often, a double-barreled method is used:
    1. Pre-Letter or Pre-Email Notification – A personalized letter notification delivered several days before the survey opens. The letter includes the purpose and goal of the research, when and at what email address they will receive the email notification, how long the survey will be active, access information (ID’s, pass codes), what they will get out of it (i.e., incentives), how their privacy will be protected, and contact information for the surveyors.
    2. Email Notification – This email repeats much of the information of the original letter, but also provides a link for the survey.
    3. Reminder - A reminder often mentions previous notifications, sympathizes about why the responded might not have completed the survey, mentions the importance of the survey, and includes the incentive information again.

Creating the Campaign

After completing data collection, researchers then analyze the data and search for patterns, looking for inconsistencies between actual behavior, attitudes, and perceived norms. When these differences are consistent with the campaign and the majority of students adhere to the beneficial idea, they are then used in the next round of message creation. For example, the data could show that college students report they consumed 0-4 drinks the last time they partied, but they believe that the average student consumed 5 or more drinks. After discovering this statistic, a researcher may craft a message like, “Most students drink 0-4 drinks when they party,” to correct the misperceived descriptive norm.

The most important descriptive researchers look for in the data is the 51% or greater statistic, or items where “most” (i.e., over 50%) of the population adheres to the beneficial behavior. These statistics could occur in injunctive norms (i.e., “Most students believe passing out from drinking too much is wrong.”), protective/healthy behaviors (i.e., “Most students use a designated driver, even when only having one or two drinks.”), or other numerous behaviors.

There are different message components that can be varied, which are experimented with during pre-testing. For example, researchers test different vocabulary (e.g., “66%” vs. “Most” vs. “Majority), using different behaviors to find out which ones are the easiest and most acceptable to perform (e.g., “eating while drinking” vs. “keeping track while drinking”), and using varying degrees of citations (e.g., large citations vs. small citations of data source),. These preliminary messages are pretested on small groups in order to refine them before they are presented to the entire population. Other aspects examined in pretesting include which messages are most socially acceptable, which are believed to be the most effective, and which messages have the highest believability.

Believability

Believability is a necessary, but not a sufficient, condition for an effective campaign. If believability of messages is low, change will probably not occur because the persuasive messages are falling into the audience’s latitude of rejection. In other words, the audience will reject the message without even considering it. It is also important to note, however, that if believability is extremely high (e.g., over 90%), change is also unlikely to occur because the message is not challenging enough. In other words, it serves only as a reinforcement rather than an element of change. Thus, while there are no specific guidelines, it is ideal to aim for believability above 50% [Smith, S. W., Atkin, C. K., Martell, D., Allen, R., & Hembroff, L. (2006). A Social Judgment Theory approach to conducting formative research in a social norms campaign. Communication Theory, 16, 141-152.] .

In an assessment of the believability of a social norms campaign, Polonec, Major, and Atwood [Polonec, L. D., Major, A. M., & Atwood, L. E. (2006). Evaluating the Believability and Effectiveness of the Social Norms Message "Most Students Drink 0 to 4 Drinks When They Party." Health Communication, 20, 23-34. ] found that students' own drinking experiences and the experiences of their friends contributed to disbelief in the message "Most students on campus choose to have 0 to 4 drinks when they party." Another study found that disbelief may be due to preconceived notions about drinking that students develop even before they arrive on campus [Stewart, L. P., Lederman, L. C., Golubow, M., Cattafesta, J. L., Goodhart, F. W., Powell, R. L., et al. (2002). Applying communication theories to prevent dangerous drinking among college students: The RU sure campaign.Communication Studies, 53, 381–399.] . A population may also not believe a message because they do not trust the people who created it; they may think that the message is an attempt to pursue the agenda of the creators, not a way to help the audience. There are several ways in which social norms practitioners can better earn the trust of the population, which include establishing a recognizable presence in the community prior to disseminating the campaign, distributing less controversial messages in the early stages of the intervention, and allowing members of the population to voice their concerns about believability [Linkenbach, J. (2006). Why don't they believe my statistics? Report on Social Norms. Retrieved July 28. 2008 from http://www.mostofus.org/newsletter/article.php?newsletterID=7&articleID=29] .

Summative Evaluation

After implementing a campaign, researchers then perform a summative evaluation which measures the success of the campaign. This step consists of examining and evaluating the progress made by an intervention through assessing the outcome and impact, cost and benefits, and cost effectiveness of a program. It is typical for researchers to use surveys similar to those used in formative evaluation. The following are questions that a summative evaluation can answer:

  1. Did change occur in perceptions? A social norms approach is based on correcting misperceptions before changing behavior. The changes in behavior are thought to occur as an outcome of corrected perceptions. The goal is thus for the population to understand the prevalent behavior so they do not feel they have to live up to misperceived norms of behavior. If there is a reduction in misperceptions, then the campaign has been implemented in a manner consistent with the social norms approach.
  2. How much change occurred? Is the difference significant or is it equally likely to have been caused by chance?
  3. Is the change associated with the intervention? Are the changes observed the result of some other factor or is there reason to believe the program was the basis for the change? This question can be answered by comparing the results with nationwide averages.
  4. How much did it cost? This is a method of weighing the benefits achieved by a program against its cost.

An especially important part of summative evaluation is the assessment of market saturation and reach. Clearly, if a social norms campaign does not reach very much of its intended audience, then its potential effectiveness decreases. If researchers can demonstrate that their campaign had high reach, then that strengthens the connection of the intervention to positive outcomes. It also lets researchers know what methods are effective for distributing the campaign [Perkins, H. W. & Craig, D. A. (2002). A Multi-faceted Social Norms Approach to Reduce High-Risk Drinking: Lessons from Hobart and William Smith Colleges. Newton, MA: The Higher Education Center for Alcohol and Other Drug Prevention.] . It is necessary for an audience to be exposed to campaign messages frequently to change misperceptions. However, overexposure is possible, leading to a loss of credibility and habituation [Johannessen, K. (2005) "Turning up the volume" and shining a light: Conducting a campus social norms marketing campaign. Report on Social Norms, 5. Retrieved July 28, 2008 from http://www.mostofus.org/newsletter/article.php?newsletterID=3&articleID=12] Thus, it is important to determine the proper dosage of the campaign in order to achieve maximum effectiveness.

Once the evaluation is complete, it has the potential to help the intervention. Summative evaluation not only tells whether a program is working, but it can also feed new messages and new campaigns by providing new, updated data.

Glossary

The following are key terms discussed in this article that are relevant to the Social Norms Approach:

  • Pluralistic ignorance: the false assumption of an individual that the attitudes or behaviors of others are different from their own, when in fact they are similar.
  • False consensus: the incorrect belief that others are similar to oneself, when in fact they are not.
  • Norms: a pattern or trait taken to be typical of the behavior of a social group.
  • Descriptive norms: Descriptive norms are concerned with what people actually do. They refer to the perceptions of "the most common actions actually exhibited in a social group,"(p. 165) such as the quantity and frequency of drinking, and are largely formed from observations of others' alcohol consumption. Park and Smith found that descriptive norms can be perceived at both a personal and societal level, and define them as "individuals’ beliefs regarding the popularity of the behavior in question," (p. 196)either among valued others or society at large.
  • Injunctive norms: Injunctive norms are concerned with what people feel is right based on morals or beliefs. Perkins defines them as "widely shared beliefs or expectations in a social group about how people in general or members of the group ought to behave in various circumstances" (p.165). Park and Smith note that injunctive norms can also be perceived at a personal or a societal level, defining them as "individuals’ beliefs regarding approval or disapproval of the behavior in question," (p.196) either by valued others or societal members.
  • Formative evaluation: The first step in a social norms campaign, which consists of surveying the population, as well as message creation based on the survey results. The formative evaluation phase is the time when information regarding perceived norms and actual behaviors is garnered from the audience.
  • Summative evaluation: The final step in a social norms campaign before the cycle begins again, which measures its success. It consists of examining and evaluating the progress made by an intervention through assessing the outcome and impact, cost and benefits, and cost effectiveness of a program.

External Links

  • [http://www.socialnorm.org National Social Norms Institute]
  • [http://alanberkowitz.com Alan Berkowitz, Independent consultant in social norms marketing]
  • [http://www.higheredcenter.org/environmental-management/change/normative/social-norms Social Norms Marketing at the Higher Education Center]
  • [http://www.mostofus.org/ MOST of US Social Norms Marketing]
  • [http://www.socialnormsurveys.org/ Social Norms Surveys Online]
  • [http://www.alcoholeducationproject.org/ Alcohol Education Project]
  • [http://www.therealproject.fsu.edu/ Social Norms at Florida State University]
  • [http://www.socialnorms.campushealth.net/ Social Norms at the University of Arizona]
  • [http://mostofus.missouri.edu/ Social Norms at the University of Missouri]
  • [http://www.socialnorms.msu.edu/ Social Norms at Michigan State University]

ee also

*H. Wesley Perkins
*National Social Norms Resource Center

References


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