Module 1, Part 1

Module 1, Part 2

Activity 1

Module 2

Activity 2

Module 3

Activity 3

Module 4

Activity 4
 
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The media plays a large role in shaping how many youth think and behave. Many of the messages kids receive from television, music, magazines, billboards, and the Internet glamorize drug, alcohol, and tobacco use. Yet, the media can be used to encourage positive behaviors as well. Four communications strategies—public education, social marketing, media advocacy, and media literacy—can be used to influence community norms, increase public awareness, and attract community support for a variety of prevention issues. These strategies are most effective when coupled with more potent prevention approaches, like policy, enforcement, education, and skill building.

Public Education
Of the four communications strategies, public education is probably the most common. Some familiar public education slogans include "Friends don't let friends drive drunk" and "A mind is a terrible thing to waste." The goal of public education is to increase knowledge and awareness of a particular health issue. This awareness can often support the development and success of programs and policies that address the problem. Public education can also be an effective way to increase awareness about a new or existing law, publicize a community-based program, and reinforce instruction taught in schools or community-based organizations.

Multimedia prevention campaigns typically combine public service announcements on television and radio with billboards and posters. Research shows that these campaigns are often the most cost-effective way to reach large groups of people. However, they’re not an effective way to change individual behavior.1

Social Marketing
In recent years, prevention professionals have become more strategic in their communications goals and savvier in their approach to using media. Through techniques known as social marketing, practitioners use advertising principles to change social norms and promote healthy behaviors. Like public education, social marketing uses a variety of media channels to provide a message to targeted groups of individuals. Yet, social marketing campaigns do more than just provide information—they try to convince people to adopt a new behavior by showing them a benefit they will receive in return.2 Florida’s Truth campaign, for example, was instrumental in preventing teens from starting to smoke cigarettes by sending the message that tobacco is an addictive drug marketed by a callous adult establishment. So, the campaign re-framed “non-smoking” as a cool act of rebellion.3 Social marketing campaigns have been used in a variety of social service and public health settings to address issues ranging from gambling to HIV prevention to seatbelt use.

Media Advocacy
Media advocacy involves shaping the way social issues are discussed in the media to build support for changes in public policy. By working directly with local newspapers, television, and radio to change both the amount of coverage the media provide and the content of that coverage, media advocates hope to influence the way people talk and think about a social or public policy.

There are two primary ways to think about media advocacy. One way is to see it as a set of guerrilla activities designed to draw the attention of the media to issues of community concern.4 This tactic was used quite successfully by AIDS activists in the early 1990s to expand prescription drug coverage for people living with HIV. The second way is to develop long-term relationships with local media and identify ways to constructively engage them in your prevention efforts. Understanding the mission and culture of media is the first step toward constructive engagement. With this understanding, you can, in effect, work as a social marketer and position your organization as a resource to the media, as opposed to an organization that simply wants coverage.

Media Literacy
Media literacy is a newer communications strategy aimed at teaching young people critical-viewing skills. Media literacy programs teach kids how to analyze and understand the media messages they encounter so they can better understand what they’re really being asked to do and think. Students also learn to create messages that de-glamorize unhealthy activities like drinking alcohol and smoking. They produce their own messages and advertisements and thus demonstrate mastery of media literacy skills and ideas.

There are many organizations currently focusing on this strategy and developing curricula for students of all ages. For example, CSAP, in partnership with the American Academy of Pediatrics and the CDC, developed MediaSharp, a two-part media literacy resource guide for educators and community leaders who work with middleschool and highschool youth.5 Students learn to ask five key questions:

  • Who created this message, and what is its purpose?
  • What techniques are being used to attract my attention?
  • What lifestyles, values, and points of view are represented?
  • How is this message intended to influence me?
  • How did they choose what to include and what to leave out of this message, and why did they make these choices?

Some evidence suggests that media advocacy and media literacy are effective communications strategies. However, more research is needed, in part because of the current lack of sophisticated evaluation tools to measure outcomes for these two strategies.

You have completed Module 4.
Please proceed to Activity 4: Applying Communication Strategies.


References

  1. Flynn, B. S., Worden, J. K., Secker-Walker, R. H., Badger, G. J., Geller, B. M., and Costanza, M. C. (1992). Prevention of cigarette smoking through mass media intervention and school programs. American Journal of Public Health, 82, 827–834; Flynn, B. S., Worden, J. K., Secker-Walker, R. H., Badger, G. J., and Geller, B. M. (1995). Cigarette smoking prevention effects of mass media and school interventions targeted to gender and age groups. Journal of Health Education, 26(Suppl.), 45–51; and Flynn, B. S., Worden, J. K., Secker-Walker, R. H., Pirie, P. L., Badger, G. J., and Carpenter, J. H. (1997). Long-term responses of higher and lower risk youths to smoking prevention interventions. Preventive Medicine, 26, 389–394.

  2. Kotler, P. and Roberto, E. (1989). Social marketing: Strategies for changing pubic behavior. New York: Free Press.

  3. Success Stories: Florida “truth” Campaign (n.d.). Available on the Social Marketing Institute Web site at www.social-marketing.org/success/cs-floridatruth.html.

  4. Wallack, L., Dorfman, L., Jernigan, D., and Themba, M. (1993). Media advocacy and public health: Power for prevention. Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications.

  5. Center for Substance Abuse Prevention, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, American Academy of Pediatrics, National Education Association Health Information Network, and U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (1997). MediaSharp: Analyzing tobacco and alcohol messages (Leader’s guide). Washington, DC: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; and Simons-Morton, B. G., Donohew, L., and Crump, A. D. (1997). Health communication in the prevention of alcohol, tobacco, and drug use. Health Education and Behavior, 24(5), 544–554.


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