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EVALUATION OF AN EXPECTNACY CHALLENGE CURRICULUM IN REDUCING HIGH RISK ALCOHOL USE AMONG COLLEGE STUDENTS WHEN MODIFIED FOR LARG
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Title
EVALUATION
OF AN
EXPECTNACY
CHALLENGE
CURRICULUM
IN
REDUCING
HIGH
RISK
ALCOHOL
USE
AMONG
COLLEGE
STUDENTS
WHEN
MODIFIED
FOR
LARG
Author
Schreiner, Amy
Keywords
alcohol
expectancy
college students
intervention
Abstract
Alcohol
consumption
has
repeatedly
been
recognized
as the
primary
public
health
concern
impacting
students
on
college
campuses.
In
response
to the
prevalence
of
risky
alcohol
use
and
lack
of
effective
response
among
colleges
and
universities
, the
National
Advisory
Council
of the
National
Institute
on
Alcohol
Abuse
and
Alcoholism
created
a
task
force
to
review
the
relevant
research
literature
on
alcohol
interventions
to
advise
college
administrators
on
effective
program
implementation
and
evaluation
as
well
as
provide
recommendations
for
future
research
directions.
Only
three
strategies
met
criteria
for
Tier
1
designation
(empirical
support
specifically
with
college
students)
and
two
of these
strategies
are
intensive
and
time-consuming
individual
methods.
The
third
Tier
1
strategy
,
challenging
alcohol
expectancies
, was the
only
method
that was
validated
for
administration
in a
group
setting.
For
widespread
utility
of
expectancy-based
prevention
strategies
,
effective
interventions
must
be
developed
for
delivery
in
typical
settings.
The
focus
of the
present
study
was to
modify
an
existing
classroom
curriculum
designed
to
alter
expectancy
processes
of
college
students
for
use
in
classroom
settings
of
100+
students
as they have
become
the
typical
class
size
in
college
and
university
settings.
The
modified
expectancy
curriculum
was
implemented
in a
single
session
with
students
during
their
actual
classes.
Measures
of
alcohol
consumption
and
alcohol
related
harms
were
collected
anonymously
for the
30
days
prior
and the
30
days
following
the
curriculum.
Measures
of
alcohol
expectancies
were also
collected
anonymously
immediately
prior
and
immediately
following
the
curriculum.
Analyses
revealed
significant
reductions
in
average
drinks
per
sitting
males
and
key
expectancy
changes
for
both
males
and
females.
A
low
number
of
high-risk
drinkers
led
to
further
exploratory
analyses
with the
exclusion
of a
proportion
of the
lighter
drinkers
in the
sample.
These
analyses
revealed
significant
decreases
in
average
drinks
per
sitting
and
peak
drinks
per
sitting
for
both
males
and
females.
There were
no
significant
changes
in
alcohol
related
harms.
This
study
represents
an
important
extension
of
expectancy-based
interventions
for a
college
population.
An
intervention
that
began
as a
multi-session
,
time
and
resource
intensive
protocol
for a
small
group
of
participants
has been
successfully
modified
for
use
with
groups
of
100+
people.
The
current
protocol
can
be
given
to this
large
a
group
in a
single
session
curriculum
that
can
be
delivered
in any
standard
classroom.
Adviser
Dunn, Michael
Publisher
University
of
Central
Florida
Degree
M.S.
Degree Discipline
Department of Psychology
Degree Grantor
Sciences
Degree Program
Psychology Clinical MS
Graduation Date
2010-01-01
Type
Master's thesis
Access Level
Public - Allow Worldwide Access
Release Date
2010-05-07
Repository
University Archives
Repository Collection
Electronic Theses and Dissertations
Identifier
CFE0003114
Access Link
http://purl.fcla.edu/fcla/etd/CFE0003114
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