PSY 225: Interventions For Health Behavior Change
PSY 225: Interventions For Health Behavior Change
PSY 225: Interventions For Health Behavior Change
Class Participation
Part of your grade will be based on class participation. To prepare, you should carefully read and
be familiar with the assigned readings. You may also want to make a note of a few issues or
questions that you would like to discuss. To earn the maximum amount of points for
participation, you need not (indeed, you should not) dominate discussion. You merely need to
contribute to the discussion each session and help it move forward. While I strongly encourage
you to do all the readings, if for some reason you have not thoroughly read all the articles on a
particular week, you should not feel that you cannot add to the discussion. You can and you
should.
reasonable amount of time to just reviewing what the readings are arguing before opening the
floor for criticism. Once everyone is clear on what the readings say, you can move the
discussion to a few key questions or thoughts that you want the discussion to be structured
around. To get people talking (remember, the class meets at 9 am), you might want to start with a
discussion question that allows people to talk about their personal experiences. Then you can
move into the more technical issues.
Feel free to be creative. You may want to try to structure a discussion around solving a fairly
specific problem. The topics of this course lend themselves well to this type of discussion, in
which the goal is to design an experiment. For some topics it may even be possible for us to
collect some data on the spot.
It is often useful to prepare a handout with bullet points of discussion questions or topics. The
hand-out might also contain a summary of the readings. This could help structure discussion. If
you do prepare a handout, I will be happy to make copies of it for you the day before class.
You will be graded on your leadership of discussion. Dont worry I will be able to tell if you
did a good job, even if your classmates let you down by not having done the reading very
carefully. (But they wont do that, right?)
Because I want you to take this responsibility seriously and to be creative, leading discussion
will be worth a rather large proportion of your course grade (see below).
Reaction Papers
Four of the ten weeks of the term you will be expected to turn in a short reaction paper on the
assigned readings from that week. You may choose which four weeks you will do this
assignment. Papers will be due at the beginning of class, and will not be accepted late. Each
paper should be approximately 2-3 pages, double-spaced. The purpose of these papers is
twofold: First, they should help you read the weekly assignments critically and thoroughly, and
second, they should help generate discussion. I will comment on the papers and grade them.
A reaction paper features your intellectual reaction to a topic covered in the course reader. A
"topic" can be a phenomenon, a theory, a concept, an experiment, and so forth. The ideal start is
to think about which issues in that weeks readings have grabbed, bothered, or puzzled you.
Once you have an idea for a topic, choose the type of paper you want to write. You may critique
an article you read; propose a new experiment that would clarify open questions; or apply issues
or comments from previous sessions to the current readings. You may start with your own
everyday observations and develop a theoretical analysis; or you may start with a theoretical
prediction and apply it to your own life. All papers should be short and to the point. So tell your
reader what you are planning to do in the first paragraph. Then, in the remaining two or three
pages, implement this plan. No matter what type of paper you choose to write, you must clearly
go beyond summarizing other people's thoughts. A mere summary of the reading material is
not acceptable.
Final Project
The class will do a final project together. The project is a writing project. As a group, we will
write a review paper of models of health behavior change, and we will analyze which models are
most appropriate and effective for which particular health behaviors, based on numerous criteria.
For some reason, there is no paper that reviews the models and tries to make sense of when each
model would be most effective. I want this paper to be a single definitive paper that finally puts
each model in its place and makes sense of the massive messy literature on this topic. Each
student in class will write a section of the larger paper. We will break this project down into
parts during the third week of class, and each member of class will be responsible for one part.
We will have deadlines for outlines and drafts of each section.
Grading
Your grade will be based on the following items:
30%
3. Leading discussion
25%
4. Class participation
25%
Readings
1/12: Week 1: Overview
1/19: Week 2: Individual Models: Health Belief Model and Theory of Reasoned Action
Rosenstock (1990). The Health Belief Model: Explaining health behavior through expectancies. In
Glantz, K. (ed.) Health Behavior and Health Education: Theory, Research, and Practice. San
Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
Aiken, West, Woodward, Reno, & Reynolds (1994). Increasing screening mammography in asymptomatic
women: Evaluation of a second generation, theory-based program. Health Psychology, 13, 526538.
Fisher, Fisher, & Rye (1995). Understanding and promoting AIDS-preventive behavior: Insights from the
Theory of Reasoned Action. Health Psychology, 14, 255-264.
Sutton, McVey, & Glanz (1999). A comparative test of the Theory of Reasoned Action and the Theory of
Planned Behavior in the prediction of condom use intentions in a national sample of English
young people. Health Psychology, 18, 72-81.