Showing posts with label assessment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label assessment. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Are alcohol-alternative events getting students out of the bars, or preaching to the choir?

alcohol alternative event evaluation results

This year, I'm putting three questions about alcohol use on all of our Late Night event evaluations in an attempt to answer the age-old question: Are we providing alternative events for students who would normally be drinking, or are we providing entertainment for students who don't drink?

We were able to purchase some pretty trendy incentives for under 50¢ each. Combined with an aggressive evaluation table, we were able to get the highest response (n=234) since I've been working here.

The three questions I added to our normal evaluation are:
  1. How many days in a typical week do you drink? (circle 0-7)
  2. How many days in a typical week do you get drunk? (circle 0-7)
  3. How many drinks did you have the last time you partied? (open response)
The questions are rather subjective (what do you mean by 'get drunk'?), but in previous research, subjective questions like these have strongly correlated with AUDIT scores - so we are able to get a rough snapshot of possible alcohol-related negative consequences in a single question rather than listing all 18 questions.

It's important to note that our evaluation table was staffed with student volunteers to try to make students feel more comfortable answering questions about their drinking behavior.

So what were the results? We appear to be preaching to the choir - at least at this Late Night event, which was on the very first night the first-year students were on campus. 69% of the respondents indicated that they drink 0 days in a typical week, 82% said they never get drunk in a typical week, and 49% said they had 0 drinks the last time they partied.

Of the students who filled out evaluations (which was a convenience sample of students in attendance at our event), 82% said they had 4 or fewer drinks the last time they partied. If we knock out the 49% who had 0 drinks at their last party, we get 33% of students having between 1-4 drinks. This is disproportionally high compared to our Fall 2010 NCHA data (random sample) which indicates that only 26.5% of the general student body consumed 1-4 drinks the last time they partied.

Looking at gender differences (female=67%, male=32%), the women drank more frequently (0.60 days/wk vs. 0.40 days/wk) and got drunk more frequently (0.27 days/wk vs. 0.22 days/wk) but had fewer drinks at their last party (2.20 vs. 3.11).

Overall, we appear to be attracting a disproportional number of abstainers and moderate drinkers to our Late Night event. So we might not be pulling students out of the bars, but we're providing entertainment and positive reinforcement for the students who are not heavy drinkers.

And there is something to be said for the 18% of student respondents who admitted to heavy drinking the last time they partied (5+ drinks in a single drinking event). If our sample were representative of the entire event attendance, it would mean we were able to host an alcohol-free night for around 300 at-risk users.

However, this event was the very first event of the year, which means a lot of these first-year students have yet to establish their "typical" college drinking behaviors. I want to continue asking these questions at our five remaining Late Night events to see what type of crowd we bring in.

Saturday, August 20, 2011

How to set your silicone ion sport watch bracelet thing

As I mentioned in my previous post, these trendy incentives can be purchased in bulk for less than 50¢ per unit, and they were a big hit at our late-night event in the Student Rec Center. However, because we bought them wholesale, we got them in a box that looked like it was straight off the boat from China with no instructions for how to set them! After much tinkering and Googling, I thought I'd post the instructions here in case anyone out there is trying to locate that information.

cheap silicone ion sport watch bracelet

Instructions for setting your silicone ion sport watch bracelet thing:
  1. Press A button twice (until month appears in top display).
  2. Month figure will appear. Press M button as many times as needed to adjust to correct month.
  3. Press A button to set month.
  4. Date figure will appear. Press M button as many times as needed to adjust to correct date.
  5. Press A button to set date.
  6. Hour figure will appear. Press M button as many times as needed to adjust to correct hour (A and P indicate AM and PM).
  7. Press A button to set hour.
  8. Minute figure will appear. Press M button as many times as needed to adjust to correct minute.
  9. Press A button to set minute.
  10. The word "sports" should be blinking when time is running correctly.
Viewing options: Press M once to view the date. Press M twice to view the seconds. To return to Time, press M.

cheap silicone ion sport watch bracelet

I've found that a mechanical pencil is the perfect pointy object to use when setting the device. Paper clips stab right through the silicone button, and pens don't always press down far enough.

cheap silicone ion sport watch bracelet

I hope this helps! If you have any other ideas for cheap, trendy incentives you can post them in the comments section. Good luck on your assessments!

Bonus data! Using the right incentive to survey alcohol use with student evaluations

campus event evaluations with alcohol questions

I knew our late-night event would draw a large crowd of first-year students (because they are the only ones moved-in on campus so far), so I wanted to add some survey questions about alcohol quantity and frequency usage in addition to our regular evaluation questions. We also wanted to get a more attractive incentive for the evaluation table, because compared to all the other freebies we were giving out, stickers wouldn't get much attention.

wholesale silicone ion sports watch

We normally give out temporary tattoos, stickers, or candy as an incentive at our evaluation table. This time, however, we got some trendy silicone sport watches. These incentives look very impressive - some companies are selling them for $21.99 each, pretending they are infused with negative ions to give you extra balance and strength (don't get me started) - but they're actually around $0.39 to $0.48 per unit depending on the quantity, if you buy wholesale. Just Google "silicone sport watch" and see what comes up.

The evaluation was a great success, and we got a stack of responses (I'm guessing around 250, but I haven't counted yet).

stack of evaluations

What's even more exciting, students actually filled out the alcohol quantity and frequency questions! This means we have "bonus" survey data on the first night these students were on campus. When we ask the same questions on future evaluations, we can compare trends. We'll also be able to answer the age-old question: Are we providing alternative events for students who would normally be drinking, or are we providing entertainment for students who don't drink?

I intentionally included a subjective question: "How many days in a typical week do you get drunk?" that I got from an interesting study called "Single Question about Drunkenness to Detect College Students at Risk for Injury" in the journal of Academic Emergency Medicine. Although this question is subjective, it positively correlates with typical measures of alcohol-related negative consequences. Basically, it's a quick and dirty approach when you just don't have room for the entire AUDIT survey.

I'm excited to get into the office on Monday to really dig into this data. Exciting start to the year!