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Health Education & Behavior
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Is the Receptivity of Substance Abuse Prevention Programming Affected by Students' Perceptions of the Instructor?

Peggy C. Stephens, PhD

University of Akron, Ohio, Tonkin{at}uakron.edu

Zili Sloboda, ScD

University of Akron, Ohio

Scott Grey, MS

Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio

Richard Stephens, PhD

University of Akron, Ohio

Augustine Hammond, PhD

Augusta State University, Georgia

Richard Hawthorne, PhD

University of Akron, Ohio

Brent Teasdale, PhD

University of Akron, Ohio

Joseph Williams, PhD

University of Akron, Ohio

Drawing on the elaboration likelihood model of persuasive communication, the authors examine the impact of the perceptions of the instructor or source on students' receptivity to a new substance abuse prevention curriculum. Using survey data from a cohort of students participating in the Adolescent Substance Abuse Prevention Study, the authors use structural equation modeling to determine the effects of the perceptions students have of their program instructor on measures of the targeted program mediators and the use of cigarettes, alcohol, and marijuana. They test these instructor effects after each component of a two-part curriculum is administered (during the seventh and ninth grades). They find that the perceptions of the instructor significantly affect refusal, communication and decision-making skills, normative beliefs, perceived consequences of use, and substance use. The authors discuss the implications of these findings for school-based prevention programming and indications for further research.

Key Words: substance abuse prevention • instructor • instructor evaluation • normative beliefs • instructor effects

This version was published on August 1, 2009

Health Education & Behavior, Vol. 36, No. 4, 724-745 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/1090198107304388


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