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1 CHS 282: Social Marketing for Health Promotion and Communication Fall 2014 Community Health Sciences/School of Public Health Lecture/Seminar 3 hrs, 1 hr. field practice Mondays 3-6 pm Room: CHS # 61-269 Professor: Nedra Kline Weinreich Office: 26-081 (to be confirmed) Telephone: 310-286-2721 Email: [email protected] Office hours: Mondays 2:00-3:00 pm or by appointment Sign up at https://nedraweinreich.youcanbook.me Website: https://ccle.ucla.edu/course/view/14F-COMHLT282-1 COURSE DESCRIPTION In this course students are expected to learn the basics of planning, implementation and evaluation of health communications campaigns and strategies to improve community and population health. The course will focus specifically on social marketing strategies, though it will also touch on other types of approaches. This course follows a dual track: theoretical frameworks, models and research strategies relevant for health communications are presented throughout the course in tandem with readings intended to impart skills in regards to planning campaigns, doing communications needs assessment and formative research, media content analysis, process and impact evaluation. Theories include models of persuasive communications, mass media effects, social marketing, fear-based messages, diffusion of innovations. The project enables students to gain experience in research in support of different health communications interventions and in planning a social marketing campaign. This may be with a real community based organization or “client.” To support projects, students are encouraged to learn about the internet, videography, desktop publishing, and other “new technologies” that can aid in the health communications process, but these skills will not be explicitly taught in this class (CHS 292 teaches these skills). Moreover, this class does not cover interpersonal communications research and theory. Planning, creating, implementation, and evaluation of comprehensive health communication campaigns, including use of social marketing practices and strategies of audience research, marketing psychology, creative message development, branding, comprehensive media use for dissemination, transmedia storytelling. Competencies: conducting focus group interviews, creating and evaluating effective health campaigns, critical assessment of existing campaigns.
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CHS 282: Social Marketing for Health Promotion and Communication Fall 2014

Community Health Sciences/School of Public Health Lecture/Seminar 3 hrs, 1 hr. field practice Mondays 3-6 pm Room: CHS # 61-269 Professor: Nedra Kline Weinreich Office: 26-081 (to be confirmed) Telephone: 310-286-2721 Email: [email protected] Office hours: Mondays 2:00-3:00 pm or by appointment Sign up at https://nedraweinreich.youcanbook.me Website: https://ccle.ucla.edu/course/view/14F-COMHLT282-1 COURSE DESCRIPTION In this course students are expected to learn the basics of planning, implementation and evaluation of health communications campaigns and strategies to improve community and population health. The course will focus specifically on social marketing strategies, though it will also touch on other types of approaches. This course follows a dual track: theoretical frameworks, models and research strategies relevant for health communications are presented throughout the course in tandem with readings intended to impart skills in regards to planning campaigns, doing communications needs assessment and formative research, media content analysis, process and impact evaluation. Theories include models of persuasive communications, mass media effects, social marketing, fear-based messages, diffusion of innovations. The project enables students to gain experience in research in support of different health communications interventions and in planning a social marketing campaign. This may be with a real community based organization or “client.” To support projects, students are encouraged to learn about the internet, videography, desktop publishing, and other “new technologies” that can aid in the health communications process, but these skills will not be explicitly taught in this class (CHS 292 teaches these skills). Moreover, this class does not cover interpersonal communications research and theory. Planning, creating, implementation, and evaluation of comprehensive health communication campaigns, including use of social marketing practices and strategies of audience research, marketing psychology, creative message development, branding, comprehensive media use for dissemination, transmedia storytelling. Competencies: conducting focus group interviews, creating and evaluating effective health campaigns, critical assessment of existing campaigns.

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COURSE OBJECTIVES Course Objectives: Upon completion of this course the student should be able to:

1. Describe the key principles of social marketing and the elements of a social marketing strategy.

ASPH Domains addressed: Health Policy and Management (D6) Social and Behavioral Sciences (E1)Communication and Informatics (F2)

2. Use secondary research to analyze the problem and environment. ASPH Domains addressed:

Epidemiology (C9) Social and Behavioral Sciences (E2, E6) Communication and Informatics (F8) Professionalism (J3, J6) Program Planning (K1) Systems Thinking (L8, L9, L10)

3. Understand how to use formative research and conduct focus groups to segment the target audience.

ASPH Domains addressed: Social and Behavioral Sciences (E2, E10) Diversity and Culture (G6, G10)

4. Design effective social marketing messages, materials and interventions. ASPH Domains addressed:

Social and Behavioral Sciences (E8, E9, E10) Communication and Informatics (F4, F6, F7, F9, F10) Diversity and Culture (G5, G8, G9, G10)

5. Create a comprehensive social marketing plan that includes goals and objectives, target audience segmentation, theoretical framework, social marketing strategy, and plans for research, implementation and evaluation.

ASPH Domains addressed: Health Policy and Management (D5, D6) Social and Behavioral Sciences (E5) Program Planning (K2, K3, K5, K6, K7, K8, K9)

PREREQUISITES CHS 210, 211A and B or previous courses in social science & consent of instructor. COURSE REQUIREMENTS The course will meet once a week for a three-hour seminar. One to two extra hours a week will be devoted to research projects. The lecture-discussion sessions will be used for critical analysis and review of key readings. You are expected to come to class prepared to fully participate in a discussion of readings.

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Assignment 1 - Problem and Environmental Analysis – Individual Assignment - Due October 20th Identify at least five resources (including three articles from peer reviewed journals) on a specific health topic you plan to do for your final project (i.e., injury, STDs, depression, child health, SIDS, amoebiasis, terrorism, etc.) and review them to answer the questions found in Worksheets 1 & 2 (pp. 45-49) of Hands-On Social Marketing. The analysis should be written in a narrative format of approximately 3-5 double-spaced pages and should include citations for all sources of data. This is an individual assignment even if you choose to work with someone else for the final project. Assignment 2 – Target Audience Profile – Individual Assignment – Due November 3rd Create a 3-5 page (double-spaced) narrative profile of the target audience to be addressed in your class project that builds on the information learned from the problem and environmental analysis. This profile should utilize existing secondary research to answer the questions listed in Worksheet 5 (pp. 76-78) of Hands-On Social Marketing and identify key segments within the target audience. This is an individual assignment even if you choose to work with someone else for the final project. Assignment 3 – Creative Brief, Research Instruments, or Campaign Descriptions – Group Assignment – Due November 17th Select one of the three options described below as the final project.

For those doing a social marketing plan (Option 1) – submit a creative brief as described in Hands-On Social Marketing pp. 135-139 (1-2 people)

For those doing formative research (Option 2) – submit your interview guide/survey instruments and a brief description of how you plan to recruit participants (2-3 people)

For those doing a case study (Option 3) – submit a description of the campaigns you intend to analyze and the materials/documents you have located for each (1-2 people)

Assignment 4 – Final Project – Group Assignment – Due December 15th Oral presentations of your projects will take place in the last class on December 8th. The final report is due by December 15th. In the report, please use a 12-point serif font (such as Times New Roman or Calibri), double-space and leave a one-inch margin on all sides. The report should be approximately 15-20 pages (excluding any appendices and references). Option 1: Write a comprehensive social marketing plan to address the topic you selected. It should be written in the form of a proposal to a real organization that might realistically conduct a social marketing campaign on your topic. Because this is a hypothetical plan, you will need to make some assumptions regarding things like staffing, timeline and budget; simply state your assumptions and create the plan based on those. You should incorporate what you found in the previous three assignments into the plan. You should create sample communication messages and materials, but you do not need to put a lot of time into production; a rough sketch, storyboard,

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script or even just a written description of what the material would look like is sufficient. This is an individual or group project (one to two people). The social marketing plan should include the following sections: • Executive Summary • Introduction/Statement of the Problem • Previous health communication or social marketing interventions addressing the problem (or similar issues) and lessons learned from them • Goals/Objectives • Target Audience • Theoretical Framework • Proposed Activities • Research Plan • Preliminary Social Marketing Mix • Creative Brief (with mocked-up samples) • Implementation Plan • Evaluation Plan • Management Plan • Timeline • Budget • References Option 2: Conduct primary formative research with the target audience you identified in Assignment 2. This is a group project completed in a team of two or three people. You must work with an existing local organization that can provide you access to the target audience. This research should collect both qualitative and quantitative data (mixed methods research) , which may include at least two focus groups, and / or in-depth interviews (at least ten , quantitative surveys (at least 50 respondents) or observations (quantitative at least 50, qualitative at least 25). You will recruit research participants, create research instruments, conduct the research and analyze the results. Based on your analysis, you will make recommendations for the social marketing mix and key messages/communication strategies. You do not need to develop actual materials, although you may create drafts to test. You must also tell us how – hypothetically – you would pretest your final materials with members of the target audience prior to production. The formative research report should include the following sections: • Executive Summary • Introduction/Statement of the Problem • Description of Study Population • Key Research Questions • Research Methodology • Recruitment of Participants • Research Instruments Used • Description of Research Methods • Limitations of Study • Results

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• Discussion/Recommendations • References • Appendices (e.g., questionnaires, materials developed, etc.) Option 3: Do a case study comparing 3 social marketing campaigns previously developed that all address a similar health topic (i.e., HIV/AIDS, nutrition, immunization, safety, etc.) and target audience. This is an individual or group project (one to two people). The sponsoring organizations of the campaign needs to be identified and contacted for information about the campaigns if the information you need is not readily available in the literature or online. You will need to be able to get your hands on campaign materials produced and also review documentation of what was done. Actual analysis of the campaign materials (i.e., curricula, PSAs, videos, media kits, posters, social media, websites) as well as the marketing and distribution strategies associated with the campaign using observational, qualitative or case study methods is encouraged. Formative research and evaluation results are also important to obtain. Analysis of data could include looking at the content of materials collected, looking at secondary data, doing focus groups or key informant interviews of project staff. The case study report should include the following sections: • Executive Summary • Introduction/Statement of the Problem

• In-depth Descriptions of Each Campaign • Target audiences • Behavior (Goals/objectives) • Program Communication/intervention strategy – social marketing mix • Results of formative research • Evaluation process and results • Implementation – challenges and opportunities • Critically Compare and Contrast Campaigns • Discussion/Recommendations for Future Campaigns • References • Appendices (e.g., documents obtained from campaigns)

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EVALUATION Students will be evaluated based on meeting a range of course requirements. These requirements include: (10%) Participation in class discussion, activities and exercises (10%) Assignment 1 – Problem and Environmental Analysis (10%) Assignment 2 – Target Audience Profile (10%) Assignment 3 – Creative Brief or Interview Guide/Survey Instruments (10%) Oral presentation of class project (50%) Final class project report Criteria for grading of assignments include:

Quality of Analysis – do your ideas make sense?

Quality of Writing – can you express yourself clearly? (grammar and spelling count!)

References – did you select high-quality sources of information?

Organization of Paper – does the information flow logically?

Professional Appearance – does the document look like it was created by someone working at a professional level?

READINGS Required Readings for CHS 282: 1. Nedra Kline Weinreich, Hands-On Social Marketing: A Step-by-Step Guide to Designing Change for Good (2nd Ed.). Thousand Oaks: Sage Publications; 2010. Available at Health Sciences Bookstore. 2. Articles and resources available online as specified in the syllabus.

3. In addition, PowerPoint overheads and other supplementary materials will be posted to the Moodle site for the class. Supplementary readings are noted for each class session, and are recommended but not required. If possible, please at least skim these readings.

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CHS 282: Social Marketing for Health Promotion and Communication Outline SESSION ONE: OCTOBER 6 I. INTRODUCTION TO SOCIAL MARKETING SESSION TWO: OCTOBER 13 II. DEVELOPING A SOCIAL MARKETING STRATEGY SESSION THREE: OCTOBER 20 III. FORMATIVE RESEARCH – KNOW YOUR AUDIENCE – OVERVIEW OF METHODS **PROBLEM/ENVIRONMENTAL ANALYSIS DUE ** SESSION FOUR: OCTOBER 27 IV. FORMATIVE RESEARCH CONTINUED – PRACTICAL SKILLS SESSION FIVE: NOVEMBER 3 V. CREATIVE STRATEGY AND COMMUNICATIONS DEVELOPMENT **TARGET AUDIENCE PROFILE DUE ** SESSION SIX: NOVEMBER 10 VI. WORD OF MOUTH AND SOCIAL MEDIA SESSION SEVEN: NOVEMBER 17 VII. APPROACHES TO WORKING WITH THE MEDIA **CREATIVE BRIEF, RESEARCH INSTRUMENTS OR CASE STUDY SUMMARIES DUE ** SESSION EIGHT: NOVEMBER 24 VIII. IMPLEMENTING AND EVALUATING A SOCIAL MARKETING PROGRAM SESSION NINE: DECEMBER 1 IX. SOCIAL MARKETING CASE STUDIES AND OTHER TOPICS SESSION TEN: DECEMBER 8 X. STUDENT PRESENTATIONS

** DECEMBER 15TH : FINAL PAPERS DUE **

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CHS 282: Social Marketing for Health Promotion and Communication: Course Readings SESSION ONE: OCTOBER 6 I. INTRODUCTION TO SOCIAL MARKETING IN HANDS-ON SOCIAL MARKETING: Chapters 1–4 (pp. 1-25) Required Readings: R. Craig Lefebvre (2013) A Consensus Definition of Social Marketing http://socialmarketing.blogs.com/r_craiig_lefebvres_social/2013/10/a-consensus-definition-of-social-marketing.html R. Craig Lefebvre, (2012),"An Integrative Model for Social Marketing", Journal of Social Marketing, Vol. 1 Iss: 1 pp. 54-72 http://socialmarketing.blogs.com/An%20integrative%20model%20for%20social%20marketing.pdf

Bill Smith, “Reinventing Social Marketing,” TedX Talk Video 2011 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IECY9LJvTf4 Nancy Lee, “How Can I Help You? Understanding Target Audience Barriers,” TedX Talk Video 2012 http://tedxtalks.ted.com/video/How-Can-I-Help-You-Understandin Supplemental Readings: Neiger B., Thackeray R., Barnes M., McKenzie J. “Positioning Social Marketing as a Planning Process for Health Education.” American Journal of Health Studies, Spring-Summer 2003. http://www.researchgate.net/publication/242260976_Positioning_social_marketing_as_a_planning_process_for_health_education/file/504635214f9ef87b5b.pdf

Melanie A Wakefield, Barbara Loken, Robert C Hornik Use of mass media campaigns to change health behaviour Lancet 2010; 376: 1261–71 Published Online October 7, 2010 http://cms.csom.umn.edu/marketinginstitute/research/documents/Useofmassmediacampaignstochangehealthbehaviour.pdf SESSION TWO: OCTOBER 13 II. DEVELOPING A SOCIAL MARKETING STRATEGY IN HANDS-ON SOCIAL MARKETING: Chapters 5-6 (pp. 29-52), Chapters 9-10 (pp. 79-104)

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Required Readings: Social Marketing National Excellence Collaborative # 2 . Social Marketing and Public Health: Lessons from the Field. http://www.turningpointprogram.org/Pages/pdfs/social_market/smc_lessons_from_field.pdf Lefevbre, RC. Principles for Success in Social Marketing. On Social Marketing and Social Change (blog). Jan 27, 2008. http://socialmarketing.blogs.com/r_craiig_lefebvres_social/2008/01/5-principles-fo.html French, Jeff. Up-stream, Mid-stream and Down-Stream Social Marketing. Defining the Term. 2014. https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/article/20140819142011-50216498-up-stream-mid-stream-and-down-stream-social-marketing-defining-the-term

UK Behavioural Insights Team. EAST: Four Simple Ways to Apply Behavioural Insights., 2014 http://www.behaviouralinsights.co.uk/sites/default/files/BIT%20Publication%20EAST_FA_WEB.pdf

Supplemental Readings: Lu, Anh-Dai. Barriers and Benefits: Changing Behavior Through Social Marketing, Sustainable Brands, 2013. http://www.sustainablebrands.com/news_and_views/behavior_change/changing-behavior-through-social-marketing SESSION THREE: OCTOBER 20 III. FORMATIVE RESEARCH – KNOW YOUR AUDIENCE– OVERVIEW OF METHODS **PROBLEM/ENVIRONMENTAL ANALYSIS DUE ** IN HANDS-ON SOCIAL MARKETING: Chapters 7-8 (pp. 53-78) Required Readings: Weinreich N. A more perfect union: integrating quantitative and qualitative methods in social marketing research. Social Marketing Quarterly. 1996;3(1):53-58. http://social-marketing.com/research.html Hawley, M. Laddering: A Research Interview Technique for Uncovering Core Values. 2009. http://www.uxmatters.com/mt/archives/2009/07/laddering-a-research-interview-technique-for-uncovering-core-values.php IDEO, Human Centered Design Toolkit. “Hear” section, pp. 21-69; and “Field Guide” section, pp. 155-187. http://www.ideo.com/work/human-centered-design-toolkit/

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Supplemental Readings: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, National Cancer Institute. Making Health Communication Programs Work. 2002. pp. 125-167. http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/cancerlibrary/pinkbook Center for AIDS Prevention Studies (CAPS), University of California San Francisco. Good Questions/Better Answers: A Formative Research Handbook for California HIV Prevention Programs. http://caps.ucsf.edu/resources/how-to-manuals/ List D. Know Your Audience: A Practical Guide to Media Research. 2002. (Skim the sections and keep as reference) http://www.audiencedialogue.net/kya.html Trendwatching.com. Virtual Anthropology. http://www.trendwatching.com/trends/VIRTUAL_ANTHROPOLOGY.htm SESSION FOUR: OCTOBER 27 IV. FORMATIVE RESEARCH CONTINUED – PRACTICAL SKILLS IN HANDS-ON SOCIAL MARKETING: Review Chapter 7 (pp. 56-63), Appendices C&D (pp. 297-300) Required Readings: Alvarez, Cindy. Customer Development Interviews How-to: What You Should Be Learning. 2010. http://www.cindyalvarez.com/communication/customer-development-interviews-how-to-what-you-should-be-learning Silverman, George. How to Get Beneath the Surface in Focus Groups. http://www.mnav.com/bensurf.htm Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. A New Way to Talk About the Social Determinants of Health. 2010. http://www.rwjf.org/files/research/vpmessageguide20101029.pdf (Specifically note the research methods discussed in Appendix B and how they informed the messaging recommendations in the rest of the report.) Supplemental Readings: Karsten C, Rothschild ML, et al. The Road Crew Final Report: Appendix A (Focus Group Research). February 2001. http://www.dot.wisconsin.gov/library/publications/topic/safety/roadcrew4-appendixa.pdf

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Maier, Andrew. Complete Beginner’s Guide to Design Research, UX Booth, 2010. http://www.uxbooth.com/articles/complete-beginners-guide-to-design-research/ SESSION FIVE: NOVEMBER 3 V. CREATIVE STRATEGY AND COMMUNICATIONS DEVELOPMENT **TARGET AUDIENCE PROFILE DUE ** IN HANDS-ON SOCIAL MARKETING: Chapters 11-16 (pp. 105-183) Required Readings: Sutton SM, Balch GI, Lefebvre RC. Strategic Questions for Consumer-Based Health Communications. http://socialmarketing.blogs.com/Publications/Consumer-based_Health_Communications.pdf Witte K. The Extended Parallel Process Model. http://www.msu.edu/~wittek/eppm.htm Goodman A. Why Bad Ads Happen to Good Causes and How to Ensure They Won’t Happen to Yours: A Guide for Creating More Effective Public Interest Print Advertising. Cause Communications. 2002. http://www.rwjf.org/files/publications/other/BadAds.pdf Supplemental Readings: O’Sullivan GA, Yonkler JA, Morgan W, and Merritt AP. A Field Guide to Designing a Health Communication Strategy. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Center for Communication Programs. 2003. Chapter 4: Strategic Approach and Chapter 5: The Message Brief. http://www.jhuccp.org/pubs/fg/02/index.shtml Rimer BK, Glanz K, et al. Theory at a Glance: A Guide for Health promotion practice. 2nd ed. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute. September 2005. http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/cancerlibrary/theory.pdf Leroux Miller, K. 25 Metaphors Nonprofits Can Use to Get their Message Across. 2010. http://www.nonprofitmarketingguide.com/resources/book/25-metaphors-nonprofits-can-use-to-get-their-messages-across-e-book/ Los Angeles County Department of Public Health. Health Education Administration. Say It Right the First Time: Using Plain Language to Address Health Literacy; Fifth Edition, May 2013. http://publichealth.lacounty.gov/hea/docs/2013.05.29_SayitRightManual_WEB.pdf

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SESSION SIX: NOVEMBER 10 VI. WORD OF MOUTH AND SOCIAL MEDIA IN HANDS-ON SOCIAL MARKETING: Chapter 19 (pp. 209-228), pp. 236-238 Required Readings: CDC's Health Communicator's Social Media Toolkit - 2nd Ed. http://www.cdc.gov/socialmedia/Tools/guidelines/pdf/SocialMediaToolkit_BM.pdf Ogilvy Washington. Using Social Media Platforms to Amplify Public Health Messages. November 2010. http://smexchange.ogilvypr.com/wpcontent/uploads/2010/11/OW_SM_WhitePaper.pdf Sernovitz A. Word of Mouth Marketing in Five Easy Steps. January 17, 2006. http://www.marketingprofs.com/6/sernovitz1.asp (requires free registration) Cases in Public Health Communication & Marketing, Volume 2. August 2008. (Choose two of the case studies to read that interest you.) http://www.gwumc.edu/sphhs/departments/pch/phcm/casesjournal/volume2/index.cfm

Supplemental Readings: Levine, Locke, Searls & Weinberger. The Cluetrain Manifesto (95 Theses). http://www.cluetrain.com/book/95-theses.html NetSquared Resource Center on Social Media for Nonprofits http://learn.netsquared.org/resource_centers Nedra’s Social Media Resource Page http://nedra.wikispaces.com

Nedra : Getting your message out through the media: http://www.social-marketing.com/media.html CDC – The community Guide – Task Force findings. Health Communication and Social Marketing: Health Communication Campaigns that Include Mass Media and Health Related Product Distribution . March 31, 2011 http://www.thecommunityguide.org/healthcommunication/RRcampaigns.html

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SESSION SEVEN: NOVEMBER 17 VII. APPROACHES TO WORKING WITH THE MEDIA **CREATIVE BRIEF, RESEARCH INSTRUMENTS OR CASE STUDY SUMMARIES DUE ** IN HANDS-ON SOCIAL MARKETING: Chapters 18-20 (pp.197-246) Required Readings: Dorfman L, Krasnow ID. Public health and media advocacy, Annual Review of Public Health. 2014;35:293-306. http://www.annualreviews.org/eprint/NQ8KENQAJhYgQBjiIZKg/full/10.1146/annurev-publhealth-032013-182503 Kaiser Family Foundation. Entertainment Education and Health in the United States. Spring 2004. http://www.kff.org/entmedia/upload/Entertainment-Education-and-Health-in-the-United-States-Issue-Brief.pdf Chen, N., Kohler, C., et al. “BodyLove: The Impact of Targeted Radio Educational Entertainment on Health Knowledge, Attitudes and Behavior among African-Americans.” Cases in Public Health Communication & Marketing. 2009; 3:92-113. http://sphhs.gwu.edu/departments/pch/phcm/casesjournal/volume3/peer-reviewed/cases_3_06.pdf Supplemental Readings: UCLA Transmedia for Good Speaker Series, 2014 http://us3.campaign-archive2.com/?u=7bc31ddbe56e6e9d175022e96&id=a4d4460542 Small Business Knowledge Base. Deciding on the Advertising Media. http://www.bizmove.com/marketing/m2j4.htm The Health Communication Unit, The Centre for Health Promotion, University of Toronto. Media Advocacy Workbook. February 2000. http://www.thcu.ca/infoandresources/publications/ma%20workbook%20v104.pdf SESSION EIGHT: NOVEMBER 24 VIII. IMPLEMENTING AND EVALUATING A SOCIAL MARKETING PROGRAM IN HANDS-ON SOCIAL MARKETING: Chapter 17 (pp. 187-196), Chapter 21-25 (pp. 247-284)

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Required Readings: Andreasen AR, Drumwright ME. Alliances and Ethics in Social Marketing. In Andreasen AR, ed. Ethics in Social Marketing. Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press; 2000. http://www.social-marketing.org/papers/allianceJan2000.html Glik DC, Prelip M, Myerson A. Narrowcast Campaign Guide for Community Programs: Creating Health Messages for Targeted Media Campaigns. pp. 26-42. http://www.ph.ucla.edu/chs/hmrg/documents/narrowcast_manual.pdf Social Partnerships Project, Caledon Institute of Social Policy. Perspectives on Partnerships. June 1998:1-22. http://www.caledoninst.org/Publications/PDF/perspect.pdf Melanie A Wakefield, Barbara Loken, Robert C Hornik, “Use of mass media campaigns to change health behavior,” The Lancet, Vol. 376, Issue 9748, Pages 1261-1271, 2010. http://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(10)60809-4/fulltext (article free with registration) Supplemental Readings Weinberg CB, Ritchie RJB. Cooperation, competition and social marketing. Social Marketing Quarterly. September 1999;5(3):117-126. http://www.sauder.ubc.ca/faculty/research/docs/weinberg/Ism_1999.pdf Tools of Change Planning Guide-Developing Partnerships. http://www.toolsofchange.com/English/firstsplit.asp (>>Planning Guide>>Developing Partners) Craig Lefebvre, Guidelines for the Review of Social Marketing Papers, On Social Marketing and Social Change, 2014. http://socialmarketing.blogs.com/r_craiig_lefebvres_social/2014/03/guidelines-for-the-review-of-social-marketing-papers.html

SESSION NINE: DECEMBER 1 IX. SOCIAL MARKETING CASE STUDIES AND OTHER TOPICS Required Readings: The Verb Campaign Case Study, Social Marketing Wiki http://socialmarketing.wetpaint.com/page/VERB+Campaign The Verb Campaign. CDC. (Read additional articles on website) http://www.cdc.gov/youthcampaign/index.htm

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The Truth Campaign. American Legacy Foundation. http://www.thetruth.com/ Merck Gardasil Campaign http://www.gardasil.com/ Noel C. Barragan, Ali J. Noller, Brenda Robles, Lauren N. Gase, Michael S. Leighs, Suzanne Bogert, Paul A. Simon and Tony Kuo The ''Sugar Pack'' Health Marketing Campaign in Los Angeles County, 2011-2012, Health Promot Pract published online 22 October 2013 http://hpp.sagepub.com/content/early/2013/10/15/1524839913507280 Got Milk? Campaign Harris interactive case study uploaded to course website Palmgreen, Philip PhD, Lorch, Elizabeth P. PhD, Stephenson, Michael T. PhD, Hoyle, Rick H. PhD, and Donohew, Lewis PhD . Effects of the Office of National Drug Control Policy’s Marijuana Initiative Campaign on High-Sensation-Seeking Adolescents (Am J Public Health). 2007;97:1644–1649. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17395843 Robert Hornik, PhD, Lela Jacobsohn, PhD, Robert Orwin, PhD, Andrea Piesse, PhD, and Graham Kalton, PhD Effects of the National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign on Youths (Am J Public Health.) 2008;98:2229–2236. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18923126 SESSION TEN: DECEMBER 8 X. STUDENT PRESENTATIONS

** DECEMBER 15TH : FINAL PAPERS DUE **


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