Evaluation of the Define It! Program for Raising Critically Conscious Bystander Behaviors

Author:

Cadaret Michael C.1ORCID,Ritter Molly2,Kohnen Sarah1,Bergman Zoë3,Folio Francesca1,Albrecht Josephine4

Affiliation:

1. School of Health Sciences, Chatham University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA

2. University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA

3. Department of Sociology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA

4. Private practice, Pennsylvania, USA

Abstract

Across two studies with cohorts of undergraduate students who previously completed a bystander intervention program, a consciousness-raising intervention called Define It! was evaluated for its efficacy in increasing critically conscious intentions. Data were collected pre, post, and one-month using the Illinois Rape Myth Acceptance Scale (IRMAS-SF; Payne et al., 1999) and Critically Conscious Bystander Scale (CCBS; Johnson et al., 2019). Following recommendations for novel intervention research by Rounsaville et al., we present our findings across two studies. Study 1 demonstrated that the program was feasible, acceptable, and specified the CCBS as an adequate measure of change. Study 2, ( n = 38) randomly assigned student participants to control or intervention groups. Results demonstrated significant increases on CBBS for intervention participants compared to the control.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference46 articles.

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