Prevention Program Power Point
Instructions
Create a small prevention program that could be implemented at a health fair, at a workplace, or in a school. The goal of this assignment is to articulate the social, biological, and psychological consequences of addictive behaviors to an at-risk population and contextualize issues of addiction in historical and social frameworks.
For this presentation, you will present your complete prevention program.
The presentation should include 7–10 slides (not counting title slide and references slide) with speaker notes to address the following topics:
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- Addiction and the effects that this addiction has on the individual, family, workplace, and community
- A look at the history and social frameworks of this addiction and the at-risk population
- Where is the best place to implement this program?
- How will you measure success for this prevention program?
- Could you apply this prevention program within your real life and community? If so, will you, and if not, why not?
An effective presentation will include:
- Dynamic formatting of the slides
- Appropriate images, charts, graphs, and so on
- Clean bullets points that do not give too much information per slide
- Use of the speaker notes section to clearly define the bullets of the slide and provide reference to cited material
View this example prevention program.
For additional details, please refer to the Prevention Program Final Project Guidelines and Rubric document.
PSY 200 Prevention Program Final Project Guidelines and Rubric
Overview There are two major projects for this course.
Scenario/Case Study: This is a final project (with milestones) in which students will analyze a scenario of an individual dealing with an addiction in order to explore potential diagnoses that could apply and to articulate a treatment plan for the individual. The goal of this assignment is to understand how addictions impact the individual, family, community, and/or society.
This assessment will assess your mastery with respect to the following course outcomes:
Evaluate major intervention techniques for their effectiveness in treating addictions
Differentiate between the physiological and psychological effects of mood-altering substances on behaviors and mental processes
Analyze addictive behaviors for their social and psychological effects on the individual, family, community, or society
Differentiate between the biological, environmental, and philosophical perspectives on addiction
Prevention Program: Students will design a small prevention program that could be implemented at a health fair, at a workplace, or in a school. The goal of this assignment is to articulate the social, biological, and psychological consequences of addictive behaviors to an at-risk population and contextualize issues of addiction in historical and social frameworks.
This assessment will assess your mastery with respect to the following course outcomes:
Analyze addictive behaviors for their social and psychological effects on the individual, family, community, or society
Identify connections between historical milestones and contemporary approaches to addictions
Prevention Program Prompt Create a small prevention program that could be implemented at a health fair, at a workplace, or in a school. The goal of this assignment is to articulate the social, biological, and psychological consequences of addictive behaviors to an at-risk population and contextualize issues of addiction in historical and social frameworks.
Below are the critical elements that must be addressed in this prevention program. Drawing on the some of the elements from Milestone One, provide a complete prevention program for an at-risk population.
Identify the population that is at risk that will be the focus of this prevention program. o Possible populations can include (this is not an all-inclusive list):
i. Adult ii. Senior
iii. Youth iv. Adolescent v. Workplace
vi. Church member vii. LGBT
Identify the addiction and the impacts it has on the individual, family, workplace and community. o Possible addictions can include (this is not an all-inclusive list):
i. Alcohol ii. Drugs
iii. Gambling iv. Tobacco v. Internet
o Possible impacts can include (this is not an all-inclusive list): i. Family conflict
ii. Financial issues iii. Reduced productivity iv. Loss of faith v. Reduced reputation and standing in the community
vi. Legal issues vii. Loss of job
viii. Criminal charges
Describe the history and social frameworks of this addiction and the at-risk population. o What is currently in place with this at-risk population?
i. For example: April is alcohol awareness month, and October is violence prevention month.
Where is the best place to implement this program? o Possible places can include (this is not an all-inclusive list):
i. School ii. Church
iii. Community center iv. Business v. Chamber of Commerce
Provide information on the marketing and funding of the program.
o Possible marketing can include (this is not an all-inclusive list): i. Facebook
ii. Twitter iii. News iv. Newspaper v. Blog
vi. Company newsletter
How will you evaluate success of this prevention program? o Surveys o Questionnaires o Before and after statistics
View this example prevention program.
Milestones Prevention Program Milestone One: Short Presentation In Module Three, you will create a presentation in which you identify the population and addiction that you will be addressing with your prevention program. This milestone will be graded with the Prevention Program Milestone One Rubric. Prevention Program Submission: Presentation In Module Five, you will submit your final presentation, which should outline a small prevention program that could be implemented at a health fair, at a workplace, or in a school. This submission will be graded with the Final Presentation Rubric.
Final Presentation Rubric Guidelines for Submission: The presentation should be a PowerPoint presentation to include 7–10 slides (not counting title slide and references slide) with speaker notes.
Critical Elements Exemplary (100%) Proficient (85%) Needs Improvement (55%) Not Evident (0%) Value
Identify the Population
Meets “Proficient” criteria and uses specific, relevant examples as to why this population is at risk
Identifies the at-risk population that will be the focus of the prevention program and discusses why they are at risk
Identifies the at-risk population, but lacks a mention of why they are at risk
Does not identify the at-risk population
15
Addiction: Identification
Meets “Proficient” criteria and utilizes specific and relevant examples on how the addiction relates to the at-risk population
Identifies the addiction that will be the focus of the prevention program and relates it to the at-risk population
Identifies the addiction, but there are gaps in how this addiction relates to the at-risk population
Does not identify the addiction 15
Addiction: Impact Meets “Proficient” criteria and uses specific and relevant examples to substantiate the addiction’s impact on the at- risk population
Analyzes possible impacts of the addiction on the at-risk population. Supports this analysis with one peer- reviewed article
Analysis contains gaps between the addiction and how it impacts the at-risk population OR does not support analysis with a peer-reviewed article
Does not analyze the impacts of the addiction on the at-risk population
15
Addiction: History Meets “Proficient” criteria and uses specific and relevant examples to relate the addiction to the at-risk population
Discusses the history of the addiction and how it relates to the at-risk population
Discusses the history of the addiction, but lacks a discussion of how it relates to the at-risk population, OR discusses how the addiction relates to the at- risk population, but does not provide a history of the addiction
Does not provide a history of the addiction
15
Addiction: Social Frameworks
Meets “Proficient” criteria and uses specific and relevant examples to relate the social frameworks of the addiction to the at-risk population
Analyzes the social frameworks of the addiction and relates them back to the at-risk population
Analyzes the social frameworks of the addiction, but analysis does not relate them back to the at-risk population
Does not analyze the social frameworks of the addiction
10
Implementation of the Program
Meets “Proficient” criteria and provides specific and relevant examples of why the location was chosen
Discusses where the program will be implemented and why this location was chosen
Discusses where the program will be implemented, but does not state why this location was chosen
Does not discuss where the program will be implemented
10
Marketing and Funding for the
Program
Meets “Proficient” criteria and provides specific and relevant examples of how to implement the marketing and funding plan
Develops a marketing and funding plan for the prevention of the addiction and discusses ways to implement this plan
Develops a marketing and funding plan for the prevention of the addiction, but does not discuss ways to implement the plan
Does not develop a marketing and funding plan for the prevention program
5
Evaluation of Success Meets “Proficient” criteria and uses specific and relevant examples to support the choice in evaluation
Develops an evaluation that will assess the program to determine if it improved awareness to the at-risk population
Develops an evaluation that will assess the program, but the evaluation does not determine if the program improved awareness to the at-risk population
Does not develop an evaluation of success
10
Articulation of Response
Submission is free of errors related to grammar, spelling, and syntax
Submission has no major errors related to grammar, spelling, syntax, or organization
Submission has major errors related to grammar, spelling, syntax, or organization that negatively impact readability and articulation of main ideas
Submission has critical errors related to grammar, spelling, syntax, or organization that prevent understanding of ideas
5
Total 100%