Title: Henry P. Cole
1Cognitive-Behavioral Approaches to Farm
Community Safety Education
- Henry P. Cole
- University of Kentucky
- Southeast Center for Agricultural Health and
- Injury Prevention
- Paper presented at the An Agricultural Safety
and Health Conference - Using Past and Present to Map the Future
- Baltimore, Maryland, February 2 - 4, 2001
2An educational problem
-
- educational programs for delivering this farm
health and safety knowledge are low in number
and often of questionable effect. (Agriculture
at Risk ,1989. p. 5) - It often seems as though relatively little has
been accomplished through the years with safety
and health education in production agriculture.
the nature of production agriculture, and current
social, political, and economic realities,
suggest that safety and health education will
remain a favored methodology for the foreseeable
future. Murphy, 1992, p. 144.)
3Enforcement has its problems too
- many production agriculture safety and health
regulations directed toward individual behavior
are nothing more than educational behavioral
guidelines. (p. 167) - These instructions ignore individual working
contingencies that influence actual behavior by
individuals in specific situations. (p. 167) - Attention, then, must be focused on the question
of how safety and health education might do a
better job for production agriculture. (pp.
144-145)
4Three theories of learning
- Behaviorism habits - 1900 to 1960
- Learning as response strengthening
- Constructivism - 1960 to 1990
- Learning as acquiring and organizing information
- Socioculturalism - 1970 - present
- Learning is situated in the practice and tools of
social groups working together on everyday task,
sometimes called JPF learning
5The A, B, C model
- Antecedents - things people can see, hear, feel
remember that cue a particular behavior - Behavior - actions exhibited in the presence of
antecedent stimuli - Consequences - outcomes or effects of behavior
(behaviors that result in desirable outcomes are
said to be reinforced and become habits) - A B C
-
6Two tales about the A-B-C model
- The man who ate too many donuts
- Short term and long term reinforcers
- Competition among reinforcers
- Why fear of punishment usually fails
- The farmer who ran his equipment without shields
(machine guards)
7What maintains safety behavior?
- Driving a tractor with a ROPS and wearing the
seat belt is very rarely reinforced by being
protected during an overturn. - What, then, reinforces a farmer for always
driving a ROPS-equipped tractor and always
wearing the seat belt? - Is it fear of injury? (No it is not!)
8Information processing theory
- The computer metaphor - human brains are like
computers, they receive, process, store, organize
and act on information. - Constructivism - Humans unlike computers receive,
manipulate, and use information to construct
meaning and to create knowledge and purpose.
9Theory of reasoned action
- Social psychological theories like these are
information processing theories. They describe
how beliefs, knowledge, attitudes, motivations,
and perceptions of others values result in
intentions and behaviors. The focus on what goes
on inside a persons head.
10The EPPM model
- An information processing model that describe how
people process fear messages and either act to
avoid the threat or deny the threat. The choice
is determined by the persons - Perception of his or her
- Susceptibility to the injury
- The severity of the injury
- The persons belief in
- His or her self efficacy (ability to control
outcomes) - Response efficacy (effectiveness of the
recommended method for reducing risk and severity
of injury) - Example How farmers deal with news about
tractor overturn fatalities and injuries
11Socioculturalism
- Learning occurs in the practice of just plain
folks engaged in the ordinary task of life and
work where each person has a legitimate role and
contribution in shared common goals - Originated in studies of the real-world social
cooperative practices of trades and professionals
and how they create and use knowledge effectively
12Instructional approach
- Educators can best support worker actions by
working within their organizations to develop
institutional structures which can respond to
issues identified... - efforts to increase commitment to
organizational safety should be oriented from
within communities of practice by actions that
personally involve their members and make safety
a part of their professionalism, not an
obligation imposed from outside.
13An important question
- Where do safety beliefs, attitudes, knowledge,
behavior and strategies reside? - Three Answers
- Behaviorists - in individuals habitual behaviors
(forget about attitudes, beliefs, and knowledge) - Constructivists - in individuals heads as
organized beliefs, attitudes, knowledge, skills,
and strategies - Socioculuralists - in the communal everyday
practices of just plain folks and their tools as
they engage in purposeful social efforts in which
each member has a legitimate role and contribution
14Stories to live by An integration
15A case example
- This farmer drove an average of three times a
day, 20 days per month for 25 years and never had
an overturn during 18,000 tractor driving events.
He knows people who died in overturns. He
believes that in an overturn a ROPS and a seat
belt provide great protection. But he says, ROPS
are not worth the cost and effort.
16The overturn event
During his 26th year of farming the farmer
overturns his tractor and becomes a paraplegic.
Thereafter he insists that his tractors be fitted
with ROPS and seat belts to protect his wife and
other family members.
17Interpretations of his behavior
- Behavioristic - he was reinforced for driving
tractors without ROPS and seat belts - Constructivist - he constructed meaningful
representations of the relative risk of overturns
and his ability to prevent these events - Socioculturalist - the culture tales in his
community presented stories that he lived by (and
nearly died by too).
18Another case
- Many habits, conceptions and culture tales in
farm communities promote the virtues of child
second riders. - Few address the risks and consequences
19Another death
- When child second riders fall from tractors and
die, how are these events usually treated in
local rural newspapers and why? - What is required to change these culture tales
and who must do so?