Devcompage visitors nearly 142,000

Clustr maps view of visitor location

ClustrMaps view of Devcompage visitor locations

In a little more than two years, this niche blog, Devcompage, has reached nearly 142,000 visitors, according to WordPress.com blog stats. It is important to remember this number as the blog stats went back to zero after I have migrated Devcompage to a self-hosted blogging platform.  For the less techies among us, this means that I have finally subscribed to a webhost and I am now using WordPress.org.  The domain name, Devcompage.com, is still with Automattic, the company I bought the domain name from. I nearly transferred this domain to the Justhost registrar but I cancelled the transfer.

Why did I transfer to a self-hosted platform when WordPress.com was free?  Well, I wanted our Chinese research partners in Zhejiang University, Hainan University and other institutes to be able to visit, exchange comments, and learn from Devcompage. The blog is after all, about principles and techniques in the use of communication for behavioral and social change.

The webhost can support unlimited websites  so this will offer an opportunity to our journalism students to start an online community newspaper for one of their journalism courses, using the self-hosted blogging platform.

My next step is to buy a package of premium themes to give Devcompage and Ricehoppers a more slick, professional website look. How about that for the summer?

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Are celebrity endorsements of OTC drugs credible to rural mothers?

Two years ago, I wrote a post on credibility of celebrity endorsements of over-the-counter (OTC) drugs which generated interest among readers. One of my students pursued it as a subject of his thesis, zeroing in on the influence of such endorsements among mothers. In the rural areas where the information environment is not as cluttered as their urban counterparts, do celebrity endorsements of OTC drugs make a dent on mothers’ health care decisions? Here’s what my student found out in his thesis research.

Perceived Credibility of Celebrity Endorsers of Over-The-Counter Medicines and Its Influence On Health Care Decisions of Rural Mothers

by
Jerwin T. Capuyan
BS Development Communication senior
Visayas State University

Six selected OTC celebrity endorsements were shown to 100 purposively selected respondents in two rural areas in Ormoc City. Using a 7-point semantic differential scale, respondents rated the endorsers in terms of their expertise, trustworthiness, attractiveness and overall credibility.

In this study, perceived credibility is composed of three factors namely: attractiveness, expertise and trustworthiness. Each factor has also each own set of bipolar adjectives (Ohanian, 1990). The computed means for each factor constituted the scores of perceived credibility of the selected celebrity endorsers. Using the methodology of Busler (2002), the computed means for each factor were used as the indicator of a celebrity endorser’s perceived attractiveness, trustworthiness and expertise, and the sum of which make up his or her credibility. The highest possible score a celebrity endorser could get for each attribute and for the credibility as a whole was 7 points. The scores which were equal to or more than 4.0 points were represented as attractive, trustworthy, expert and as credible while those scores equal to or below 3.9 points were not.

Expertise

For her endorsement of Tempra, Sharon Cuneta got the highest score for expertise with 6.72 points. She was followed by Aga Mulach for Solmux with 6.61 points. Maricel Soriano for Loviscol ranked third with 6.59 points, John Lloyd Cruz for Biogesic scored 6.42 points, followed with 6.26 points for Lucy Torres- Gomez for her ad on Ascof. Manny Pacquiao for his Alaxan commercial scored the lowest with only 5.70 points. All the selected celebrity endorsers were perceived as experts by the respondents.

Trustworthiness

Moving on to trustworthiness, Sharon Cuneta for the same product was perceived as the most trustworthy with 6.73 points, Maricel Soriano and Aga Mulach tied on the second rank with 6.59 points. John Lloyd Cruz scored 6.53 points while Lucy Torres- Gomez got 6.37 points. Still on the last spot was Manny Pacquiao with 6.11 points. Generally all the selected celebrity endorsers were perceived as trustworthy by the respondents. Continue reading

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How to measure reliability of an attitude scale

Jinhua College student interviewing rice farmer. Photo credit: Zhu Zeng Rong (Zhejiang University)

Many thesis students who are using the survey as their data collection procedure, will often develop attitude, belief or perception statements on the topic of their thesis, such as mothers’ attitudes toward prenatal care, college students’ female beauty ideal, students’ perceptions of the credibility of TV ads on alcoholic drinks, etc.  Developing attitude statements shouldn’t end there. After the survey has been done and the attitude data encoded in a spreadsheet and uploaded in SPSS, a key step is to calculate the reliability score of the scale.

In surveys, scales are often used to measure respondent beliefs, perceptions and attitudes. Results are then used to make inferences and judgments on intervention points that need to be addressed in subsequent upscaling initiatives. When a scale is used, it is a standard procedure in the social sciences to determine its reliability. A popular measure of reliability is Cronbach’s alpha which determines the internal consistency or average correlation of items in a survey instrument to gauge its reliability. Internal consistency estimates how consistently the respondents have responded to the items within the scale. The closer the Cronbach’s alpha is to 1, the higher the internal consistency (Gliem & Gliem, 2003). In social science, the widely accepted alpha is 0.70 or higher for a set of items to be considered a scale.

Farmer interview in Lingui County, China

We calculated the Cronbach’s alpha of the belief and attitude scale on non-rice habitats used in a baseline survey instrument. As items were worded either positively or negatively, reverse scoring was done to negatively worded statements. The items within the scale were drawn from focus group discussions (FGDs) with rice farmers in China, Thailand and Vietnam. We used a Likert-type scale, as follows:  Definitely not true, in most cases not true, may be true, in most cases true and always true. The attitude scale on ecological engineering included these items: Continue reading

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Sample theoretical framework in communication research

Chicago Navy Pier balloon. Photo credit: http://www.flickr.com/photos/randz/3965296251/in/set-72157622355477395/

For many months, the most popular post and queries in Devcompage has been “Writing the theoretical framework”.   Here’s a sample theoretical framework I wrote for a paper published in the International Journal of Pest Management.

Motivating rice farmers in the Mekong Delta to modify pest management and related practices through mass media

Huan, N,H,  H.V.Chien, P.V. Quynh,  P.S Tan, P.V. Du, M.M. Escalada , and K.L. Heong

Theoretical Framework

Theory of Social Learning

The project applied social learning theory in developing interventions to motivate farmers to reduce seed sowing, nitrogen fertilizer application and insecticide application rates. Social learning theory (Bandura, 1977) stresses the importance of observational learning, imitation, and modelling to explain media effects on human behaviour. Through social modelling, an individual can adapt critical aspects of the behaviour they wish to adopt. Awareness and expectations of future reinforcements or punishments can have a major effect on an individual’s behaviour. As extrinsic factors are important in behaviour change, new behaviour is often learned through observing how others conduct themselves (Severin and Tankard, 2001).

Theory of Planned Behaviour

In developing the campaign approach and media materials, the project drew largely upon the strategic communication campaign framework (Adhikarya, 1994) and adapted the Theory of Planned Behaviour (Ajzen, 1988) and the Theory of Reasoned Action (Ajzen and Fishbein, 1980) to understand and promote individual behaviour change.

The Theory of Reasoned Action asserts that intention to perform certain behaviour is determined by the individual’s attitude toward the performing the behaviour and by the subjective norm held by the individual. The theory has been applied to many health and campaigns relating to breastfeeding, AIDS, anti-smoking,  safety belt usage, and anti-drugs to determine which factors influence individuals to act in certain ways and to identify better ways of effectively communicating the message.

The Theory of Planned Behaviour, an extension of the Theory of Reasoned Action, can help to explain why some media campaigns have limited success. Increasing knowledge alone does not help to change behaviour but campaigns aimed at attitudes and perceived norms in making adoption decisions produced better results. Studies of behavioural intentions suggest that the likelihood of intended audiences’ adopting a desired behaviour can be predicted. By assessing and understanding the factors we can develop messages to influence their attitudes and perceptions of benefits of the behaviour and how their peers will view their behaviour. Research by Fishbein and Ajzen (1975) supports the idea that individuals’ and society’s (perceived) attitudes are important determinants of action. Therefore, an important step toward influencing behaviour is an assessment of intended audience attitudes. We can subsequently monitor these attitudinal changes.

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Some more communication thesis topics

Newspaper boxes during winter in Chicago. Photo credit: http://www.flickr.com/photos/randz/

After the holidays, I noticed an upsurge in reader interest in the topic, “Writing the theoretical framework, conceptual framework and thesis topics”. Let me give you some freebie topics that I strongly recommend you adapt (modify to suit your requirements) to conform to your devcom or masscom thesis topic requirements:

1) News Media Use and Knowledge about the 2010 Presidential Elections:  Why Exposure Matters in Voter Learning

2) Influence of Philippine political-social commentary blogs and Facebook accounts on readers’ awareness and opinions on current issues

3) Impact on knowledge exchange and social mobilization of blogs: the case of Marketmanila.com

4) Gratifications from social interactions in a food blog: the case of Marketmanila.com

5) Information exchange and motivations of food blog readers to seek and share: the case of Marketmanila.com

6) Source credibility dimensions of popular Philippine political-social commentary blogs and Facebook accounts — ML Quezon III, The Professional Heckler, Dean Jorge Bocobo, etc.

7) Senior citizens’ readership and information seeking from special interest blogs: do they read and share?

Will appreciate your comments.

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Happy holidays to all Devcompage readers

Christmas lantern in the Philipines. Photo credit: http://www.flickr.com/photos/bingramos/49794352/

Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to everyone.  Students and teachers are now on Christmas vacation so things around Devcompage will be slow for the next two weeks. I will be in Chainat and Bangkok, Thailand next week to conduct focus group discussions with rice farmers to get a sense of what’s going on and understand how they are coping with massive brown planthopper (BPH) outbreaks.

I wish everyone peace, good health,  wealth and happiness in the coming year.

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Assessing visitors' feedback to a website and Facebook page

by
Jed Asaph D. Cortes
BS Development Communication student
Visayas State University
Visca, Baybay, Leyte, Philippines

Jed Asaph Cortes and their SCUAA website

Note:  Jed conducted this research and wrote this report as a requirement in a course on evaluation of communication materials.

On October 25-30, the Visayas State University hosted the 25th Regional State Colleges and Universities Athletic Association (SCUAA) Games. The celebration of its silver year is elemental since SCUAA in Region VIII was born in this university while it was still Visayas State College of Agriculture (ViSCA). Therefore, holding the Games in its place of birth makes it considerably one of the Region’s highlights for 2009.

As part of VSU’s hosting, the SCUAA 2009 Executive Committee has decided to put up an online resource to augment promotions and information dissemination. Since VSU’s web servers for our official website (http://www.vsu-visca.edu.ph) have been down for quite a time, the Online Promotions Committee has decided to host a blog as the official website for the 2009 SCUAA Games: http://vsuscuaa.org. The web administrators also started a Facebook Fan Page for SCUAA 2009 at VSU since the advent of the Facebook News Feed is a good avenue to disseminate updates about SCUAA and its preparations.

Since hosting websites to promote special occasions like SCUAA 2009 is new to VSU, the need to receive feedback of online visitors will be a good rule to measure the effectiveness of these online resources.

Research objectives

Audience analysis was carried out to determine the visitors’ socio-demographic profile, online access, and their attitudes and behavior towards the online resource.

Online survey tool

Since the target audience of this audience analysis are visitors of the online resource, an free online survey tool was used to construct the web-ready (clickable) questionnaire. Since it is free, the survey was allowed only to take as much as 25 respondents. The URL of the survey was http://scuaa2009.speedsurvey.com/ (now closed).

Data processing and analysis

The data from the questionnaires were encoded in the spreadsheet program Microsoft® Excel®. The data was analyzed in SPSS 15.

Results

Profile of respondents

Most of the respondents who took the online survey turned out to be college students in VSU. College respondents consist 82.6% while high school and graduates were starkly lower in number, 13% and 4.3% respectively.

Three out of four respondents come from Visayas State University. This is because of the networking capabilities of Facebook, where the online survey was advertised. Since the survey started from VSU, fans who are nearer VSU’s FB network must have had more chances of being invited to complete the survey.

Only one out of five respondents (20.8%) own a weblog while almost all own a Facebook account (95.8%).

Continue reading …

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Has cell phone use diminished your time for other media?

Anna Lourdes C. Javier and Shanemie Carelle O. Daquio, BS Devcom students, texting on their cell phones

Anna Lourdes Javier and Shanemie Carelle O. Daquio, VSU college students, using their mobile phones. Photo credit: A.L. Javier & Jed Asaph Cortes

Has cell phone use reduced the time you used to spend on reading newspapers, magazines and books, watching television, listening to the radio or conversing with family and friends? Despite our extraordinary ability for multi-tasking,  some traditional communication activities have to give way to the the new media.

One senior BS Devcom student in our university will tackle that research question.  With her permission, here are her thesis title and the key questions that she adapted from previous research and developed to measure the key variables in her thesis:  motivations for cell phone use and displacement effects.

The Beeps and Tunes of a Portable Lifestyle:  Motivations and Displacement Effects of Mobile Phone Use Among VSU College Students

By: Anna Lourdes C. Javier
Thesis Adviser:  Avril Adrianne B. De Guzman

Objectives

Generally, this study aims to find out what motivates VSU college students to use mobile phones and the displacement effects of its use.

Measurement

Motivations for cell phone use will be measured as follows:

Cognitive needs (acquiring information, knowledge or understanding)
- communication facilitation and entertainment
- cost-efficiency
- immediate access
- mobility

Personal integrative needs (strengthening credibility, confidence and stability)
- communication facilitation and entertainment
- reassurance
- self-gratification/dependency
- security
- functionality
- instrumentality

Social integrative needs (strengthening credibility, confidence and stability)
- communication facilitation and entertainment
- strengthening contact with family and friends
- affection/sociability

Displacement effects- refers to the media activities that are reduced/replaced when the respondents use their mobile phone. It will be measured by the following questions:

About how many hours and minutes in a typical week do you spend on the following activities:

Activity
Number of
Hours/Week
    Using the Internet
    Watching the television
    Texting on your mobile phone
    Reading newspapers
    Calling on your mobile phone
    Listening to radio
    Playing sports and other games
    Interacting with family members
    Socializing with close friends face-to-face outside of school

Did you experience a decrease or increase in your use of other media after you got a mobile phone? If yes, please indicate the extent to which your use of the following media changed when you began using mobile phones.

Read more …

Posted in Communication research, New media-ICTs | Tagged | 4 Comments