ACTIVITY 9: My Perception!
ACTIVITY 9: My Perception!
How I Am (Intrapersonal Skills)
This section has students look at how they act, feel, and think. Topics covered include self-esteem, social image, decision-making skills, and personal values (what is important to each student). The activities are designed to provide students with a chance to practice decision making and to empower them to make healthy choices.
SKILLS: Building Self-Esteem / Understanding Personal Values
Suggested Time Consideration: 25 mins
RATIONALE
One predictor in the experimentation and escalation phases of tobacco and nicotine uptake is self-image—some adolescents turn to smoking or vaping because they think it will give them a better image.4 Low self-esteem is another factor that influences a young person’s decision to use tobacco and nicotine.
GETTING STARTED
To start this activity, ask students to brainstorm words or phrases that come to mind when they think of people using tobacco or nicotine. Explain that youth smoking rates among middle and high school students have declined over the past decade, but e-cigarette use is on the rise.5
When a comment reflecting the perception that smoking or vaping makes people look “cool” is raised, challenge students to explain why. Ask them to provide specific instances to support their notion that it looks cool. Chances are that any student thinking it looks cool will point to media representation. Ask these students:
Would the person be cool even if he or she did not smoke or vape?
What other characteristics make the person cool?
Do characters tend to hold cigarettes or vapes more often than smoke them? (It may be more common to see them holding cigarettes or vapes than inhaling or spitting tobacco, since these actions are usually less appealing to see.)
Spend time discussing how important “image” should be, especially when there is a difference between image and reality. Remind students of the health consequences of tobacco and nicotine use, and show them the poster with the images depicting these health issues. The poster is included in the “Activity Resources” section. There is nothing cool about these pictures.
For additional resources related to media representation, see the resource section in the Overview Booklet.
In this exercise, students will examine how they see themselves and the image that they want to portray. Share the digital activity link. Students will select and/or type 10 adjectives that they feel are self-descriptive. Then, they will look at an illustration of young people using tobacco and nicotine and select and/or type adjectives to describe their perception of the characters.
TALKING ABOUT IT
Once their lists are completed, students should compare them. Create two columns on the board with the headers “Us” and “The Characters.” Ask for volunteers to share adjectives and write them under each column. If you feel your students might be reticent to share their lists, you can suggest adjectives for the “Us” column.
Remind students that perceptions are subjective. Encourage them to talk about what they might have learned about themselves and about how others see them. Then move the conversation in the direction of what constitutes a positive self-image and raise the issue of how some people begin using tobacco or nicotine simply because of how they think it makes them look.
WRAPPING UP
Refer back to the words on the board. If your students have a positive perception of the characters in the illustration, ask them to explain why. See if some students a) think it looks cool to smoke/vape, b) think it looks cool but isn’t worth the risk, or c) think it looks ridiculous. Try to bring the conversation around to a discussion of how, when it comes to tobacco and nicotine, there aren’t any “positive” images.
To emphasize the point, display the poster depicting the health consequences of tobacco and nicotine use. Refer to the list of words and tell students, “Keep in mind that the pictures and facts on the poster are reality.”
SOURCES
4 U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Preventing Tobacco Use Among Youth and Young Adults: A Report of the Surgeon General. Atlanta, Georgia: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Office on Smoking and Health; Washington, D.C., 2012. Referenced 2023. http://www.surgeongeneral.gov/library/reports/preventing-youth-tobacco-use/full-report.pdf