The Knowledge – Level 2

Giving you the knowledge to guide behavioural change

Level 2 goes into more details of the theories, science, and challenges to behavioural change.

Level 2 – Behavioural Change Planner

Content:

    • The SCOAP Model
    • Challenges to Scaling
    • Blocks and Sustainability
    • Some Change Models 
    • Articles

The SCOAP Model 

A consolidated neuro-psychological model of human behaviour

Introduction to SCOAP

Introduction to SCOAP

SCOAP is a complete model of human motivation, behaviour, and wellbeing, summarising over a century of research into the human brain, human psychology, and human behaviour in all contexts.

SCOAP Needs

SCOAP Needs

These are basic human needs which means fulfilling them is essential for human wellbeing and therefore also that having them unfulfilled or violated lowers human wellbeing. These also direct human motivation and subsequently human behaviours.

SCOAP Motivation

SCOAP Motivation

Much has been written about motivation and there are many (false) assumptions to motivation also. So let’s start with a simple definition of motivation.

SCOAP Behaviour

SCOAP Behaviour

Behaviour is about doing things, actions. That is obvious, but there are many grey zones to behaviour. For example do we class breathing as behaviour, or heartbeat, or sweating?

SCOAP Change

SCOAP Change

As you will have seen with SCOAP, this gives a comprehensive model of  human needs, motivation, and behaviour. We can therefore use this to guide behavioural change interventions.

Challenges to Scaling

Good ideas and change may not scale – fortunately you can pre-empt much of this.

The Equilibrium Effect

The Equilibrium Effect

Things in life tend towards certain balances. This is particularly true in large systems and this is why change can happen in small contexts and be very effective or successful but in large systems different rules apply.

Blocks & Sustainability

What blocks or derails change and how can we make it stick?

The Undermining Effect

The Undermining Effect

Rewards sound like a good way to instigate behaviour you want. In our world we often think of financial rewards. Good idea, right?
Well, no, rewards can actually lower motivation.

The Value-Action Gap

The Value-Action Gap

The value-action gap has multiple other names:  attitude-behavior gap, intention-behavior gap, KAP-gap (knowledge-attitudes-practice gap) or belief-behavior gap.

It refers to the gap between what people often say they value and their subsequent actions or willingness to meaningfully contribute to this value.

Change Models

A short review of change models

Behavioural Change Wheel

Behavioural Change Wheel

The Behaviour Change Wheel is the result of a systematic review of change models, frameworks, and theories, followed by the subsequent realisation that they were not aligned and describing different things.

Nudge

Nudge

A nudge in everyday language is a gentle push. Something that is none aggressive but significant enough to be noticed and often triggers a behaviour…

B-MAT

B-MAT

The B-MAT model is similar to the COM-B model included in the Behavioural Change Wheel which aims to explain behaviour and its antecedents and therefore aim to guide behavioural change attempts

Social Cognitive Theory

Social Cognitive Theory

Social Cognitive Theory by famed psychologist Bandura is grounded, as the name suggests, in social contexts saying that behaviour is driven by the triad of behaviour, personal, and environmental factors

Articles

All Level 2 articles

The Nine Interventions

The Nine Interventions

There have been multiple models of behaviour and behavioural change proposed over the years. These have taken different viewpoints of behaviour.

Behavioural Change Wheel

Behavioural Change Wheel

The Behaviour Change Wheel is the result of a systematic review of change models, frameworks, and theories, followed by the subsequent realisation that they were not aligned and describing different things.

Nudge

Nudge

A nudge in everyday language is a gentle push. Something that is none aggressive but significant enough to be noticed and often triggers a behaviour…

B-MAT

B-MAT

The B-MAT model is similar to the COM-B model included in the Behavioural Change Wheel which aims to explain behaviour and its antecedents and therefore aim to guide behavioural change attempts

Social Cognitive Theory

Social Cognitive Theory

Social Cognitive Theory by famed psychologist Bandura is grounded, as the name suggests, in social contexts saying that behaviour is driven by the triad of behaviour, personal, and environmental factors

Introduction to SCOAP

Introduction to SCOAP

SCOAP is a complete model of human motivation, behaviour, and wellbeing, summarising over a century of research into the human brain, human psychology, and human behaviour in all contexts.

SCOAP Needs

SCOAP Needs

These are basic human needs which means fulfilling them is essential for human wellbeing and therefore also that having them unfulfilled or violated lowers human wellbeing. These also direct human motivation and subsequently human behaviours.

SCOAP Motivation

SCOAP Motivation

Much has been written about motivation and there are many (false) assumptions to motivation also. So let’s start with a simple definition of motivation.

SCOAP Behaviour

SCOAP Behaviour

Behaviour is about doing things, actions. That is obvious, but there are many grey zones to behaviour. For example do we class breathing as behaviour, or heartbeat, or sweating?

SCOAP Change

SCOAP Change

As you will have seen with SCOAP, this gives a comprehensive model of  human needs, motivation, and behaviour. We can therefore use this to guide behavioural change interventions.

The Undermining Effect

The Undermining Effect

Rewards sound like a good way to instigate behaviour you want. In our world we often think of financial rewards. Good idea, right?
Well, no, rewards can actually lower motivation.

The Value-Action Gap

The Value-Action Gap

The value-action gap has multiple other names:  attitude-behavior gap, intention-behavior gap, KAP-gap (knowledge-attitudes-practice gap) or belief-behavior gap.

It refers to the gap between what people often say they value and their subsequent actions or willingness to meaningfully contribute to this value.

The Equilibrium Effect

The Equilibrium Effect

Things in life tend towards certain balances. This is particularly true in large systems and this is why change can happen in small contexts and be very effective or successful but in large systems different rules apply.