limit-login-attempts-reloaded domain was triggered too early. This is usually an indicator for some code in the plugin or theme running too early. Translations should be loaded at the init action or later. Please see Debugging in WordPress for more information. (This message was added in version 6.7.0.) in /home1/enabling/public_html/blog/wp-includes/functions.php on line 6121Can we all be scientists? The scientific method is freely available to everyone. The most powerful invention in human history is not inherently complicated: it just means making hunches and testing them.<\/p>\n
Daniela Santucci leads the resource recovery team at Bankstown City Council. She decided to stop despairing about the high number of plastic bags contaminating recycling in apartment blocks. Instead, working with waste educator Margaux Park, she made some informed hunches and tested them. <\/p>\n
<\/span><\/p>\n Inspired by <\/span>Goldstein, Martin and Cialdini’s Yes!: 50 Scientifically Proven Ways to Be Persuasive<\/a><\/em><\/span>, they decided to systematically test some proven social persuasion techniques.<\/span><\/p>\n And they added two techniques of their own… kitchen tubs and holely lids (see photos). These are not persuasion techniques – they are changes to people’s technological environment. Tubs mean that people don’t need to use plastic bags to transport recycling from kitchen to bin. Holely lids, meanwhile, make it hard to drop a full plastic bag in the bin – Daniela said she got the idea from public place bins and had been thinking about using it for years.<\/span><\/p>\n The basic technique they decided to test was the ‘smiley face’ feedback technique pioneered by Robert Cialdini. You can read about how this method has making a splash in the US power industry through the work of OPOWER<\/a>, where Cialdini is a consultant. <\/span><\/p>\n Daniela and Margaux used two cards, one with a smiley face and one with a frowning face, to push householders’ psychological buttons (about fear of social condemnation for breaking social norms).<\/span><\/p>\n The smiley card said:<\/span><\/p>\n “Well Done! This week your household recycled right. 85.7% of households in Bankstown recycled right. Thank you for your efforts.”<\/span><\/p>\n The frowning card said:<\/span><\/p>\n “Oh no! This week your household did not recycle right! Because in your recycling bin we found Plastic Bags or [other]. We need your help to recycle right! Thank you for your efforts.<\/span>”<\/span> <\/p>\n
(I <\/span>wonder why didn’t they use the 85.7% figure here. It’s where it would have been most effective.)<\/p>\n