STRENGTHEN ALCOHOL PREVENTION AND INTERVENTION ON YOUR CAMPUS

Alcohol education shouldn’t stop at awareness, and intervention shouldn’t feel like punishment. Help students make safer decisions before and after incidents occur.

SEE HOW YOUR CAMPUS CAN REDUCE ALCOHOL-RELATED RISK

Take a closer look at our alcohol prevention and intervention courses and see how they fit into your campus strategy.

A COMPLETE APPROACH TO ALCOHOL PREVENTION AND INTERVENTION

Many institutions struggle to balance:

  • Proactive education for incoming students
  • Effective responses after alcohol-related incidents
  • Limited staff time and resources
  • Ongoing high-risk drinking and repeat violations

Meeting requirements is one thing, but changing student behavior is what actually reduces risk.

Using prevention and intervention together allows your institution to:

  • Reduce high-risk drinking across your student population
  • Address violations with meaningful, educational responses
  • Decrease repeat incidents and conduct issues
  • Support student safety, retention, and wellbeing

3rd Millennium’s courses use personalized feedback and evidence-based strategies to drive measurable behavior change.

Start with the whitepapers to explore key learning outcomes and our evidence-based approach

ALCOHOL WISE (Alcohol Prevention)

What you’ll learn from the whitepaper:

  • Identify risks associated with excessive drinking
  • Understand peer norms and correct misperceptions
  • Set safer limits and avoid high-risk situations
  • Recognize early warning signs of misuse
  • Build protective strategies for long-term success

UNDER THE INFLUENCE (Alcohol Intervention)

Instead of punishment alone, it helps students:

  • Understand the consequences of their behavior
  • Reflect on personal drinking patterns
  • Correct misperceptions about peer behavior
  • Develop strategies to reduce harm
  • Recognize signs of alcohol poisoning and risk escalation

USED BY HIGHER EDUCATION INSTITUTIONS NATIONWIDE TO SUPPORT ALCOHOL, PREVENTION, INTERVENTION, AND STUDENT SAFETY