Skip to main content

Verified by Psychology Today

Confidence

“Frontloading” Among College Students: Motives and Outcomes

Why college men and women "pre-party," and what can be the results.

“Frontloading,” “Pre-partying,” and “Pre-gaming”

The above terms all refer to the same behavior among college students, namely drinking in advance of a social occasion in order to get a “head start” on becoming intoxicated. It turns out that this is not such an uncommon behavior on college and university campuses. The question of interest is why do college men and women do this, and what if anything are the consequences?

Research Sheds A Light

In a study published in the journal Addiction researchers report on their study of Swiss college men and women (Kuntsche, E. and Labhart, F. (2013), Drinking motives moderate the impact of pre-drinking on heavy drinking on a given evening and related adverse consequences—an event-level study. Addiction, 108: 1747–1755. doi: 10.1111/add.12253). They used a scale that measures four different reasons why college students engage in frontloading:

  • Social Facilitation: Because frontloading will make a social event more enjoyable.
  • Coping: Because frontloading relieves social anxiety or improves self-confidence.
  • Enhancement: Because you like the feeling of intoxication and enjoy pursuing it.
  • Conformity: Because your friends do it and/or so you won’t feel left out.

The researchers also surveyed the study participants regarding what sorts of negative consequences they may have experienced as a result of frontloading. These included reports of:

  • Blackouts: When a person cannot recall what he or she did when drunk.
  • Injuries (including falls and fights).
  • Unintended or unprotected sexual intercourse.
  • Property damage or vandalism.
  • Medical emergencies: Caused by toxic levels of alcohol in the blood.

This particular study focused on assessing the motivations for frontloading among a sample of Swiss college students, and it is the first study that sought to delve deeper into the psychology of frontloading. That said, there is ample evidence that frontloading is also common among American college students. A study reported in the Journal of American College Health (J Am Coll Health. 2007 Nov-Dec;56(3):237-45) found that fully three out of four college drinkers say they “pre-party” (frontload); moreover, about 45% of all drinking events involve a pre-party.

The Psychology of Frontloading

What these researchers found is succinctly summarized in their conclusion: Enhancement motives among men and coping motives among women predicted both pre-drinking (“frontloading”), continued heavy drinking, as well as alcohol-related negative consequences.

This study has significant implications for the prevention of many of the negative drinking-related consequences that college counselors and administrators are faced with. It suggests that college men are drawn to frontloading (and continued drinking afterward) primarily because they see it as a doorway to a better time. Moreover, they seem to look at frontloading this way despite the negative consequences it can be associated with. Not so for women.

College women, in contrast to their male peers, seem drawn to frontloading mainly as a means of coping with an interpersonal problem. Specifically, those women who frontload do so because it helps them forget their worries, reduces their social anxiety, and/or makes them feel more self-confident. Not all college women engage in frontloading or excessive drinking for these reasons, but the data clearly suggest that a significant number of those who frontload do so for these reasons. Needless to say many more college women than men are likely to experience sexual assault and unprotected sex that are college men.

What To Do?

Virtually all college and universities are concerned with the negative consequences to their students that are associated with excessive drinking. This study, however, points in some directions that would appear to be well worth including in any prevention program. They include:

  • Recognizing frontloading (or any of its other names) as a real phenomenon that needs to be talked about.
  • Making the connection between frontloading as an added risk factor for negative consequences.
  • Recognizing and educating both students and counselors regarding the different motives that underlie frontloading for women and men.
  • Creating outreach, through pamphlets, articles in college newspapers, etc. to engage college women who may be frontloading for emotional/psychological reasons, and to encourage them to pursue counseling (as opposed to frontloading) as a remedy for those issues.

The college environment—especially the freshman year, which for many students represents their first experience with sustained independence—is in many ways conducive to experimentation, which may include excess in many areas, including drinking. Many colleges and universities have successfully implemented policies that contain that excess, for example on homecoming weekends and spring break. By venturing deeper than that, into the psychology of drinking behavior, it may be possible to further reduce the negative consequences associated with that youthful tendency toward excess.

Joseph Nowinski, Ph.D. is a clinical psychologist. His most recent book is Almost Alcoholic: Is My (or My Loved One’s) Drinking a Problem?

@2013 by Joseph Nowinski, Ph.D.

advertisement
More from Joseph Nowinski Ph.D.
More from Psychology Today