Y12W01WR How habits actually form
Design a specific habit intervention for yourself — a new habit you’d like to form or an old one you’d like to break — and walk through the research-based mechanisms you’d use.
1Retrieval check
Q1.How does Wendy Wood’s research describe how habits actually form?
- AThrough willpower achievements sustained over time
- BAs context-behaviour links formed by repeated pairing of cue and action in stable environments
- COnly through dramatic lifestyle changes
- DThrough conscious goal-setting alone
Q2.What did Phillippa Lally’s research find about the ‘21 days to form a habit’ claim?
- AIt was exactly right
- BIt has no research basis — the real range was 18 to 254 days, depending on complexity and consistency
- CIt was an overestimate — habits form in 7 days
- DHabits never become automatic
Show answer key
Q1 → B. As context-behaviour links formed by repeated pairing of cue and action in stable environments.Stable cues and environments produce habits more reliably than varied contexts; disruption is when habits break.
Q2 → B. It has no research basis — the real range was 18 to 254 days, depending on complexity and consistency.A habit becomes automatic after roughly 2-3 months of consistent practice, but the range is very wide.
2Prompt deconstruction
- Command verb
- DESIGN — specify a concrete intervention, not describe habit theory
- Must reference
- Wood’s cue-context-consistency mechanisms; Lally’s timeline range
- Must include
- the specific cue, the stable context, frequency, duration, and predicted failure points
- Honesty requirement
- account for the real instability of your life (term changes, holidays) and what you’ll do through disruption
3Position nudge
Where on the range does your proposal sit?
Pole Amicro-habit (30 seconds, one cue)
Pole Bsubstantial routine (30+ minutes, multiple cues)
Commit to a specific point; defend it in your planner.
4Planner — design the thing, then the trade-offs
5Sentence stems
- My proposal is ___.
- I am grounding this in [researcher]’s finding that ___.
- The main trade-off is ___: this design gains ___ but loses ___.
- The most predictable objection is ___, and my response is ___.
- I would know it was working after [time] if ___.
- What I am most likely to abandon is ___, so I will build in ___ to prevent that.
6Exemplar paragraph (not about this article)
(1) My proposal is to form a ten-minute reading habit, first thing after dinner, at the same desk, for the remainder of Term 1. (2) I am grounding this in Wood’s finding that cues and stable contexts — not motivation — produce habit formation, and in Lally’s finding that the timeline typically runs 2–3 months rather than 3 weeks. (3) The main trade-off is that ten minutes is shorter than I ‘should’ be reading, but the research on consistency suggests a rhythm I will keep beats a rhythm I will abandon. (4) The most predictable objection is that dinner time varies on weekends and travel days; my response is to pre-commit that on disrupted days I read at whatever time I next sit at my desk, and skip entirely rather than move the habit to a new context. (5) I would know it was working after eight weeks if opening the book had become automatic rather than a decision I have to make. (6) What I am most likely to abandon is the practice during the exam block, so I will build in a 90-second minimum version — one paragraph, same desk — to keep the cue intact through stress weeks.
What this paragraph does, move by move
- Names the habit, cue, context, and window with specifics.
- Grounds each choice in Wood’s and Lally’s research.
- States the trade-off explicitly and defends the short duration.
- Answers the most predictable real-life objection.
- Specifies the observable test of automaticity.
- Pre-commits to the minimum-viable version during disruption.
- Choosing a selection results in a full page refresh.
- Opens in a new window.