Response to OMB’s Questions of July 27, 2009
Evaluation of Secondary Math Teachers from Two Highly Selective Routes to Alternative Certification
Thank you for your quick response to our memo of July 24, 2009 regarding 200904-1850-004. Below, we present our answers to your questions of July 27, 2009.
Less than one third of all students in the study will receive the three incentives. The class incentive (given to the teacher to spend on the class) and student consent form incentives will only be offered in districts that require active consent. The assessment completion incentive will only be given to students who participate in the assessment and we are only administering the assessment to high school students. Table 1 shows the expected percentage of students who would be offered each combination of incentives (in the absence of an experiment).
Table 1: Percentage of Students in Study Who Would be Offered Each Incentive
Incentives |
Estimated Percentage of Students |
Class, consent form, and assessment incentives |
31% |
Class and consent form incentives only |
27% |
Assessment incentives only |
20% |
No incentive |
21% |
Total |
100% |
While we would prefer an experiment in which all three groups receive some incentive, we are willing to do an experiment in which there is a control group in which the students receive neither a class nor a consent form incentive. This experiment would randomly assign schools to one of three groups:
Treatment 1: Class receives a $25 incentive if 95 percent or more of the consent forms are returned and individual students are offered $5 if they return the consent form.
Treatment 2: There is no class incentive; individual students are offered $5 if they return the consent form.
Control: There is neither a class incentive nor a student financial incentive for returning the form.
Table 2 presents the minimum detectable difference (MDD) in the rate at which consent forms are returned for the incentive experiment described above. If we assume an intra-class correlation (ICC) of 0.10, the MDD is 14 percentage points. Based on the evidence that we assembled in our memo of July 24, 2009 (see Table 1 in that memo), we expect that the difference in the consent form response rate between Treatment 1 and Control is likely to be about 40 percentage points (see Thompson 1984). The differences in the form return rate between Treatment 2 and Control and between Treatment 1 and Treatment 2 are likely to be smaller but still much larger than 14 percentage points.
Table 2. The Minimum Detectable Differences in the Rates at Which Consent Forms are Returned for the Incentive Experiment
Districts |
Number of Schools |
Number of Students per School |
ICC |
Expected Return Rate with No Incentive |
MDD |
All active consent |
65 |
160 |
0.10 |
0.42 |
0.14 |
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Note: We assume clustering at school level. |
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File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
Author | smcconnell |
File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
File Created | 2021-02-02 |