U NITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
National Center for Education Statistics
October 23, 2018
MEMORANDUM
To: Robert Siviniski, OMB
From: Sarah Grady, NCES
Through: Kashka Kubzdela, NCES
Re: National Household Education Survey 2019 (NHES:2019) Nonresponding Households In-Person Study Update (OMB# 1850-0768 v.16)
The National Household Education Survey (NHES) is a data collection program of the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) designed to provide descriptive data on the education activities of the U.S. population, with an emphasis on topics that are appropriate for household surveys rather than institutional surveys. Such topics have covered a wide range of issues, including early childhood care and education, children’s readiness for school, parents’ perceptions of school safety and discipline, before- and after-school activities of school-age children, participation in adult and career education, parents’ involvement in their children’s education, school choice, homeschooling, and civic involvement. The request to conduct the NHES:2019 full scale data collection, from December 2018 through September 2019, in conjunction with an In-Person Study of Nonresponding Households, designed to provide insight about nonresponse that can help plan future survey administrations was approved in September 2018 (OMB# 1850-0768 v.14-15). NHES:2019 will use mail and web data collection modes and will field two surveys: The Early Childhood Program Participation survey (ECPP) and the Parent and Family Involvement in Education survey (PFI). This request provides the expected update on the final plan for the NHES:2019 In-Person Study of Nonresponding Households.
Due to resource constraints and concerns about generalizability, the originally proposed short structured interviews and comparable sample of responding households are no longer proposed. These are replaced by an enhanced address observation effort.
All materials on pages 14-36 and 48-51 of Appendix 4 are newly added. Please also note that Attachment B.2. of Appendix 4 will provide the Spanish versions of the materials that will be used to interact with households sampled for the qualitative interview. These materials will be provided to OMB as a change request in November 2018.
The changes described in this document do not affect the total cost to the federal government for this study. The revision to the estimated response burden is detailed below.
Revisions to the content of the approved submission documents (Parts A and B and Appendix 4) are reflected in tracked changes below.
Part A Supporting Statement
(p.1)
The
contact materials, final interview protocols, and final sample
selection details for this study will
be submitted to OMB for review with a 30-day public comment period in
fall 2018
are
also included in Appendix 4.
(pp.5-6)
In-Person Study of NHES:2019 Nonresponding Households
Given
continued declines in response rates to both NHES and to household
surveys more broadly – and the growing challenges associated
with conducting cost-efficient, high-quality, representative data
collections, NCES will conduct the In-Person Study of NHES:2019
Nonresponding Households during the NHES:2019 administration. This
study will focus on understanding the reasons for the growing level
of nonresponse to NHES and to mail-based household surveys.
Furthermore, the study will focus on screener rather than topical
nonrespondents because of the impact that screener nonresponse has on
both the screener response rate and each NHES topical survey’s
overall response rate; and because NHES screener response rates are
lower than topical response rates.1
This study will consist of two separate
interview operations:
(a) structured interviews and (b)
qualitative interviews. Due to the
differences in interview protocols, data from these two sets of
interviews will be analyzed separately.
and (b) address and neighborhood observations. Appendix 4 of
this submission discusses the importance of conducting this study and
provides a more
detailed overview of its methods. The
finalized procedures and It
also provides the study’s contact and interview protocol
materials for the
In-Person Study of NHES:2019
Nonresponding Households will be submitted for OMB’s review
with a 30-day public comment period in fall 2018.
Structured
interviews
The
primary goal of the structured interviews is to understand who lives
in nonrespondent households and the household members’ primary
reasons for nonresponse. Approximately 350 screener nonrespondents
will be sampled and 230 structured interviews will be conducted with
NHES screener nonrespondents. Sampled cases will be clustered around
2 to 4 U.S. cities and will be located within 70 miles of the center
of those cities. They will be sent an advance letter that includes $2
or $5 cash2,
invites them to participate in the in-person study, and indicates
that someone will be visiting their home to ask them to complete an
interview. The advance letter will not ask for a response or action
from the household member, only inform them that an interviewer will
visit their house. All sampled cases will be offered an additional
$25 cash incentive for completing the interview. When field
interviewers first reach a sampled address, they will complete a
brief observation of the neighborhood and address as unobtrusively as
possible to record observable characteristics of nonresponding
addresses. Next, the field interviewer will attempt to conduct a
10-minute (on average) structured interview with the adult who
usually opens the mail, or with another adult who is available. Most
of the follow-up interview will be devoted to understanding the
reason(s) for the household’s lack of response to the screener,
with a particular focus on understanding at which stage this
household’s response process was interrupted (e.g., did the
package reach the household, did the household members open it,
etc.), in addition to obtaining basic demographic characteristics and
attitudes that may impact the response decision, such as privacy
concerns or perceived level of burden. Interviews will be conducted
in both English and Spanish.
Qualitative interviews
Approximately
480 additional
500 NHES:2019 screener nonrespondents will be sampled
selected to conduct up to 80
participate in qualitative,
semi-structured interviews,
with a goal of obtaining approximately 100 completed qualitative
interviews (see appendix 4 for sampling
details). The NHES:2019 screener
nonrespondents may be stratified to focus on a handful of key
household characteristics available on the sampling frame that are
likely to drive differences in reasons for nonresponse and could be
used for targeting NHES materials and contact protocols in future
administrations: (1) whether the household has children living in it,
(2) whether the household is Hispanic or is expected to prefer to
respond in Spanish, and (3) whether the household is located in an
urban area or a rural area. A final sample design and strata will be
specified in the fall 2018 OMB submission (with a 30-day public
comment period). Cases will be clustered near 2 to 3 U.S. cities and
will be located within 70 miles of the center of those cities. The
70-mile radius will allow for sampling of rural addresses.
Sampled cases will be sent an advance
invitation letter that includes $2
or $5 cash3,
invites them to participate in the in-person study, and
indicates that someone will informs
them of the contingent incentive, and provides them with NHES staff
contact them
information for letting the researchers know that they would like to
participate. Sample members that do not respond to schedule
the invitation letter will receive up to two additional reminder
postcards. Addresses with telephone numbers will additionally receive
up to 4 phone call reminders. An in-person recruitment period will
also take place, where all households that have neither agreed nor
declined to participate will be visited by an interviewer.
The follow-up mailings will be spread out over several weeks and will
be paired with in-person recruitment. All
sampled cases will be offered an additional $120 cash
incentive for completing the 90-minute interview and this incentive
will be mentioned in all recruitment materials. Interviews will be
conducted in both English and Spanish, and will be audio-recorded,
with participant’s permission
(note that due to their brevity
and structured nature, the structured interviews will not be audio
recorded).
Address and neighborhood observations
Approximately 750 addresses will be sampled from among NHES:2019 early screener nonrespondents for address and neighborhood observations. Of these, 500 will be selected for and invited to take part in the qualitative interview study (to yield approximately 100 completed 90-minute interviews). If nonresponse clustering patterns result in lower than estimated cost of observing and interviewing the target numbers of addresses, more addresses will be selected for the address/neighborhood observations. The objective of these observations is to determine the types of addresses that are prone to nonresponse or having their NHES mailings be undeliverable, and to assess the accuracy of the information available on the frame for such addresses.
(p.10)
In-Person
Study of NHES:2019 Nonresponding Households incentives. Sampled
cases
Cases sampled for the qualitative interview
will be sent an advance letter that includes $2
or
$5 cash3
and invites them to participate in the in-person study. All cases
sampled for the structured
interview will be offered an additional $25 in cash for completing
the 10-minute in-person interview, while all cases sampled for the
qualitative
interview will be offered an additional $120 in cash for completing
the 90-minute in-person interview. These incentives are designed to
demonstrate to participants that their time and participation is
valued and to take into account that both samples are comprised of
households that have already shown reluctance to participate in the
survey (see Appendix 4 for additional discussion of the incentive
amount).
(p.13)
NHES:2019
will screen 205,000 households. An expected screener response rate of
approximately 54 percent and an address ineligibility4
rate of approximately 10 percent are assumed, bringing the total
number of expected screeners to 98,790.5
From these completed screeners, it is expected that approximately 29
percent will contain an eligible child. A detailed description of the
planned sampling design is provided in this submission in Supporting
Statement Part B. The hourly wage rate of $24.33 is based on the
average for all civilian workers from the September 2017 National
Compensation Survey (http://www.bls.gov/news.release/ecec.t02.htm).
For NHES:2019, a total of 12,964948
burden hours are anticipated, resulting in a total burden time cost
to respondents of approximately $315,414025.
Part B Supporting Statement
(p.9)
Additionally,
in conjunction with NHES:2019, NCES plans to conduct an In-Person
Study of NHES:2019 Nonresponding Households, designed to provide
insight about nonresponse that can help plan future survey
administrations. This in-person study is described in detail in
Appendix 4 of this submission;
its contact materials, final interview protocols, and final sample
selection details will be submitted to OMB for review with a 30-day
public comment period in fall 2018.
(p.23)
The
in-person study of nonresponding households will use structured
and qualitative
in-person interviews, as well as
and address and household
neighborhood observations to assess whether the existing
theories surrounding household survey nonresponse are applicable to
NHES. The study is designed to provide additional actionable
information about how to combat the growing nonresponse problem in
NHES and other federal government household surveys that use mail to
contact sample members. It is expected that the results of this study
will be used to improve the design of NHES:2022, with the goal of
increasing the response rate and the representativeness of the
respondents. Potential changes could include modifications to the
nonresponse follow-up protocol, the type of incentives offered, and
the presentation of contact materials.
This
in-person study is described in detail in Appendix 4 of this
submission. The Appendix
also includes
contact materials, final interview protocols, and final sample
selection details for this study
will
be submitted to OMB for review with a 30-day public comment period in
fall 2018.
(p.31)
In-Person
Study of NHES:2019 Nonresponding Households:
As described in Part A,
section A.2, and section B.2 of
this document, the
in-person study of nonresponding households will use structured
and qualitative
in-person interviews,
as well as
and
address and household
neighborhood
observations to assess whether the existing theories surrounding
household survey nonresponse are applicable to NHES. 230
completed structured interviews and 80
100
semi-structured, qualitative interviews and
approximately 750 (or more of budget permits) address and
neighborhood observations will
be completed with NHES:2019
nonrespondentsing
addresses.
Additional detail is provided in Appendix 4,
which also includes contact materials, final interview protocols, and
final sample selection details and
planned analyses
for this study will
be submitted to OMB for review with a 30-day public comment period in
fall 2018.
Appendix 1 – NHES 2019 Contact Materials
Appendix 1 has been updated to reflect the endorsements that have been received for NHES. Specifically, the sections titled “Initial screener package letters” and “Third screener package letters” was revised as follows:
(p.24)
Further,
addresses that are part of the tailored materials experiment group
and are predicted to have Spanish speakers will receive NHES-11LB(T).
Those sampled for the tailored materials experiment group but not
predicted to have Spanish speakers will receive the NHES-11L(W) noted
above. The tailored letter includes endorsements from organizations
and programs that are
currently being pursued
have
been obtained by
NCES but
have not yet been obtained.
A
The
letter that
will be
used to seek endorsements is provided preceding the tailored screener
materials.
(p.75)
Addresses
that are part of the tailored materials experiment group and are
predicted to have Spanish speakers will receive the NHES-13LB(T)
letter. Those sampled for the tailored materials experiment group but
not predicted to have Spanish speakers will receive the NHES-13L(M)
noted above. The tailored letter includes endorsements from
organizations and programs that are
currently being pursued
have
been obtained by
NCES but
have not yet been obtained.
The letters in these sections have been revised to show the endorsements.
Appendix 4 – In-Person Study of NHES:2019 Nonresponding Households
All materials on pages 14-36 and 48-51 are newly added. Additionally, the following revisions were made:
(p.1)
Two
separate interview operations will be conducted to
To address these
research questions we
will conduct approximately:
(a) 230
10-minute interviews using a structured interview protocol and
neighborhood observations (“structured interviews”) and
(b) approximately 80
100 of 90-minute
interviews using a
semi-structured
an
unstructured,
qualitative interview protocol and home
observations (“qualitative interviews”). Due to the
differences in interview protocols, data from these two sets of
interviews
(b)
750 address and neighborhood observations
will
be analyzed separately.
This document discusses the importance of conducting this study and
provides an overview of its methods.
(pp.3-5)
The
proposed In-Person Study
of NHES:2019 Nonresponding Households
will use structured
and
qualitative in-person interviews, as well as address and household
neighborhood
observations to assess whether the existing theories surrounding
household survey nonresponse are applicable to NHES. The study is
designed to provide additional actionable information about how to
combat the growing nonresponse problem in NHES
and other federal government household surveys that use mail to
contact sample members.
It is expected that the results of this study will be used to improve
the design of NHES, with the goal of increasing the response rate and
the representativeness of the respondents. Potential changes could
include modifications to the nonresponse follow-up protocol, the type
of incentives offered, and the presentation of contact materials.
The
primary goal of the structured interviews is to understand who lives
in nonrespondent households and the household members’ primary
reasons for nonresponse.
Approximately
230 structured interviews will be conducted with NHES screener
nonrespondents. Screener
nonrespondents, rather than topical nonrespondents, are the focus of
the study because of the impact that screener nonresponse has on both
the screener response rate and each NHES survey’s overall
response rate and because NHES screener response rates are lower than
topical response rates.6
Larger numbers of screener nonrespondents are anticipated to be
clustered in metropolitan areas than in more rural locales. Exhibit 1
plots the location of NHES:2016 screener nonrespondents. As expected,
screener nonrespondents are widely dispersed, but there is some
clustering around large cities.
About
350 screener nonrespondents will be sampled to yield these 230
completed interviews. Sampled cases will be clustered around 2 to 4
U.S. cities and will be located within 70 miles of the center of
those cities. To evaluate the representativeness of the sample drawn
from the cities under consideration (Chicago, IL; Washington, DC;
Atlanta, GA; Austin, TX; and San Mateo, CA), we have conducted a
preliminary analysis using NHES:2016 data to identify potential
biases in cases reached under this design compared to cases that are
located outside of these five city areas. Focusing on statistically
significant biases of five percentage points or more, this analysis
suggests that the following groups would be overrepresented in this
study sample:
Addresses
in high percent Hispanic strata (and addresses that are in strata
that are neither high percent Black nor high percent Hispanic would
be underrepresented);
Addresses
where the head of the household is Hispanic (and those where the
head of household is White would be underrepresented);
Addresses
that received bilingual mailings (and those that did not would be
underrepresented);
Addresses
in block groups that are 100 percent urban (and those that are
located in block groups that are 50 percent or less urban would be
underrepresented); and
Addresses
with Census low response scores (LRS) in the fifth (lowest
propensity) quintile (and those in the second highest quintile would
be underrepresented).
Exhibit 1. Location of NHES:2016 Screener Nonrespondents
Though
cases located near cities overrepresent certain subgroups of
nonrespondents (such as those that are Hispanic or urban dwellers),
these are also the groups that tend to be less likely to respond to
NHES. In
Moreover,
in NHES:2016,
household in tracts with 40% of more Hispanic persons, high rise
apartments, and renters had lower weighted screener response rates,
55.9%, 58.9%, and 56.6% respectively (see Attachment A in this
document for screener response rates by additional subgroups) (McPhee
et al. 2018). This
study is an opportunity to learn more about the specific response
barriers faced by these specific types of sample members. For
example, are sample members that need bilingual mailings getting
them, and are sample members living in multi-unit or high-rise
buildings receiving their mailings? While the resulting sample will
not be nationally representative, it will be large enough to provide
rich data about these important subgroups of nonrespondents.
Analyses of the resulting data are expected to illuminate some of the factors associated with nonresponse and inform revisions to the content and design of recruitment materials to be used in NHES:2022.
Sampled
cases will be sent an advance letter that includes $2 or $5 cash7,
invites them to participate in the in-person study, and indicates
that someone will be visiting their home to ask them to complete an
interview. The advance letter does not ask for a response or action
from the household member. Its purpose is to inform the household
that an interviewer will visit their house. All sampled cases will be
offered an additional $25 cash incentive for completing the
interview. This incentive is designed to demonstrate to participants
that their time and participation is valued and takes into account
that the sample is comprised of households that have already shown
reluctance to participate in the survey. Recruitment materials will
be branded as coming from the National Center for Education
Statistics (NCES). The participant will receive a consent form to
read and sign before the interview starts, and will be able to keep a
copy of the form for their records. The details of obtaining consent
and the consent forms will be submitted for OMB’s review with a
30-day public comment period in fall 2018.
When
field interviewers first reach a sampled address, they will complete
a brief observation of the neighborhood and address as unobtrusively
as possible. The main goal of this observation task is to better
understand the characteristics of nonresponding addresses (e.g.,
whether they appear to be occupied or whether there are objects
present that suggest children live there such as children’s
outdoor toys). The observations also will assess quality of the
United States Postal Service (USPS) return service (for example, are
there addresses that actually appear to be vacant or nonexistent? Is
it possible to locate the addresses that had at least one mailing
returned as undeliverable, and, if so, what are their
characteristics?).
Upon
completion of the address observation, the field interviewer will
ring the bell or knock on the door of the home. If no one answers the
door, the interviewer will leave a “Sorry I Missed You”
card at the household. The card will indicate that he or she stopped
by and will return at a later day and time. It also will contain a
phone number the sample member can call to learn more about the study
and/or schedule an interview. If someone answers the door, the field
interviewer will introduce him- or herself, show their identification
badge and forms to indicate that they are part of the study, mention
the advance letter, and attempt to speak with the adult living at
this address who usually opens the mail.8
If that person is not available, the interviewer will attempt to
interview another available adult living in the household. Interviews
will be voluntary and will last approximately 10 minutes. Interviews
will be carried out by trained field interviewers who will be further
trained for this specific study before data collection begins. Some
interviewers will be Spanish bilingual speakers so that they can
conduct interviews in Spanish if needed.
The
goal of the interview is to understand the reason(s) for the
household’s lack of response to the screener, with a focus on
understanding at which stage this household’s response process
was interrupted (e.g., did the NHES:2019 survey package reach the
household, did the household members open it?). The interviewer also
will collect basic demographic household characteristics; for
example, whether any household members are eligible for the NHES
topical surveys (generally, children in 12th
grade or younger).9
Finally, the interview will include questions about characteristics
that may be drivers of the nonrespondent status of the household,
such as privacy and confidentiality concerns, busyness, topic
salience, and attitudes toward surveys or the federal government
(Brick and Williams 2013; Groves et al. 2004; Kulka et al. 1991;
Singer and Presser 2008). Interviews will be conducted in both
English and Spanish. Data quality control procedures will be
undertaken; several options, such as audio recording or manager
follow-up with a subset of participants, are currently being
evaluated. The structured interview protocol and contact materials
are currently being developed (see Attachment B in this document for
an outline of the protocol’s content). The finalized
procedures, interview protocol, and contact materials for the
In-Person Study of NHES:2019 Nonresponding Households will be
submitted for OMB’s review with a 30-day public comment period
in fall 2018.
Qualitative research is
particularly useful for trying to understand how
people make sense of
their lives and experiences. To gain a deeper understanding of why
some sample members do not respond to the NHES screener,
approximately 80
semi-structured
100
unstructured,
qualitative interviews will be conducted with screener
nonrespondents. These interviews are designed to be
longer and
provide richer
rich
and more
nuanced
information than
the structured interviews described above
about
survey nonresponse.
The
NHES:2019 screener nonrespondents
may
will be stratified
and sampled
to focus on a handful of key household characteristics available on
the sampling frame that are likely to drive differences in reasons
for nonresponse and could be used for targeting NHES materials and
contact protocols in future administrations,
such as (1) whether
the household has
children living in it, (2) whether the household is
Hispanic or is expected to prefer to respond in Spanish, and (3)
whether the household
2)
in what part of the United States the address
is located an
urban area or a rural area. A final sample design .
Cases
will be sampled from three or more sites and
sampling
strata will be specified in the fall 2018 submission. In addition,
the cases
sampled
for each site will
be clustered near
2 to 4 U.S. cities and will be located
within 70
miles of the center of those cities. The 70
an
area with approximately a 30-mile
radius.10
This design will
allow for sampling of some
rural addresses
(e.g.,
villages and towns such as Sollitt, IL, which is 45 miles south of
Chicago, IL and is,
while still maintaining
a rural
community with fewer than 100 people within the community).
manageable
driving distance for the interviewers.
Approximately 750
addresses will be sampled from among NHES:2019 early screener
nonrespondents for address and neighborhood observations. Of these,
480
500
households
will be sampled
selected
for and invited to take part in the qualitative interview study (to
yield approximately 80
100
completed 90-minute interviews).
If nonresponse clustering patterns result in lower than estimated
cost of observing and interviewing the target numbers of addresses,
more addresses will be selected for the address/neighborhood
observations.
The cases included in the nonresponse follow-up study will be selected using frame variables that will be identified based on the observed patterns of nonresponse to early NHES:2019 screener mailings. Because NHES:2019 will be the first NHES administration that uses a web-push mixed-mode design (whereas recent NHES administrations used a paper-only design), we are not certain what patterns of screener nonresponse will be observed and thus must wait to determine the actual selection criteria for the nonresponse follow-up study until NHES:2019 screener data collection has begun and patterns of the early NHES:2019 screener nonresponse become known. However, patterns of screener nonresponse to NHES:2016 give some indication of address characteristics that are likely to drive screener nonresponse in 2019, such as: being in an area with a higher percentage of Black or Hispanic residents, being in an area with a higher poverty rate, being in the south, being in a rented (vs. owned) dwelling, being in a multiunit (vs. a single unit) dwelling, not having a phone number available on the frame, or lacking demographic information about the head of the household (such as gender, age, or marital status).
Once we determine the subgroups of address characteristics that show the highest likelihood of nonresponse to early NHES:2019 screener mailings, we will identify three or more geographic clusters, of approximately 30-mile-radius each, that will include large enough numbers of nonrespondents from the address characteristics subgroups to meet the recruiting targets for the nonresponse follow-up study. Due to differences in mail delivery challenges in urban versus rural areas (which are key for understanding potential reasons for nonresponse to a mailed survey such as NHES), urbanicity will be one of the factors used in the selection of sites. In addition, we will ensure that each of the at least three clusters will include a diverse group of addresses by characteristics such as region, address characteristics, demographics, etc. Initially, in each selected cluster, address/neighborhood observations will be conducted with the nonresponding households selected from that cluster. From the observed addresses, across all clusters, a subset of 500 addresses will be selected for recruitment for the target 100 in-person qualitative interviews. At this time, the cost of observations and interviews will be determined and, budget permitting, additional NHES:2019 screener nonrespondent addresses may be selected for additional address/neighborhood observations.
One
possible design for the study of nonresponding households is to also
follow up with a small sample (n= 50-100) of responding households
for the 90-minute semi-structured, qualitative interviews. Data from
responding households would provide a comparison to the data from the
nonresponding households. Respondent sample cases could be stratified
on whether they were early or late responders and on the same
demographic characteristics used to identify cases for nonrespondent
sampling. If differences are found between the responding and
nonresponding groups, this will aid analyses by helping to hone in on
the themes in the data from nonrespondents that may be related to
nonresponse. If no differences are found between the responding and
nonresponding groups, it will be a signal to look at some of the less
common themes in the interview data for clues about nonrespondents’
unique characteristics or attitudes. In turn, these less common
themes would provide future researchers with better information on
which to base interview protocols for research into nonresponse.
Bates
(2007) found that debriefing both respondents and nonrespondents to a
mail survey yielded considerably more data from respondents than
nonrespondents and that nonrespondents commonly did not remember
receiving the mailed survey materials. Collecting data from
respondents in addition to nonrespondents would help us to understand
whether or not differences in household practices with mail are the
linchpin to ABS-survey nonresponse in which contact materials are
sent through the mail. Budget may limit our ability to add a sample
of responding households. Final decisions and details about the
sample design, and whether or not responding households will be
included, will be provided for OMB review in fall 2018.
The following recruitment protocol will be used after the NHES:2019 screener data collection closes in late May 2019:
Sampled
cases will be sent an advance
invitation
letter that includes $2
or $5
cash11,
invites them to participate in the in-person study, and
indicates that someone will
informs
them of the contingent incentive and provides them with NHES staff
contact them
to schedule an interview. The advance letter does not ask
information
for a
response or action from the household member. Its purpose is to
inform
letting
the household
researchers
know that they
will
be contacted to schedule an interview at their house
would
like to participate.
All sampled cases will be offered an additional $120 cash incentive
for completing the interview and this incentive will be mentioned in
all recruitment materials. This incentive is designed to demonstrate
to participants that their time and participation is valued and
takes into account that the sample is comprised of households that
have already shown reluctance to participate in the survey (see
below for additional discussion of the incentive amount).
Recruitment
materials will be branded as coming from the National Center for
Education Statistics (NCES).
Up to two reminder post cards will be sent to each sampled household that has not yet responded to the nonresponse follow-up study invitation. The first will be sent in the early part of the recruitment period, approximately one week after the invitation letter. A second will be sent to the remaining follow-up nonrespondents about halfway through the recruitment period. These postcards will invite sampled households to participate in the study, remind them about the contingent incentive, provide them with NHES staff contact information for letting the researchers know that they would like to participate, and inform them that an interviewer will be visiting their home to try to schedule an interview.
Recruitment
phone calls will occur in two windows for sampled households that
have phone numbers available on the sampling frame.
One window will occur at
and
have not yet responded to
the start
of
nonresponse
follow-up study contacts. The first will be early in
the recruitment period (shortly
after the first reminder postcard) and
the other will
be about halfway
through the recruitment period. During each window, each household
will be called twice
up
to two times. One
voicemail will be left per calling window if the household does not
answer the phone.
An
in-person recruitment period will
also take place, where
all households that have neither agreed nor declined to participate
over
the phone (or do not have a phone number available) will
be visited by a
recruiter. Recruiters
an
interviewer. Interviewers
will have an identification badge,
which they will
show to each household along with study forms to indicate that they
are part of the study.
The
phone and in-person recruiters
recruitment
will encourage the household to participate in the in-person
interview,
screen for eligibility (e.g., the participant needs to have been
living at the address when the NHES:2019 materials were sent),
and set up a time for
a trained qualitative to
do the interview. The interviewer
to
do so. The recruiter
will attempt to speak with the
an
adult living at this address who usually opens the mail. Should that
person not be available, they
the
interviewer will
attempt to speak to another available adult living in the household.
If, when the interviewer arrives, no one answers the door, the
interviewer will leave a “Sorry We Missed You” card at
the address. The card will indicate that someone stopped by and will
return at a later day and time. It will also contain a phone number
and e-mail address the sample member can contact to learn more about
the study and/or schedule and interview.
All materials will be branded as coming from the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES). For sampled addresses that are expected to have a high likelihood of being Spanish speaking, the mailed recruitment materials will include both English and Spanish; bilingual phone and in-person staff will be assigned to these cases.
To
maintain engagement and increase the likelihood that recruited
households keep their scheduled appointments, the recruiters
interviewers
also will ask recruited households to provide contact information
that can be used to keep them engaged and aware of their upcoming
interview appointment. Depending on the type of contact information
provided, recruited households will receive: (1) a confirmation email
or text shortly after scheduling the appointment,
and (2) a reminder email or text and a reminder phone call in the
days leading up to the interview. The interviewer will then call the
participant the morning of the interview to confirm he or she is
still available to meet. If when the interviewer arrives, no one
answers the door, the interviewer will leave a “Sorry I Missed
You” card at the household. The card will indicate that he or
she stopped by and will return at a later day and time. It also will
contain a number the sample member can call to learn more about the
study and/or schedule an interview. All interviewers will have an
identification badge they will show to the household to indicate they
are part of the study.12
Interviews will be carried out by trained qualitative interviewers
who will be further trained for this specific study before data
collection begins. Some interviewers will be Spanish bilingual
speakers so that they can conduct interviews in Spanish if needed.
All materials will be branded as coming from the National Center of
Education Statistics (NCES).
(or
an appointment reminder card if they are recruited in-person), and
(2) a reminder email and/or phone call the day before the interview.
The
participant will receive a consent form to read and sign before the
interview starts, and will be able to keep a copy of the form for
their records. The details of obtaining consent and the consent forms
will be submitted for OMB’s review with a 30-day public comment
period in fall 2018.
(pp.7-8)
Qualitative
interviews will be voluntary and will last 90 minutes to allow time
to obtain consent, give participants sufficient time to reflect on
the more open-ended questions included in this protocol, and conduct
observations. Because this is exploratory research (trying to find
out why something is happening as opposed to testing a hypothesis)
maximizing contact time with the participants and giving them enough
space to discuss their experience is crucial. Interviews will be
conducted in both English and Spanish. All interviews will be
audio-recorded with participants’ permission13.
They will consist of the following kinds of questions:
Qualitative interview questions that aim to gain a deep understanding of the household’s reasons for nonresponse and what might convince them to respond (covering domains such as understanding of surveys, privacy concerns, attitudes toward the government, attitudes toward education, time use, and civic engagement);
Questions
adapted from the
More
structured interviews
for the qualitative interview protocol
questions,
such as conducting
a household roster by
asking about the other
members of the households
participant’s
demographic characteristics,
or asking if the participant remembers receiving the NHES mailings;
A
mail interaction discussion, using
a packet of example mail where
the interviewer asks the participant to do
things like “show me what you do with your mail when you get
it” or “show me
model
how you
decide whether to open a piece of
they
sort mail and
make decisions about what to keep, read, or throw away, while the
interviewer probes about that decision process; and
A request for feedback on NHES:2019 screener mailed materials.
The
interview will conclude with the interviewer using
a brief check list to make
making
observations about the home and/or household members, beyond any
observations recorded while interacting with the participant during
the interview. Observations are important to include in qualitative
research because interview questions can often only address attitudes
or actions of which participants are cognitively aware. There are
likely other observable aspects of participants’ lives that
they may not explicitly connect to their lack of participation (e.g.,
how they organize their mail), as well as observable qualities that
nonresponding households may have in common (e.g., whether they
display children’s educational achievements). These
observations will be used to capture such more nuanced indicators.
The
qualitative
finalized
interview protocol and contact materials are
currently being developed (see Attachment B for an outline of the
protocol’s content). The finalized procedures, interview
protocol, and contact materials
for the In-Person Study of NHES:2019 Nonresponding Households
qualitative
interviews can be found in the Attachment B of this document.
Approximately 750 addresses will be sampled for address and neighborhood observations. Of these, 500 will be also invited to take part in the qualitative interview study (see above), and for the remaining 250 households, only observations will be collected. The objective of these observations is to determine the types of addresses that are prone to nonresponse or having their NHES mailings be undeliverable, and to assess the accuracy of the information available on the frame for such addresses.
The objective of these observations, which will be carried out by staff contracted for NHES, is to determine the types of addresses that are prone to nonresponse or having their NHES mailings be undeliverable and to assess the accuracy of the information available on the frame for such addresses. The instrument has been programmed to be administered on a tablet or computer to ease data collection efforts and minimize error. Each observer will receive a tablet to complete their observations. The 7-minute observation instrument is designed to evaluate variables from the address-based sample frame. Several of the items are based on existing instruments (e.g., the Neighborhood Observation Instrument (NOI), Contact History Instrument (CHI), the Los Angeles Family and Neighborhood Survey). The instrument also includes a series of characteristics that interviewers will look for and mark off when they observe them for that address or neighborhood. There is also space for entering notes that might provide helpful context about the address or neighborhood. Exhibit 2 below displays a summary of the proposed measures, the frame variables that will be evaluated, and the potential impacts those findings could have on the design of future NHES administrations. To increase efficiency, observers may audio record their observations and transcribe them onto the instrument later.
Exhibit 2. Summary of proposed measures, frame variables evaluated, and potential impact on NHES design
Measure |
Frame Variable(s) evaluated |
Potential Impact |
Structure type |
|
Mailing method (e.g., use courier service such as FedEx) |
Contact materials (e.g., use larger font for address to minimize sorting issues for multi-unit addresses, tailor language of contact materials) |
||
Incentive use (e.g., use varied incentives by structure type) |
||
Frame accuracy (e.g., evaluate frame information to improve adaptive design models) |
||
Occupancy |
|
Frame accuracy (e.g., evaluate frame information to improve adaptive design models) |
Eligibility (e.g., confirm whether the postmaster ‘vacant household’ status is accurate) |
||
Eligibility |
|
Topical Eligibility (e.g., assess whether the nonresponse process differs based on topical eligibility) |
Frame accuracy (e.g., evaluate frame information particularly to improve adaptive design models) |
||
Contact materials (e.g., tailor language used in survey invitation to alleviate privacy concerns of certain households such as households with children) |
||
Mail Access |
|
Mailing method (e.g., using courier services that provide door-to-door service) |
Contact materials (e.g., use bolder envelope designs such as larger font for addresses where mail mix-up is likely) |
||
Frame accuracy (e.g., evaluate frame information particularly to improve adaptive design models) |
||
Household income |
|
Incentive use (e.g., use varying incentive structures by income level) |
Frame accuracy (e.g., evaluate frame information particularly to improve adaptive design models) |
||
Additional address / neighborhood observations |
None (these observations will be used to assess whether additional census planning database variables should be used for making data collection protocol changes) |
Contact materials (e.g., tailor emphasis of individual (incentive) versus communal (policy impact) advantages of NHES participation) |
As part of the 7-minute observation, observers will also take a picture of the sampled address to validate that the observer was indeed present at the address, to document a time and location of the visit, and to clarify any issues related to the observation the observer may have recorded. The photos will only be taken from public spaces such as the street, and will not be taken while on someone’s private property. The finalized observation protocol for the In-Person Study of NHES:2019 Nonresponding Households is provided in Attachment B.3 of this document
All materials on pages 14-36 and 48-51 of Appendix 4 are newly added. Please also note that Attachment B.2. of Appendix 4 (pages 37-47) will provide the Spanish versions of the materials that will be used to interact with households sampled for the qualitative interview. These materials will be provided to OMB as a change request in November 2018.
1 The final base weighted NHES:2016 screener response rate was 66.4%. ECPP yielded a 73.4%, PFI a 74.3%, and ATES a 73.1% topical response rate. These rates resulted in overall response rates (the product of the screener response rate and topical response rate) of 48.7%, 49.3%, and 48.5%, respectively. The increased use of the web survey mode in 2019 is expected to increase topical response rates.
2
The incentive amount of $2 vs. $5 is currently under consideration.
One amount will be selected for data collection and provided to OMB
for review in fall 2018.
3
The incentive amount of $2 vs. $5 is currently under consideration.
One amount will be selected for data collection and provided to OMB
for review in fall 2018.
4 Ineligible addresses are those that are undeliverable. Screener mailings for an address where one or more mailings are returned as a postmaster return (PMR) and no mailings are returned completed or refused will lead to an address being coded as ineligible.
5 Address eligibility and response rates are estimated based on NHES:2016 and are calculated to account for expected differential response rates within sampling strata and experimental treatment groups.
6 The final base weighted NHES:2016 screener response rate was 66.4 percent. The Early Childhood Program Participation survey yielded a 73.4 percent topical response rate. The Parent and Family Involvement in Education survey yielded a 74.3 percent topical response rate. The Adult Training and Education Survey yielded a 73.1 percent topical response rate. These rates resulted in overall response rates (the product of the screener response rate and topical response rate) of 48.7 percent, 49.3 percent, and 48.5 percent, respectively. The increased use of the web survey mode in 2019 is expected to increase topical response rates.
7
The incentive amount of $2 vs. $5 is currently under consideration.
One amount will be selected for data collection and provided to OMB
for review in fall 2018.
8
Only one field interviewer will be at the household. To ensure
interviewer safety, a security escort will be provided when field
interviewers are visiting unsafe neighborhoods.
9
While this basic demographic data is similar to information
requested in the screener, these data will not be incorporated into
the NHES:2019 dataset or used to send the household a topical
NHES:2019 survey.
10 P.O. Boxes that are included in the NHES:2019 sampling frame will be excluded from the nonrespondent sampling frame due to not having a street address associated with the P.O. Box to visit.
11
The incentive amount of $2 vs. $5 is currently under consideration.
One amount will be selected for data collection and provided to OMB
for review in fall 2018.
12
Only one field interviewer will be at the household. To ensure
interviewer safety, a security escort will be provided when field
interviewers are visiting unsafe neighborhoods.
13
Note that due to their brevity and structured nature, the structured
interviews will not be audio recorded.
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