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Memorandum
To: Kelsi Feltz
Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA)
Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
From: Ann Rivera
Office of Planning, Research and Evaluation (OPRE)
Administration for Children and Families (ACF)
Date: August 22, 2023
Subject: Nonsubstantive Change Request – Home-Based
Child Care Practices and Experiences Study [OMB # 0970-0612]
This memo requests approval of nonsubstantive changes to the approved
information collection, Home-Based Child Care Practices and
Experiences Study (HBCC PPE) [OMB Information Collection Request
0970-0612]. Specifically, we request approval of updates to the
instruments and recruitment materials.
Background
The goal of the HBCC PPE study is to examine the experiences,
strengths, resources, and strategies used by home-based child care
providers to serve and support equitable outcomes for children and
families. The study is designed to explore the experiences of
family, friend, and neighbor providers (i.e., home-based child care
providers who are legally exempt from state licensing or other
regulations that apply to non-custodial care of children in the
provider’s own home.) The study uses semi-ethnographic,
open-ended methods (including semi-structured interviews, and photo
and audio journals) to generate rich information about the
experiences of study respondents.
The
study team pretested the study protocol, methods, and materials with
a small group of Spanish-speaking providers (less than 10) during the
public comment period and identified several potential changes to the
language and materials that would help to reduce burden or improve
understanding among respondents. In addition, the project’s
Internal Review Board (IRB) completed its review of the study
application and requested changes to consent procedures and language
to improve informed consent among potential study participants.
Overview of
Requested Changes
In response to findings from
pretesting with Spanish-speaking providers and to edits identified by
the project’s IRB, the requested changes fall into four
categories:
Updates to
consent statements and forms (English and Spanish)
Slight wording changes to
instrument introduction text and questions (English
and Spanish)
Minor revisions to participant
recruitment materials (English)
Spanish versions of all study
appendices
The proposed modifications to instruments and recruitment materials
are summarized below in more detail. We are not proposing any
adjustments to the data collection approach or approved time period.
These changes do not affect burden estimates or meaningfully alter
the instrument content for respondents.
We
request a response as soon as possible so that we can begin data
collection for this study.
Updates to consent statements and forms
The study
team’s IRB requested changes to the consent statements included
in seven instruments.
Table
1. Updates
to consent statements and forms
Change
|
Updated
Materials
|
Description
|
Add
an explicit question to confirm that respondents agree to
participate in the data collection activity
|
Instrument
1. Provider Screener
Instrument
3. Provider logistics call
Instrument
9. Provider feedback back focus group
Appendix
D. Consent statements and interview contact forms.
|
Added:
“Do you agree to participate in this call?” to
Instruments 1, 3, and 9. Provider Screener, “Is it ok to
proceed with this call?” to Instrument 3. Provider
logistics calls, and “Does everyone agree to participate in
this group?” to Instrument 9. Provider feedback focus
group.
We
incorporated these changes into Appendix D. Consent statements
and interview contact forms.
|
Acknowledge
minimal psychological risk in the consent statement, as well as
noting there are no other risks or benefits
|
Instrument
2. Provider Interview #1
Instrument
6. Provider interview #2
Instrument
7. Family member interview
Appendix
D. Consent statements and interview contact forms.
|
Added
bolded text: “There is a small chance that responding to
some of our questions could bring up topics that are upsetting to
you. You can choose to not answer a question for this, or
any other reason, if you wish. We can also pause or stop an
interview at any point. There are no other risks, or benefits,
to participation.
We
incorporated these changes into Appendix D. Consent statements
and interview contact forms.
|
Add
a statement that there are no risks or benefits to respondents
|
Instrument
6. Provider interview #2
Instrument
8. Community member interview
Instrument
9. Provider feedback focus group
Appendix
D. Consent statements and interview contact forms.
|
Added:
“There are no direct benefits or risks to participation.”
We
incorporated these changes into Appendix D. Consent statements
and interview contact forms.
|
Add
additional information about plans to archive data
|
Instrument
2. Provider Interview #1
Instrument
6. Provider interview #2
Instrument
7. Family member interview
Instrument
8. Community member interview
Appendix
D. Consent statements and interview contact forms.
|
Added:
“In the future, responses from this study (with nothing
identifying participants) might be securely shared with qualified
individuals for additional learning purposes to better understand
the strengths of home-based child care.”
We
incorporated these changes into Appendix D. Consent statements
and interview contact forms.
|
Instruct
focus group participants not to use names of others
|
Instrument
9. Provider feedback focus group
|
Added
bolded text: “Privacy also depends on you. We ask
that none of you share what you hear from other providers with
others outside the group. We also ask that you do not use the
names of individual children or other adults during this
conversation.”
|
Include
information that is included in Instrument 2. Provider interview
#1 consent statement
|
Instrument
6. Provider interview #2
|
Added
bolded text:
We
will keep your participation private. We will only use your
responses for research purposes and in ways that will not reveal
who you are. We will not share your responses with others who
participate in the study, including family members of the
children you care for and the person in the community who
supports you. There are a few exceptions to this; for
example, if you indicate that you are planning to harm yourself
or others, we may be required by law to share that with the
appropriate authorities.
We
will produce reports that will describe the experiences and
viewpoints expressed by those we interview.
However, in some previous studies, people have
agreed to let researchers share additional details of their
experiences and identity because they want to share this with
others who take care of children and people interested in
supporting child care. In the future, we might ask if you are
interested in letting us share your details and identity in our
reports. We will only share what you feel comfortable sharing
and explicitly agree to share.
|
Add
information that is included in other instrument consent
statements
|
Instrument
9. Provider feedback focus group
|
Made
the consent statement consistent with other instruments by
adding: “We have a Certificate of Confidentiality from the
National Institutes of Health. The Certificate helps us protect
your privacy by limiting when the study team can give out
information that identifies you, but there are a few exceptions.
For example, if you indicate that you are planning to harm
yourself or others, we may be required by law to share that with
the appropriate authorities. The U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services (HHS) may ask for data for an audit or evaluation.
If they do, we will need to provide it. However, only HHS staff
involved in the review will see it.”
|
Add
child
assent procedures for children old enough to assent, including
signing an assent form if 10 years or older, for the children to
appear in photo journal entries
|
Instrument
2. Provider interview #1
Appendix
C. Instructions for providers to use study tools.
Appendix
D. Consent statements and interview contact forms
Supporting
Statement A (SSA), Section A.11
|
Added
a child assent form to Appendix
D. Consent statements and interview contact forms and
instructions about the child assent forms to Appendix
C. Instructions for providers to use study tools.
Added
bolded text to Instrument to reference the child assent
procedures: One
important note, about the photos: we cannot include any photos
that have the children you care for in them until their parent or
guardian has given written permission that this is okay and,
if their parent or guardian gives permission, until children have
also said this is okay (if they are old enough to understand).
We will send you a flyer and a form and ask you to give them to
all of the families of the children in your care. These
materials explain the photos and ask them to indicate whether
they give permission for their child to be in photos or not, and
to sign the form. There
is also a form that any child age 10 or older will need to sign.
Added
description of the child assent process for the photo journals to
the SSA.
|
Add
child
assent procedures for children old enough to assent, including
signing an assent form if 10 years or older, for the children to
appear in photo journal entries
|
Instrument
3. Provider logistics call
Appendix
C. Instructions for providers to use study tools.
Appendix
D. Consent statements and interview contact forms
|
Added
a child assent form to Appendix
D. Consent statements and interview contact forms and
instructions about the child assent forms to Appendix
C. Instructions
for providers to use study tools.
Added
bolded text to Instrument to reference or explain the child
assent procedures to providers:
Second,
we want to talk about what we’d like you to do to ask
permission from family members for their children to possibly
appear in a photo, permission
from the children themselves in some cases,
what to do to ask permission from family and community members
to be contacted for an interview, and how to send that
information back to us.
Now
please look for the 10 copies each of the “Family Consent
Form for HBCC P&E Study Photos” (GREEN
PAPER),
“Child
Assent Form for HBCC P&E Study Photos” (GREEN
PAPER),
“Family
Contact Form for HBCC P&E Study Interviews,”
and a
study
flyer for family members (GREEN
PAPER).
Family
and Community Member Permissions Overview.
Before
we take out the phone, I want to describe the steps we will ask
you to take to make sure the parents of the children in your
care are aware of the study and agree to having you take photos
while their children are in your care.
We
will also talk about making sure the children are ok with being
in photos.
Let’s
talk about the children
and family
members first.
In
addition to having permission from parents, please make sure
that any child old enough to understand what you are doing
agrees to be included in any photos you take. You can let the
children know you might take some pictures for an activity you
are participating in, that their parents said it was ok, and ask
if they are ok with being in photos. You can use your judgment
on when a child is too young to understand, and do not need to
discuss with them.
(If
they care for any school-age children)
For older children who are in school, you can add that it’s
a research study to learn more about the provider’s
experiences, and that the photos will only be used for research.
Any child 10 years or older who might appear in a photo,
including your own children, also needs to read and sign a copy
of the “Child Assent Form for HBCC P&E Study Photos”
from the FedEx package.
(All
providers)
Please do not take any photos of children who do not want to be
photographed, even if a parent has given permission. If a
parent does not give permission, then children cannot be
photographed even if they would have agreed. In other words,
both the parent and child (if old enough) have to give
permission. Do you have any questions for me about getting
permission and consent from parents or children?
For
the photos, we are trying to focus on activities you do with
children and the spaces where you do those activities, not the
individual children you are caring for. Because of that, photos
do not need to include children. However, it is okay if a child
appears in a photo as long as the child
is okay with being photographed (including signing the child
assent form if they are 10 years or older) and
the child’s parent signed the family consent form and
marked that it would be okay for their child to appear in
photos. If
children might appear in photos, you can tell the children that
they should keep doing whatever they’re doing when you
take the photo and these aren’t photos they should pose
for. Do you
have any questions?
The
first thing you’ll want to do is to use the family
consent form to
get permission from families to take photos of their children
and agreement
from children to be in photos (including the child assent form
for any children 10 years or older);
and then submit the forms on the EthOS app.
And
one more reminder to please hand out the flyers and forms we
talked about to family and community members, and once you get
the forms back from families (and
children if old enough)
and get permission from community members, to upload photos of
those forms through EthOS.
Deleted:
We understand children might ask why you are taking photos. We
recommend ask that you let the children know you might take some
pictures for an activity you are participating in, that their
parents said it was ok, and that they should keep doing whatever
they’re doing when you take the photo and these aren’t
photos they should pose for. (If
they care for any school-age children)
For older children who are in school, you could probably to add
that it’s a research study to learn more about the
provider’s experiences, and that the photos will only be
used for research.
|
Provide
two copies of consent forms so participants can retain signed
copies
|
Instrument
3. Provider logistics call
|
Added
bolded text to explain this to the provider (since the providers
will distribute the forms to families): For
the family consent form,
if a parent says that they do not want you to take any photos of
their child, please follow their request. Please do this before
you start taking photos. You know your families best, so for
some parents it might work well for you to explain the study and
how you are contributing to it to them at drop off and pick up.
Then you could ask them to sign the forms and leave them with
you.
Please give them
two copies so they can keep one as a record.
|
Instruct
providers not to include other adults in photos and not to
mention anyone by name in audio recordings
|
Instrument
3. Provider logistics call
Appendix
C. Instructions for providers to use study tools.
|
Added
bolded text: A
few important
notes
about the photo and
audio journals. We’ll start with a couple notes related to
the photo. First,
it’s fine to take photos in your home or a shared or public
space, such as a sidewalk or library. However, please do not
take any photos in someone else’s home, such as the home of
a child you care for (If
the provider lives with any noncustodial children they care for,
clarify that is okay because it’s their home). Second,
we also don’t want you to take photos of any adults, even
if they are involved in caring for the children or are members of
your family. For the audio journals, we ask that you do not say
the names of other adults, including the names of your family
members or children’s family members and the names of other
adults who help you care for children.
We
incorporated these changes into
Appendix
C. Instructions
for providers to use study tools.
|
Slight wording changes to instrument
introduction text and questions
The study team made slight wording changes to
introduction text and questions in three instruments in response to:
(1) feedback from their IRB and (2) input from pretesting with a
small group of providers who speak Spanish on Spanish versions of
instruments and materials. Some of the input from the providers was
relevant to the English versions of the instruments.
Table
2.
Summary of wording changes
Change
|
Instrument(s)
|
Description
|
Added
to the introduction about the study a sentence
acknowledging there might be different labels they’ve been
called and a couple sentences emphasizing that we want to learn
from the
providers
|
Instrument
1. Provider screener
Instrument
2. Provider interview #1
|
Added:
You may have been called a child care provider, a caregiver, a
babysitter, or something else. (Moving forward, use the term
they respond to.) You know the most about your own
experiences, and we want to learn from you. Our goal in this
study is to listen to you and improve our understanding of how
people like you care for children at home.
|
Edited
question S9a to use less formal language
|
Instrument
1. Provider screener
|
Edits
to question include deletions (shown with strike through) and
additions (shown in bold).
S9a.
Before you started looking after these children, did you have
a prior relationship with
know
any of their families personally?
If
yes:
For
How
many of these children did you have
a prior relationship with
know personally before you started looking after them? What
is your personal relationship to those children?
|
Revised
questions 1 and 3 to ask about children generally rather than by
individual child
|
Instrument
2. Provider interview #1
|
Deleted
table 1 and rephrased questions to generally ask about children
in care. For example, instead of “What is [CHILD’S
NAME] gender?”, revised to “What are the genders of
the children you care for?”
Deleted
table 2 and rephrased questions to generally ask about the
providers’ own children.
|
Revised
question 13 to ask
provider about their identity first, instead of trying to define
it based on information collected in the screener, but using a
probe based on information gathered in Instrument 1. Provider
screener
|
Instrument
2. Provider interview #1
|
Edits
to question include deletions (shown with strike through) and
additions (shown in bold).
In
our first phone call, you told us that you identify as [USE
PROVIDER’S WORDS FROM SCREENER]. Tell
me more
about this
about your
identity and
why
how
it is important to you and your work caring for children.
PROBE
IF NEEDED: In our first phone call, you told us that you
identify as [USE PROVIDER’S WORDS FROM SCREENER], how is
this important to you and your work caring for children?
|
Moved
optional probes from week 2 to week 3 and moved optional prompts
from week 3 to week 2. Language of the probes remained the same.
|
Instrument
5. Provider audio journals
|
Moved
the following week 3 optional prompts for audio journals to week
2:
Tell
us about a time this week when you responded
to a child’s interests (for
example, reading a book together, playing a game). What
were you doing? How did you use your own knowledge about
this child and their cultural and family background to interact
with them? How do you think this child felt?
Tell
us about an interaction that you had this week with the children
where you were helping them learn
about reading or numbers.
What did this look like? What do you hope children learned
from this interaction?
Tell
us about a time this week when you encouraged
a child to be physically active or you did a physical activity
with a child. What were
you doing? How did you feel during this interaction with
children? How do you think children felt?
Moved
the following week 2 optional prompts for audio journals to week
3:
Tell
us about a time this week when you helped
children of different ages do an activity or play together.
What did the children get out of the activity or experience?
What do you think children learned from each other?
Tell
us about a time this week when you had to address
a child’s behavior that you found challenging
(for example, infants
who sleep very lightly or spit up a lot, toddlers who bite,
preschoolers who hit, school-age children who struggle with
their homework)?
What did you do? How did the child react? In what
ways did you reach out to the child’s family? In
what ways did you draw on your own cultural knowledge to support
this child? How did you feel about this interaction?
Tell
us about a time this week when you helped
children understand and appreciate their differences or when you
helped children recognize their bias towards others who are
different from them.
How
do you think your own experiences with racism or other inequities
or inequalities influence these interactions with children?
|
Revised
question 2 to keep identity open-ended,
instead of trying to define it based on information gathered in
Instrument 2. Provider Interview #1
|
Instrument
6. Provider interview #2
|
Edits
to question include deletions (shown with strike through) and
additions (shown in bold).
Please
tell me more about how your own cultural identity and values
influence the way you take care of and support children. For
example, how does your identity as
a [how they identify in interview #1]
influence your care of children?
PROBE:
How do you draw on your own identity and experiences as
a [use self identifier e.g., Black woman/Latina
woman/Chinese-American woman; a single mother] in your
care of children? Please share some examples.
|
Minor
revisions to participant recruitment materials
The study
team made slight wording changes to two materials included in
Appendix A. Participant recruitment materials in response to feedback
from providers on the Spanish versions of the materials.
What do you
mean by “home-based child care”?
Home-based
child care is care for children by someone who is not a parent or
custodial caregiver of the child and that takes place in the home
of the provider’s home (who may also be
called a child care provider, caregiver, babysitter, or something
else) or the home of the child’s home.
Who else is
participating in the study?
We will speak
to people who take care of children across the country. In addition
to your participation, we are interested in hearing from families
that rely on you and people who give you information and
support, who we are calling community members that
support you. We’ll ask you to help us arrange
interviews with family members of up to two of the children you care
for and someone in your community who you feel helps or supports you
around your taking care of children.
Why do you want to hear from community members?
We want to hear
from people, who we are calling community members of
the community, who are a source of give
information and support (formal or informal) to providers who
care for children. Your experiences will help us understand the
types of resources and supports that could benefit child care
providers.
File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
File Title | Mathematica Memo |
Subject | memo |
Author | Patricia Del Grosso |
File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
File Created | 2023-12-15 |