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Recruiting Sites and Participants for Random Assignment Studies

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Title: Recruiting Sites and Participants for Random Assignment Studies


1
Recruiting Sites and Participants for Random
Assignment Studies
  • IES/NCER Summer Institute
  • June 25, 2007
  • Fred Doolittle

2
Overview of the Session Topics
  • What is the purpose of site and participant
    selection?
  • The art of recruiting sites for random assignment
    studies
  • Topics to address
  • Building the foundation for longer term success
    of the study
  • Addressing the tough issues in advance
  • Assuring cooperation in study implementation

3
The Goal of a Fair Test of the
Intervention/Program
  • Some elements of the fair test
  • Sites that serve the intended target group
  • Sites that can operate the intervention
    reasonably well
  • Sites that can provide the intended service
    contrast
  • A research design that can produce credible
    findings on impacts and can be implemented
  • A data collection plan that preserves the good
    impact design and documents differences in
    services and outcomes at the various stages of
    the theory of action
  • An analysis strategy and report process that
    produces useful findings
  • In various ways, all of these involve the sites

4
Topics for a conversation
  • The process of recruiting sites
  • Embedding a random assignment design and data
    collection into normal program operations
  • Asking the tough questions
  • Real understanding of the design
  • Political issues
  • Ethical concerns
  • Working to achieve long-term cooperation in study
    implementation
  • Lack of crossovers and withdrawals
  • Data collection

5
Reading the Site Recruitment Context
6
Factors to Consider
  • How many sites do you need?
  • What restrictions are there on your choices?
  • Geographic- need to be close to you, need to be a
    specific places because of funder, need to test
    in specific kinds of places, need to be
    representative
  • Programmatic-
  • do sites need to be doing something on which you
    build
  • not doing something so get service contrast
  • Size need to be big enough to provide the
    desired sample of clusters, teachers and/or kids

7
Factors (cont.)
  • Are you offering something new or wanting to
    study existing programs?
  • Does what you offer fit into their existing plans
    programmatically and operationally so easy sell?
  • After-school example
  • Reading Professional Development example
  • Is the existing program long established and
    popular?
  • Is it oversubscribed so there is scarcity?
  • How have selection decisions been made?
  • Does it have outcome-based performance standards?
  • Others????

8
Recruiting Framework
  • What is the benefit-cost balance in participating
    from the perspective of sites?
  • Possible Benefits- the potential benefits for
    kids because of new services, staff professional
    development, the visibility of being in a study,
    site-level findings, etc
  • Possible Costs the need to devote management
    time to the intervention and study, a divergence
    from local priorities, hassle of integrating the
    intervention into local operations, controversy
    of random assignment, operational hassles of
    random assignment, the hassle of data collection,
    etc.

9
Responding to the Site Recruitment Context
  • The context affects the sequence of topics
  • The more it looks like a tough sell, the more you
    lead with benefits of participating
  • The more it looks like an easy sell, the more you
    move quickly through the benefits and into the
    roles and responsibilities
  • In either case
  • The goal is to get folks interested in
    participating so they can help you solve the
    inevitable problems, find ways to lessen the
    costs, and identify locally-relevant benefits
  • Always include the benefits in any material
    because it may be passed around to new folks who
    need to understand why to bother with this.

10
Examples of Strategies
  • Building site recruitment into special program
    funding decisions
  • Still need engagement process
  • Selecting representative sites
  • When might this be appropriate?
  • What is the pitch?
  • Using data bases to identify prospects that fit
    the profile and then making cold call contact
  • Data bases may not include key criteria
  • With whom to make the contact?
  • What is the pitch?
  • Working through service provider or funding
    networks to gain access
  • Pros and cons
  • What is the pitch?
  • Substantial outreach to build demand and
    stimulate applications
  • What is the balance between benefits and
    obligations in initial outreach?
  • How orchestrate the application and selection
    process?

11
What to Expect When Make Contact
  • In districts/schools/programs
  • Everyone is overburdened and stressed
  • Many things are changing simultaneously
  • A new intervention is of greater interest than
    the research
  • Getting chosen for a study and/or getting
    something free might be regarded as
    significant--but not for long
  • Evaluation results either overall or
    site-specific - often do not matter much because
    way off in the future

12
Recruiting Process
  • What is the point of entry?
  • The pros and cons of starting high in an
    organization
  • Recovering from an initial rejection
  • First dates (i.e., meetings) are pivotal
  • Make a good impression by bringing the right
    info and people
  • Get the right people from the site in the room
  • Build relationships from the outset
  • Be the buyer and the sellerexplain the benefits
    but ask the tough questions relatively early
  • Try to understand their perspective
  • Be willing to dig in to details

13
Embedding Random Assignment into Normal
Operations
14
Why Does This Matter?
  • Your goal is to mesh the research procedures with
    their operations
  • If you do this well, it significantly reduces the
    cost to a site of participating
  • If you get them interested enough in the possible
    benefits, they will start helping you figure this
    out

15
Understanding Normal Program Operations
  • How does the sample usually get to the place
    (program, school, classroom, etc) where you want
    to introduce the intervention and do random
    assignment?
  • Ask managers and line staff
  • Focus on understanding the usual way and any
    exceptions, alternative routes in, etc.
  • Understand the timing of the steps and the
    information that is available at each step
  • Understand the frequency of later corrections
    and how done
  • Can be because of mobility of students, late
    hires, turnover
  • Cannot fix this after random assignment

16
Understanding Normal Program Operations (cont.)
  • For the kids
  • Do kids apply? If so how and when?
  • If not, how are appropriate kids identified? Who
    is involved? Counselors, other teachers, referral
    agencies? Do they expect all they refer to get
    in?
  • Who decides which kids are accepted?
  • When are these decisions made?
  • What data is normally available or collected on
    the kids at various stages?
  • What percent of those selected actually
    participate?

17
Understanding Normal Program Operations (cont.)
  • For the staff
  • How and when are staff assignments made?
  • What is the usual skill set of staff?
  • What other responsibilities do these staff have
    that might affect your ability to train on
    intervention?
  • Are there other constraints, for example union
    rules?
  • Matching kids with staff and services
  • How and when is this normally done?
  • Is there a tradition of special cases parents,
    staff requesting changes?
  • Is there a tradition of deciding some kids just
    have to have this staff person, program
    services, etc. and these are handled outside the
    usual process?

18
Normal Program Operations (cont.)
  • Ask about information and time available at key
    stages
  • What info is available on kids at different
    stages to see if eligible/appropriate for
    intervention or to serve as baseline data?
  • Is there time to introduce informed consent and
    baseline data collection prior to random
    assignment?
  • When will any research delays be a problem
    because scheduling complicated, because
    teachers/kids/parents need to know what is up,
    etc. ?

19
Examples
  • Individual random assignment
  • After-school services
  • Upward Bound
  • School level random assignment
  • Elementary school teacher professional
    development in reading through summer institutes
    and coaching
  • Middle school teacher professional development in
    math through summer institutes and coaching

20
Focusing on Service Receipt
  • Two parts to this are key because the service
    contrast is what drives impacts
  • Program group Want strong implementation of the
    intervention to intended kids, with intended
    participation
  • Worry about mobility of kids and turnover of
    staff
  • Control group Want clear service contrast for
    the control group
  • Not necessarily no service
  • But clearly different services

21
Picking the Point of Random Assignment
  • How close to the start of services do you put the
    lottery?
  • Choice affects
  • the question you address,
  • the sample,
  • the baseline data you will have, and
  • service participation for program and control
    group
  • The tradeoff
  • Late means greater participation rate for the
    program group but also more hassle for staff,
    harder to plan, more disappointment if not
    selected, and -usually - more motivated control
    group so more services for controls
  • Early means the opposite

22
Examples
  • Individual level random assignment
  • KIPP middle school evaluation
  • Mentoring programs
  • Cluster random assignment
  • The previous professional development examples

23
Setting Random Assignment Ratios
  • This can be part of the site recruitment
    discussion
  • A balanced design is best for power, but not
    necessary
  • The power drop-off is not major until move past
    21
  • An unbalanced design can make a big difference to
    sites and help address ethical concerns
  • A very unbalanced design with many sites is an
    option if data collection costs are manageable
  • Avoiding empty program slots is important
  • Overbook somewhat the program group
  • Use a non-research waiting list to fill empty
    slots
  • In extreme, can set program group size to fill
    available program slots and the control group is
    the rest

24
Handling the Sensitive Cases
  • Much better if do this prior to random assignment
  • Tell programs if absolutely necessary they have a
    few chips they can use prior to the lottery for
    cases where they could not live with control
    group designation
  • They apply to use a chip for a person or cluster
    before random assignment
  • Affects generalizability but not internal
    validity
  • In cluster random assignment, can include some
    extra non-study staff from program clusters in
    program services
  • Sometimes have to accept a crossover to save a
    study
  • Small numbers in a large sample do not matter a
    lot

25
Dont let post-lottery procedures undo the
randomness
  • Post-random assignment allocation of kids to
    clusters
  • Compare school-level random assignment to
    teacher-level random assignment
  • In the latter, important to get commitment of
    kids to clusters or a clear process to do it
    before conduct random assignment

26
Avoid Undoing Randomness
  • Data collection problems
  • Low rates for sample
  • Differential rates across research groups
  • Build tracking into design
  • Try to mesh data collection with normal
    participation in services
  • Create incentives
  • Cover the costs at a minimum
  • Provide positive incentives- there are OMB limits
  • Special incentives for control sample?
  • Clusters
  • Individuals
  • Pay for a local study liaison to coordinate data
    collection

27
Asking the Tough Questions Early
28
Tough Questions to Ask
  • Do you really want to do this or is someone
    forcing you?
  • Do you really understand random assignment?
  • Are you committed to using a lottery to decide
    who gets the intervention and who does not?
  • Do you really understand your roles and
    responsibilities related to
  • Research procedures
  • Data collection
  • Implementation of the intervention

29
More Tough Things to Ask
  • Who could object to the study procedures and are
    you prepared to confront these objections and
    stay the course?
  • unions, parents, governing board, participant
    referral sources
  • Can you devote the staff time needed to manage
    the study and the intervention?

30
Even More Tough Questions to Ask
  • Are you about to (likely to) do something else
    that will affect our ability to pull off the
    study?
  • Change local priorities so not interested?
  • Introduce some other similar intervention so not
    a service contrast?
  • Lay off staff so cannot staff it?
  • Study champion is about to retire or take a new
    job?

31
Still More Tough Questions
  • Are there lurking ethical concerns?
  • Uncertainty about real scarcity?
  • Need to recruit more to have a control group?
  • Local certainty the intervention really works so
    should not deny access?
  • Local certainty can identify those most in need
    who will benefit?
  • Sense of coercion despite informed consent?
  • ????

32
Negotiating and Closing the Deal
33
Negotiating a Formal Agreement
  • A formal, detailed agreement is important
  • It should specify respective roles and
    responsibilities about both program and research
    activities, timelines, costs
  • The agreement must be cleared directly with all
    relevant decision makers
  • The head person must read and sign
  • This takes time but worth the effort in the long
    run

34
Negotiating and setting the stage (cont.)
  • Once signed an agreement is gradually forgotten
    by many
  • Therefore, one must have at least one properly
    placed internal champion to push forward the
    study
  • The champion must be tended and kept engaged via
    ongoing communication
  • Other relationships also matter make the rounds
    periodically
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