NHES:2007
Request for
IMT/OMB Review
August 30, 2006
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Section Page
PART A: JUSTIFICATION 1
Request for Clearance 1
Introduction 1
A.1. Circumstances Necessitating Collection of Information 10
A.2. Purposes and Uses of the Data 14
A.3. Use of Improved Information Technology 15
A.4. Efforts to Identify Duplication 16
A.5. Collection of Data from Small Businesses 25
A.6. Consequences of Less Frequent Data Collection 25
A.7. Special Circumstances 26
A.8. Public Comment and Consultations Outside the Agency 26
A.9. Payments to Respondents 34
A.10. Assurance of Confidentiality 35
A.11. Sensitive Questions 38
A.12. Estimated Response Burden 39
A.13. Annualized Cost to Respondents 41
A.14. Annualized Cost to the Federal Government 41
A.15. Reasons for Program Changes 41
A.16. Publication Plans and Project Schedule 41
A.17. Approval for Not Displaying the Expiration Date for OMB Approval 51
A.18. Exceptions to the Certification Statement 51
PART B. DESCRIPTION OF STATISTICAL METHODOLOGY 53
B.1. Statistical Design and Estimation 53
B.2. Survey Procedures 88
B.3. Methods for Maximizing Response Rates 95
B.4. Tests of Procedures and Methods 97
B.5. Individuals Responsible for Study Design and Performance 109
PART C: JUSTIFICATION OF NHES:2007 QUESTIONNAIRES 111
C.1. Screener 111
C.2. School Readiness and Parent and Family Involvement in Education Interview 118
C.3. Adult Education for Work-Related Reasons Interview 138
C.4. PFI Reinterview 149
References 151
Appendix A: Screener, School Readiness and Parent and Family
Involvement in Education Interview, Adult Education for Work-Related
Reasons Interview, and PFI
Reinterview A-1
Appendix B: Respondent Materials B-1
Appendix C: Details About Sample Size Requirement C-1
LIST OF TABLES
Table Page
Table 1. Estimated response burden for NHES:2007 40
Table 2. Race/ethnicity distribution of completed interviews in NHES:2003: Actual counts and percentages compared to counts and percentages expected without oversampling in the high minority stratum: 2003 62
Table 3. Screener response rates and ever refusal rates, by incentive group: 2003 65
Table 4. Expected numbers of sampled telephone numbers and completed Screeners, and expected residency and Screener unit response rates, by stratum: 2007 73
Table 5. Percentage of telephone households with eligible children, by age/grade group: CPS 2003 80
Table 6. Expected number of screened households in NHES:2007, by household composition: CPS 2003 81
Table 7. Expected number of adults sampled for AEWR interviews, by number of adults and presence of eligible children in household: 2007 82
Table 8. Expected numbers sampled and expected numbers of completed interviews in the telephone sample for NHES:2007 83
Table 9. Comparison of expected number of persons sampled for extended interview in NHES:2007 to the numbers sampled in previous survey administrations 85
Table 10. Comparison of expected numbers of completed interviews in NHES:2007 to the numbers completed in previous survey administrations 86
LIST OF EXHIBITS
Exhibit Page
Exhibit 1. Topics addressed in surveys conducted under the National Household Education Surveys Program and years administered 2
Exhibit 2. NCES Affidavit of Nondisclosure 36
Exhibit 3. Westat Confidentiality Pledge 37
Exhibit 4. NHES 2007 schedule of major activities 51
Exhibit 5. NXXType codes 58
Exhibit 6. Key design features of the NHES:2007 nonresponse bias evaluation 68
Exhibit 7. Overview of the sampling scheme for selecting adults based on household composition 79
LIST OF EXHIBITS-Continued
Exhibit Page
Exhibit C-1. Item-by-item description of the NHES:2007 Screener 116
Exhibit C-2. Item-by-item description of NHES:2007 School Readiness Interview and Parent
and Family Involvement in Education Interview 127
Exhibit C-3. Item-by-item description of NHES-2007 Adult Education for Work-Related Reasons
Interview 143
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PART C. JUSTIFICATION OF NHES:2007 QUESTIONNAIRES
NHES:2007 data will be collected using a Screener, two extended interviews, and a brief reinterview. The NHES:2005 instruments are as follows:
A Screener, required to identify eligible households and persons for extended interview administration.
The School Readiness and Parent and Family Involvement in Education (SR/PFI) interview, to be administered to the parent or guardian most knowledgeable about the care and education of children from age 3 through the 12th grade. Due to some overlap in populations of interest and measures of interest, these two surveys share a single instrument, with specific paths and items designated for children of various ages or grades in school.
The Adult Education for Work-Related Reasons (AEWR) interview, to be administered to persons age 16 and older who are not currently enrolled in 12th grade or below, not institutionalized, and not on active duty in the U.S. armed forces.
The PFI Reinterview, a brief set of questions that will be re-asked of a subsample of PFI respondents for the purposes of examining the response variability of the items. The interview will focus on school choice, identification of the child’s school, and tutoring services.
The NHES:2007 Screener, which is included in Appendix A, serves the same purpose as previous NHES Screeners. The Screener is used to collect information required for sampling children or adults as subjects for extended interviews, to identify the parent or guardian in the household who knows the most about any sampled children, and to learn the whereabouts of sampled adults age 16 to 25 and living in student housing. In addition, the Screener includes an expanded set of items to be asked about household members in cases that are referred for in-person data collection for the bias study. These items will provide information useful in assessing bias in those field cases for which the extended interviews are not completed.
The NHES:2007 Screener will use a “screen-out” question to increase cooperation rates. The screen-out question identifies households that have members age 20 or younger and would potentially be eligible for an SR or PFI interview. The process of household enumeration depends upon the response to this question as well as for which extended interview(s) the household has been sampled. If the household is sampled for possible AEWR sampling, or if the household has members age 20 or younger, all household members will be enumerated. In addition, all household members will be enumerated in address sample cases. Otherwise, if the case is part of the RDD sample, has no members 20 or younger, and is not selected for possible AEWR sampling, no household members will be enumerated. As noted in section B1.2.2, in about one-third of households, no enumeration of household members will be done.
The core items contained in previous NHES Screeners are also contained in the NHES:2007 Screener, i.e., items to identify an appropriate Screener respondent, items to enumerate household members who might be sampled for an extended interview, items to determine children’s enrollment status and grade, and an item pertaining to adult’s participation in educational activities. Additional items for fielded bias study cases include additional demographic characteristics, detail on children’s schools and parent/family involvement, and information about adults’ educational activities and employment. The appropriate respondent for the SR and PFI interviews is also identified in the Screener, as is the relationship of that person to the sampled child. The SR and PFI interviews will be conducted with the parent or guardian in the household identified by the Screener respondent as the person who knows the most about the child’s care and education. The sampled adult will be the respondent for the AEWR interview. Additionally, there are several questions on additional telephones numbers, including cellular phone numbers and computer and fax lines. These questions will aid in more precise weighting. Exhibit C-1, which follows the discussion below, presents an item-by-item justification of the Screener items.
Household and Respondent Eligibility (CNT2000-CNT2450). In the NHES:2007 Screener, the first series of questions will determine that the telephone number belongs to a household and that the person on the telephone is eligible to answer the questions. If the number belongs to a business, the call will be terminated. If the person on the telephone is not a household member or is a household member who is not at least 18 years old, an appropriate Screener respondent will be requested. If there are no household members age 18 or older, the head of the household (irrespective of age) will be asked to respond to the screener.
The Screen-out Question (HHE2010). This item gives Screener respondents more information about the purpose of the interview at a point in the contact when their attention is more likely to be focused on the call. It also will identify households with members age 20 or younger who could potentially be sampled as the subject of an SR or PFI interview.
Enumeration (ENM1100-ENM3000). If the household has children and/or is designated for possible AEWR sampling, the first name, age, and sex of each household member age will be collected. This information will be used along with later items to determine the eligibility of household members for interviews. In addition, household composition is of interest to researchers in the fields of school readiness and parent and family involvement in education.
School Enrollment (SMP1120-SMP1210). Following the enumeration, school enrollment items will determine the enrollment status and current grade for each of the household members age 3 through 20. Information pertinent to sampling for the AEWR interview will also be obtained from the responses to these questions, because household members age 16 or over who are currently attending elementary or secondary school are ineligible for the AEWR component.
Following the collection of school enrollment information, the subjects of the SR and PFI interviews will be selected using a sampling algorithm programmed into the CATI system. If no children are sampled for an SR or PFI interview and the household is not sampled for an AEWR interview, questions will be asked about additional telephone numbers in the household and home ownership (APQ1200-APQ2000 and APW2070), which are used for weighting purposes. Then the Screener will be terminated.
Additional Items About Children for Fielded Cases (SMP1280-SMP1540). As noted above, additional information about children will be obtained in bias study cases referred for in-person data collection. This information will be used when the extended interviews in the household are not completed. The selected items provide additional information about the child’s school and early childhood program participation, family composition, demographic characteristics, and parent involvement.
Most Knowledgeable Respondent and Relationship to Child (MKR1140-MKR1500). If any children are sampled for SR or PFI interviews, the appropriate parent/guardian respondent for each child will be identified by his or her name and relationship to the sampled child. If the Screener respondent is not the respondent for the SR or PFI interview, Screener questions about the child’s school enrollment and grade level will be asked again of the new respondent in the SR or PFI interview so that the most knowledgeable respondent will answer these important questions about the sampled child.
Questions about Adults (AEN1150-AEN1160, ASP1640-ASP1900). This series of questions includes some that are asked about all adults, and some designated for adults in those cases referred for in-person data collection. They are interspersed so as to permit a logical flow. Educational attainment will be collected for each adult in fielded cases. In all households, Screener respondents will be asked about participation in educational activities during the last 12 months for each household member age 16 or older who is not currently enrolled in elementary or secondary school. This is because there is a different probability of participants and nonparticipants being sampled for the AEWR interview, with participants more likely to be sampled. Following this general participation item, information on specific types of educational activities will be asked about adults in fielded cases. In all households, information about employment in the previous 12 months will be collected. While not a determinant of sampling rates, this item will be included in the analysis of nonresponse to the AEWR survey, and will be used in forming nonresponse adjustment cells, if appropriate. Labor force status in the previous week will be collected for adults in fielded bias study cases, as will additional demographic information. The respondent for the AEWR interview will be selected using a sampling algorithm programmed into the CATI system. No more than one adult will be sampled in any household. If no adult is sampled, questions will be asked about additional telephone numbers in the household and home ownership (APQ1200-APQ2000 and SCR1580), which are used for weighting purposes, and household income (SCR1980) for fielded bias study cases. Then the Screener will be terminated.
Military Status (INR1200). Active duty military status of the sampled adult will be ascertained for adults under age 65. Persons currently serving on active duty in the U.S. armed forces are not eligible for an AEWR interview. (This item does not apply to the sampling of children. Children of military personnel are eligible subjects for the SR or PFI interview.)
Location of Sampled Adults (INR1230-INR1240). Some sampled adults who are considered members of the household will be enrolled in postsecondary programs and may be living in school-sponsored housing. Contact information will be collected so that the adults in school-sponsored housing can be contacted for the interview. The same item will be used to code as ineligible those living in private residences at which they could have been sampled and those living in institutional quarters.
Additional Telephone Numbers, Home Ownership, Address Verification, and Household Income (APQ1200-APQ2000, APQ2070, and HHD1140-HHD1380). The Screener respondent will be asked about other telephone numbers in the household and whether they are for home use. Responses to these questions will be used in weighting. Questions on cell phones counted as home use telephone numbers and the number of telephone numbers within the home that are being used for fax and computer lines will be used to aid in weighting. That is, cell phones and computer/fax lines that are not answered for talking will not be considered home telephones for weighting purposes. The respondent will be asked about home ownership (tenure), another weighting factor. Address verification will be asked only of bias study sample cases completed during telephone interviewing, and will used to confirm that the telephone number matches the sampled bias study address. Finally, the respondent will be asked about the household’s income, in bias study cases referred for in-person data collection.
Closing Statements (RST7100, RST9027, RST9040) and Answering Machine Messages (RST3020, RST3030). Also given in at the end of the Screener questionnaire are the closing statements read to respondents. Different closing statements are provided for different circumstances: a nonresidential number, a household in which persons are sampled, and a household in which no persons are sampled. Two answering machine messages are shown: one for households that have never refused, and one for households in refusal status.
Exhibit C-1. Item-by-item description of the NHES:2007 Screener
Item |
Description |
Purpose or research question |
CNT2000/ CNT2200 |
Initial introduction |
Introduce interviewer and sponsor |
CNT2400 |
Household member 18 or older |
Ensure household adult is respondent |
CNT2410 |
Identified head of household if no member is 18 or older |
Identify appropriate respondent |
CNT24500 |
Introduction and confirmation of head of household |
Introduce interviewer and sponsor, ensure respondent is head of household |
CNT2100/ CNT2300 |
Use of phone number |
Identify phone number use as residential |
HHE2010 |
Purpose of study; any household members 20 or younger |
Introduce purpose of study, determine presence of children in eligible age range |
ENM1100 |
Enumeration matrix: children/youth 20 and younger, plus adults if household is sampled for adult enumeration |
Facilitate sampling |
ENM2210 |
Identify person as 21 or older |
Approximate age when exact age is missing; facilitate sampling |
ENM2215 |
Identify age range of respondent |
Approximate age when exact age is missing; facilitate sampling |
ENM3000 |
Enumeration matrix verification |
Verify household membership |
SMP1120 |
School enrollment status of children/youth |
Required for eligibility/sampling |
SMP1140-SMP1170 |
Homeschooling items |
Required for eligibility/sampling |
SMP1200-SMP1210 |
Grade/grade equivalent of children |
Required for eligibility/sampling |
SMP1280 |
Public/private school |
School characteristic for bias study; collected of field cases only |
SMP1320 |
Child now attends day care center/preschool/pre-K/ Head Start |
Early childhood program participation for bias study; collected of field cases only |
SMP1340-SMP1380 |
Family members and nonfamily members in household with child |
Household composition for bias study; collected of field cases only |
SMP1400-SMP1420 |
Child ethnicity and race |
Child demographic and background for bias study, collected of field cases only |
SMP1460-SMP1500 |
Family member attended a school meeting/parent teacher conference/school/class event |
Parent involvement with school for bias study, collected of field cases only |
SMP1540 |
Number of times someone in family read to child in past week |
Adult involvement with reading for bias study, collected of field cases only |
MKR1140-MKR1500 |
Most knowledgeable parent/guardian |
Identify parent/guardian respondent |
AEN1150-AEN1160 |
Interest in adult education |
Transition to questions about adults |
ASP1640 |
Highest grade/year of school completed |
Educational attainment for bias study, collected of field cases only |
ASP1660 |
Earn high school diploma or GED |
Educational attainment for bias study, collected of field cases only |
ASP1710 |
Classes, courses, programs, workshops, training respondent has taken |
Required for eligibility/sampling |
ASP1740-ASP1800 |
College, Vocational, Apprenticeship, and Work-related courses, or classes |
Adult education in the past 12 months for bias study, collected of field cases only |
ASP1820 |
Employed in the past 12 months |
Used in evaluating differential response |
ASP1860 |
Employed in the past week |
Employment status for bias study, collected of field cases only |
ASP1880-ASP1900 |
Adult ethnicity and race |
Demographics for bias study, collected of field cases only |
INR1200 |
Respondent on active duty in U.S. Armed Forces |
Required to determine eligibility of sampled adult |
INR1230-INR1240 |
Location of sampled adult; contact information. |
Required to contact adult living in school housing |
ASP1200-APQ2000 |
Additional telephones in household, home use, computer/fax lines |
Required for weighting |
APQ2070 |
Own/rent home |
Required for weighting |
HHD1140-HHD1280 |
Address confirmation |
Required to confirm that telephone interview was conducted at the sampled address, bias study sample interviews conducted through telephone collection only |
HHD1300-HHD1380 |
Household Income |
Socioeconomic status for bias study, collected of field cases only |
RST7100 |
Thanks respondent, only interviewing in private residences |
Termination statement for nonresidential telephone numbers |
RST9040 |
Close for household members not sampled for extended interviews |
Termination statement if no household members sampled |
RST3020 |
Answering machine message for cases that have never refused |
Interview administration |
RST3030 |
Answering machine message for cases that have refused |
Interview administration |
The NHES:2007 SR-PFI interview draws questionnaire items from several previous NHES administrations, and shares measures with the NHES:2003 PFI and NHES:1993 SR interviews. In addition, some new measures are included on the advice of experts in the respective fields. (See Appendix A for the questionnaires.) The following topics are included in the survey:
School enrollment status
Homeschooling;
Participation in early childhood care and educational programs;
Developmental characteristics such as children’s cognitive abilities and emerging literacy;
Kindergarten enrollment;
School characteristics such as control (public/private), size, grades, and reasons for school choice;
Student experiences in schools and teacher feedback including academic grades and grade repetition;
Parent and family involvement/participation in school and barriers to such participation;
School practices to involve and support families;
Satisfaction with children’s school;
Family involvement in children’s schoolwork;
Family educational activities such as visiting a library, reading to a child and participation in other activities;
Role of parent in preparing child for school;
Communication with other parents;
Children’s health and disability;
Parent characteristics, including marital status, mother’s age at first becoming a mother, language, national origin, educational attainment, and employment status and schedule;
Household characteristics including receipt of public assistance, and income.
There are five paths through the SR-PFI instrument. Each path includes the items appropriate for the five subpopulations of interest for SR-PFI: preschoolers aged 3 to 6 and not in kindergarten or a higher grade (Path N), children who are enrolled in elementary school in kindergarten through fifth grade (Path E), children who are enrolled in middle school/junior high school in sixth through eighth grade (Path M), children who are enrolled in senior high school in ninth through twelfth grade (Path S), and children ages 4 to 18 who are home schooled (Path H). It is important to note that selected sections of the SR/PFI instrument are restricted to children enrolled in kindergarten through second grade. These are items of interest to school readiness in addition to those about preschoolers.
Month and year of birth and the relationship of all household members to the child are collected at the outset of the interview. School enrollment or homeschooling status is collected for all children. Homeschooling parents are then asked detailed questions on homeschooling, and are set to a path where they answer questions on home activities with their children in a later section of the instrument. Parents of preschoolers are asked about their preschool or Head Start participation. Parents of preschoolers are asked further questions about children’s developmental characteristics, and parents of preschoolers and early elementary school are asked about kindergarten plans or experiences. Parents of children in kindergarten through high school, except homeschooling parents, are administered questions on their children’s school, their experiences in school and their expectations of their children’s future education. Parents of children enrolled in elementary/secondary school (i.e., excluding homeschooled children) are asked about their children’s experiences in school and feedback from teachers on school performance, their involvement in school, school practices to involve families, parents’ satisfaction with school, barriers to effective participation in school, and their involvement in schoolwork. All parents, including parents of homeschoolers, are asked questions on their home activities and family involvement outside of school including reading activities as well as a variety of other learning activities. Finally, parents of all children are administered items on their children’s health and disability and demographic characteristics, the characteristics of parents/guardians residing in the household, and household characteristics.
Below, the survey items are discussed in more detail. Included are references to the research questions outlined in section A.16.2. The descriptions are presented in the order the questions appear in the printed instrument. Skip instructions, which have been programmed in the CATI system, are noted on the questionnaire in boxes and in parentheses following the appropriate items. The order in which the questions are administered depends upon the path for the particular interview and is determined by the child’s age. The interview paths are noted for each section described below. An item-by-item listing is given at the end of this description.
Age Confirmation, Household Relationships, and Child & Parent Language (PAR1100–PAR1960; all paths). These initial items determine eligibility for questionnaire administration and guide displays for question wording and skip patterns through the instrument. These items collect the following specific information:
The month and year of birth is required to ensure that the child is within the eligible age range for the survey and will be used for weighting. If the child is over age 20 as of December 31, 2006, the interview will be terminated at this point.
The items concerning the relationships of household members to the child are included for two reasons. First, they are analytically meaningful in terms of describing the child’s family structure and home environment. Second, the items will be used to determine the ways in which several subsequent questions concerning one or both of the parents/guardians are asked.
Current School Status (PSS1100-PSS1640; all children who are sampled). The series of items determining the current enrollment status and grade of the child is required in order to “route” the case to the appropriate interview path. Tracking the participation of children who are at various levels of school enrollment at different points in time is of central interest for researchers who have used the NHES data. If the SR/PFI respondent answered these questions in the Screener, they will not be repeated.
Homeschooling (PHS1100-PHS4120: parents of homeschoolers). NHES is one of the few sources of national data on homeschooling in the United States. The items in this section include the prevalence of home schooling among sample respondents, time spent homeschooling every week, whether homeschooling associations and other organizations play a role in such instruction either directly by providing curricula and other materials or by organizing activities for parents and children (PFI research question 9). The reasons for homeschooling by parents are also covered in this section. The homeschooling section in the SR/PFI NHES:2007 builds on the section on homeschooling in PFI-NHES:2003 by asking more detailed questions on specific activities that parents and children are involved in as well as the role of homeschooling associations.
Early Childhood Care and Programs (PCC1100-PCC1500; path N). This section of the instrument collects information on children’s participation in early childhood programs, including center-based daycare, preschool, pre-kindergarten, and Head Start. The items in this section will provide information on the extent of current participation in center-based early childhood programs, and the amount of time children spend in current arrangements or programs, addressing questions in SR research question 4. This information can in turn be related to children’s personal, family, and household characteristics. The following information is collected in this section:
Participation in center-based early childhood programs;
Whether nonparticipating children ever attended a daycare center, preschool, or Head Start program;
The number of hours per week that children attend early childhood programs;
Parents’ involvement in children’s daycare center/preschool program; and
Whether the child ever attended a Head Start program.
Developmental Characteristics (PDC1100-PDC1420: path N). This section covers questions on things that different children do at different ages and is asked of parents of preschoolers. It emphasizes the school readiness of young children (SR research question 2). These questions on children’s level of development cover topics such as whether the child can recognize the letters of the alphabet, how high the child can count, whether the child is overly active and is able to sit still, and the child’s language and verbal skills.
Kindergarten-Related Items (PKG1100-PKG1680: parents of preschoolers and children in grades K through 2, not including homeschoolers). The questions in this section focus on children’s kindergarten experience for children who have already been enrolled in kindergarten. In the case of children who have not yet enrolled in kindergarten, it covers parents’ plans for kindergarten enrollment. The questions in this section include the timing and age of child at kindergarten enrollment and the reasons for the delay in entry into kindergarten (SR research question 3).
School Characteristics (PSC1100-PSC1780: paths E, M, S). This section covers questions that are asked of all parents with children in elementary, middle or high school who are not homeschoolers. This covers topics such as whether a school is a private or public school, whether it is a school that has been assigned or is a school that parents have chosen for their children.
A series of questions (PSC1180-PSC1380) asks for information on whether parents chose the school that their children are enrolled in, including the information that parents obtained about the school before making a choice and the reasons for school choice if children attend a school that their parents chose for them.
A new feature of this section of the questionnaire is the ability to be linked to a school lookup file that provides information on schools in the United States based on the name of the school. In case, the name of the school mentioned by the parent cannot be matched to the schools listed in the school lookup file, additional information on school characteristics is obtained from parents who respond to the survey (PSC1584-1680). This covers topics such as whether the school is a charter school, a Catholic school or other school affiliated with a religion, and the size and grade levels in the school. Several of the research questions related to parent and family involvement in education examine the extent to which school characteristics are associated with school practices and parents’ involvement with schools. (PFI research question 4c, for example).
Student Experiences, Teacher Feedback, and Adjustment (PSE1100-2600: paths E, M, S, selected items for parents of preschoolers in center-based programs). This section mainly covers parents with children in elementary, middle school, or high school. However, limited items are asked of parents of preschoolers enrolled in center-based programs. This section of the instrument includes items that cover several topics.
Student experiences in school including grades and other measures of academic performance (PSE1320-PSE1340);
Teacher feedback on child’s school performance and behavior and child adjustment (PSE1560-PSE1660);
Children’s enrollment in advance placement classes or English immersion programs (PSE1760-PSE1840);
A detailed series of questions on grade repetition (PSE1860-PSE1900); and
Parents’ plans for their children’s college education including their educational expectations of their children and whether anyone has opened an account to save for their childen’s college education (PSE2400-PSE2600).
Family Involvement in School (PFS1060-PFS1720: paths E, M, S). An important part of the SR/PFI:NHES2007 instrument is information obtained from parents on their involvement in their children’s education and school related activities (PFI research question 1). The SR and PFI research questions are outlined in Part A.16.2 of this document relate research topics such as parents social networks and ties (PFI research question 2a), parent assessments of the school environment (PFI research question 4e), language, cultural barriers and parental efficacy (PFI research question 5), and the relationship of the children’s health and disability status (PFI research question 8) to family involvement in schooling.
This section covers questions on the frequency and nature of parents’ involvement in school including attending meetings, volunteering, serving on school committees, and other types of contact with school staff and teachers.
School Practices to Involve and Support Families (PSP1120-PSP1580: paths E, M S). Another aspect of parent’s contact with school includes school practices to communicate with parents regarding their children. This section includes items that cover this topic. Schools contact parents for various reasons including students’ performance, other methods and opportunities that can help children in their education, planning for attending college or work after completion of education (PSP1300-PSP1580). The nature of contact could include contact via letters or newsletters as well as email or through the use of a website that provides school information. Parents’ perceptions of communication by the school are addressed in PFI research questions 3 and 4 both in terms of measuring the extent of communication as well as relating them to family involvement in schooling and homework and other activities or school characteristics.
Satisfaction with School (PIS1280-PIS1360: paths E, M S). This section covers questions on parental satisfaction with the school, with the child’s teacher, academic standards of the school, discipline, and how the school staff interacts with parents.
Factors Affecting Parent and Family Participation in School (PFP1100-PFP1580: paths E, M, S). This is a new section that has been included in the SR/PFI:NHES 2007 instrument based on comments from technical experts who were contacted during the process of questionnaire development. Given the diverse nature of the sample including immigrant populations and persons belonging to low-income and other socially disadvantaged groups, there is an increased need to collect information on the experiences of these groups in their contact with schools and whether they face any barriers that limit their participation. The series of questions in this section cover topics that are useful in answering PFI research questions 4 and 5 on school practices and specific barriers to family participation, respectively. The types of barriers in this section include logistic barriers such as parents work and family schedules, childcare, and linguistic and other barriers including whether the school is welcoming to parents. Questions on whether parents trust the schools and school staff as well as whether they are able to communicate with school staff personnel in case of problems are also addressed. Finally, questions on parental efficacy in their involvement in children’s schooling are also included in this section.
Family Involvement in Schoolwork (PSW1100-PSW1860: paths E, M, S). In addition to parents involvement in children’s schools, equally important is family involvement in homework related activities. This section covers questions that address this topic (PFI research question 6). The research questions that relate family involvement in homework to school communication and other school practices (PFI research questions 3c and 4b), and rules regarding homework (PFI research question 6d) will also be addressed by information gathered through the questions listed in this section.
This section covers questions that determine the extent of homework that children get, the home environment that families create to do homework, the involvement of parents and other family/non-family members in ensuring that children complete their homework. This section also covers whether a child has received free tutoring or any other tutoring and parent satisfaction with tutoring services.
Home Activities/Family Involvement Outside of School (PHA1100-PHA4040: all paths including homeschoolers). Activities with potential educational benefits that families can do together are measured in this section of the questionnaire. All questions in this section are also addressed to parents of homeschoolers with the appropriate grade equivalent as well as parents of children attending school. The items in this section address PFI research question 7 and SR research question 1. They can also be examined in relation to parent perceptions of school communication and other school practices as addressed by the research questions.
Parents of young children (preschoolers and those in kindergarten through second grade) are asked about reading to their children, the amount of time spent reading every day and whether they visited a library or bookstore in the past month. Parents of preschoolers and children in elementary school are asked about other activities such as telling a story, doing arts and crafts, playing sports and games or getting involved in other projects. Parents of older children who are in middle or high school are asked similar questions about activities that are appropriate to their age. All parents of children in this section are asked to report on the activities done with their child in the past week and in the past month.
New subsections that have been added to this section in the SR/PFI: NHES 2007 instrument include questions on television viewing which will be gathered from parents of children in second grade or below. In addition, this section focuses on activities the child participates in outside of school. With the intention of capturing the home literacy and learning environment of children, a question on parent’s reading has also been included (PHA4040).
Role of Parent in Preparing Child for School (PRP1100-PRP1240: path N). This section contains a series of items that address questions on parents’ perceptions of their role in preparing their children for school. Only parents of preschoolers are asked questions in this section. Some of the items in this section include whether parents feel that it is their role to teach children the alphabet, teach children numbers, discipline children, and teach them how to share. These items address SR research question 6.
Communication with Other Parents (PCS1100-PCS1120: paths E, M, S, H). This section was added to the survey to examine the role of the community and social networks and ties of parents and the role they play in facilitating parents’ and families’ involvement in their children’s education (PFI research question 2), but was substantially reduced following the field test. The remaining question is administered only once for each household and provides information on the extent to which parents of sampled children are in communication with the parents of other children in the school or community.
Health and Disability (PHD1100-PHD1980; all paths). This section includes items to identify disabled children and to determine whether children with disabilities are receiving services. The presence of disabilities is an important risk factor for all children and is related to children’s development and educational experiences in the preschool years as well as their later experiences in school. These items will also provide the data to analyze the accessibility of special education and other programs and plans for disabled children, an issue that is addressed in PFI research question 8 and SR question 5. New items include questions involving concerns about the child’s weight and whether the child is covered by health insurance.
Race and Country of Origin (PRC1100-PRC1240: all paths). This section collects demographic information on the child’s race/ethnicity and country of origin. These characteristics can be correlated with the various levels of family involvement in children’s education.
Parent/Guardian Characteristics (PFG1160-PFG2080, PMG1100-PMG2000; all paths). This section collects information on the child’s parents or guardians who reside in the household: mother and father, partner of a parent, other guardians if parents are not present, or grandmother and grandfather if parents are not present. If two children in the same household are sampled, the items regarding the mother’s and father’s characteristics are asked only once, unless the children have different parents.
The topics for mothers include age at first becoming a mother or guardian, native language, country of origin, educational attainment, and employment status. The same items are asked for fathers, except for the age at first becoming a parent. These items on parental characteristics measure risk factors that could be associated with each of the children’s development and progress through school. Other questions within both parent characteristics sections can be used to relate family involvement in education with parents’ characteristics including their education, and choice of employment.
Household Characteristics (PHH1100-PHH1580; all paths). This final series of items collects information about internet access at home, ZIP Code, receipt of public assistance, times a family has moved, and household income. These items will be asked once in each household during the first extended interview and will be copied to the records of other interviews in the household. The household income, and Screener data on telephone numbers and home ownership will be used in forming weighting classes for estimating national statistics. The ZIP Code variable allows for the linkage of NHES data to demographic information from the decennial Census of Population. Receipt of public assistance and household income are used to classify families according to the economic resources available to them, and to examine the relationship of the family’s economic status to early childhood program participation.
Exhibit C-2. Item-by-item description of NHES:2007 School Readiness Interview and Parent and Family Involvement in Education Interview
Item |
Description |
Purpose or research question - SR |
Purpose or research question - PFI |
PAR1100 |
Introduction if person is not screener respondent |
Inform respondent of sponsor, purpose, voluntary nature, and confidentiality |
Inform respondent of sponsor, purpose, voluntary nature, and confidentiality |
PAR1140, PAR1150 |
Confirm child’s date of birth, (month/year) |
Required for eligibility/sampling |
Required for eligibility/sampling |
PAR1320 |
Confirm child’s age |
Required for eligibility/sampling |
Required for eligibility/sampling |
PAR1360 |
Relationship of each individual in household to child |
Introduce section asking about the relationship of each individual to child |
Introduce section asking about the relationship of each individual to child |
PAR1470, PAR1480 |
Relationship of respondent to child |
Required for eligibility/sampling |
Required for eligibility/sampling |
PAR1640, PAR1680 |
Type of mother (birth, adoptive, stepmother, foster) |
Required for eligibility/sampling |
Required for eligibility/sampling |
PAR1720, PAR1740 |
Type of father (birth, adoptive, stepfather, foster father) |
Required for eligibility/sampling |
Required for eligibility/sampling |
PAR1860, PAR1900 |
Language child speaks most at home |
Demographic/background |
Demographic/background |
PAR1920, PAR1960 |
Language respondent speaks most at home |
Demographic/background |
Demographic/background |
PSS1100 |
Child enrolled in preschool/kindergarten/school |
Required to set path |
Required to set path |
PSS1140 |
Is child being schooled at home? |
Required to set path |
Required to set path, Research question 9 |
PSS1160 |
Child is schooled at home instead of at school for some classes |
Required to set path |
Research question 9a |
PSS1200 |
Is all instruction at home or some at school, some at home |
Required to set path |
Research question 9a |
PSS1220 |
Hours per week child goes to school for instruction |
Required to set path |
Research question 9a |
PSS1300 |
Grade or year in school child is attending |
Required to set path |
Required to set path |
PSS1320 |
If 94, we will be referring to kindergarten |
Clarification for respondent |
Clarification for respondent |
PSS1340 |
If 96, we will be referring to prefirst grade |
Clarification for respondent |
Clarification for respondent |
PSS1400 |
Who is most knowledgeable parent/guardian about child’s care and education |
Required to identify parent/ guardian respondent |
Required to identify parent/ guardian respondent |
PSS1460 |
Grade child would be attending if school had regular grades |
Required to set path |
Required to set path |
PSS1480 |
If 94, this refers to kindergarten |
Clarification for respondent |
Clarification for respondent |
Exhibit C-2. Item-by-item description of NHES:2007 School Readiness Interview and Parent and Family Involvement in Education Interview–Continued
PSS1490 |
If 96, this refers to prefirst grade |
Clarification for respondent |
Clarification for respondent |
PHS1100 |
Introduction to items about family’s homeschooling experiences |
|
Transition Statement |
PHS1120, PHS1140 |
Person in household who mainly homeschools child |
|
Research question 9 |
PHS1200 |
Use of private tutor or teacher for home instruction |
|
Research question 9 |
PHS1220 |
Days each week child is homeschooled |
|
Research question 9 |
PHS1280 |
Total hours per week child is homeschooled |
|
Research question 9 |
PHS1320 |
Family participation in homeschooling association |
|
Research question 9 |
PHS1340 |
Number of times family attended activities/meetings of homeschooling association |
|
Research question 9 |
PHS1380 |
Child’s participation in activities with other homeschooled children |
|
Research question 9 |
PHS1400 - PHS1540 |
Sources of curriculum/books used to homeschool child |
|
Research question 9 |
PHS1560 |
In homeschooling, use of curriculum or books from Internet sites |
|
Research questions 9b, 9e |
PHS1600 - PHS1700 |
Sources of other services/activities used in homeschooling child |
|
Research question 9 |
PHS1720 |
Homeschooled child taking courses over the internet |
|
Research questions 9b, 9e |
PHS1730 |
Internet instruction for homeschoolers provided by a public school |
|
Research questions 9b, 9e |
PHS1795 |
Grade(s) child was home schooled for some classes or subjects (all grades and K, all grades other than K, some grades but not all) |
|
Research question 9c |
PHS1800 |
Which grades was child schooled at home for some classes/subjects |
|
Research question 9c |
PHS3020 - PHS4080 |
Reasons parents choose to homeschool their child |
|
Research question 9d |
PHS4120 |
Most important reason for homeschooling child |
|
Research question 9d |
PCC1100 |
Introduction to daycare centers/early childhood programs |
Transition statement |
|
PCC1140 |
Child now attends day care center/preschool/preK/Head Start |
Research questions 4a |
|
PCC1260 |
Child ever gone to preschool/preK/Head Start/day care center |
Research questions 4a |
|
Exhibit C-2. Item-by-item description of NHES:2007 School Readiness Interview and Parent and Family Involvement in Education Interview–Continued
PCC1380 |
Hours/week child goes to daycare center or preschool |
Research questions 4a |
|
PCC1420 |
Number of times parent went to meetings/participated in activities/volunteered at daycare/preschool |
Research question 4b |
|
PCC1500 |
Did child ever attend Head Start/Early Head Start/Home Head Start |
Research question 4a |
|
PDC1100 |
Introduction to developmental characteristics |
Transition statement |
|
PDC1120 |
Identification of colors (red/yellow/blue/green) by name |
Research questions 2a, 2c, 2d, 4b, 4c |
|
PDC1160 |
Recognition of letters of the alphabet |
Research questions 2a., 2c, 2d, 4b, 4c |
|
PDC1180 |
Highest number child counts to |
Research questions 2a, 2c, 2d, 4b, 4c |
|
PDC1240 |
Writes first name even if letters are not quite right |
Research questions 2a, 2c, 2d, 4b, 4c |
|
PDC1260 |
Child rhymes words |
Research questions 2a, 2c, 2d, 4b, 4c |
|
PDC1280 |
Recognizes beginning sound of a word |
Research questions 2a, 2c, 2d, 4b, 4c |
|
PDC1340 |
Holds pencil using three fingers/grips it in fist |
Research questions 2c, 2d, 4b, 4c |
|
PDC1380 |
Is he/she overly active or can’t sit still |
Research questions 2c, 2d, 4b, 4c |
|
PDC1420 |
When child speaks how often are they understood by a stranger |
Research questions 2b, 2c, 2d, 4b, 4c |
|
PKG1100 |
Introduction to questions about enrolling child in kindergarten |
Transition statement |
Transition statement |
PKG1300 |
When do you expect child to start kindergarten |
Research question 3a |
|
PKG1360 |
Expect child to enroll in kindergarten based on date of birth/will you wait until child is older |
Research question 3a |
Research question 1a |
PKG1460, PKG1480 |
Age in years and months when child first started kindergarten/prefirst grade |
Research question 3c, 4 |
Research question 1a |
PKG1680 |
Child attends full-day/part-day kindergarten/prefirst grade |
Research question 4 |
|
PSC1100 |
Introduction to questions regarding school child attends |
|
Transition statement |
PSC1140 |
Child attends public or private school |
|
School characteristics |
PSC1180 |
Regularly assigned school or school you chose |
|
Research questions 1b |
PSC1220 |
Is school in your assigned school district |
|
Research questions 1b |
PSC1240 |
Parent can choose the school child will attend in school district/another district |
|
Research questions 1b |
PSC1260 |
Consider other schools for child |
|
Research questions 1b |
PSC1280 |
Seek information on performance of schools (test scores) |
|
Research questions 1b, 1d, 2a |
PSC1300 |
Talk to other parents about schools their children attend before choosing school |
|
Research questions 1b, 1d, 2a |
Exhibit C-2. Item-by-item description of NHES:2007 School Readiness Interview and Parent and Family Involvement in Education Interview–Continued
PSC1340 |
Is school child attends your first choice for him/her |
|
Research questions 1b, 1c, |
PSC1360, PSC1380 |
Main reason you chose the school child attends |
|
Research questions 1b, 1c |
PSC1420 |
Move to neighborhood so child eligible for current school |
|
Research questions 1b, 1c |
PSC1500 |
Identify name of child’s school |
|
School characteristics |
PSC1520 |
Name of school if no electronic match |
|
School characteristics |
PSC1540 |
Street address of school |
|
School characteristics |
PSC1560 |
City where school is located |
|
School characteristics |
PSC1580 |
State where school is located |
|
School characteristics |
PSC1584 |
Is the school a charter school |
|
School characteristics |
PSC1588 |
Child’s school affiliated with a religion |
|
School characteristics |
PSC1590 |
Is the child’s school a Catholic school? |
|
School characteristics |
PSC1600 |
Lowest grade taught at child’s school |
|
School characteristics |
PSC1640 |
Highest grade taught at child’s school |
|
School characteristics |
PSC1680 |
Estimate of number of students enrolled in child’s school |
|
School characteristics |
PSC1760 |
Since September, was child in same school |
|
Research question 1 |
PSC1780 |
Month child started current school |
|
Research question 1 |
PSE1100 |
Introduction to student experiences at current school/preschool |
Transition statement |
Transition statement |
PSE1180 |
Child enjoys school/preschool |
Research question 4 |
Research question 4e |
PSE1320 |
Student’s overall grades this school year |
|
Research questions 1g, 1h, 4e, 6a, 6c, 7a |
PSE1340 |
Overall description of student’s work |
|
Research question s 1g, 1h, 4e, 6a, 6c, 7a |
PSE1560 |
Teacher/school contact with child’s mother/father about child’s behavior |
Research questions 4 |
Research questions 3a, 3c, 3d |
PSE1620 |
Teacher/school contact about child’s problems with school work |
Research questions 4 |
Research questions 3a, 3c |
PSE1660 |
Teacher/school contact when child is doing better |
Research question 4 |
Research questions 3a, 3c |
PSE1760 |
Child enrolled in advanced placement classes |
|
Research questions 1g, 1h, 6a, 6c, 7a, 8c |
PSE1840 |
Currently enrolled in ESL, bilingual education or English immersion program |
|
Research questions 1g, 1h, 6a, 6c, 7a, 8c |
PSE1860 |
Has child repeated any grades |
Research question 3b |
Research questions 1g, 1h, 6a, 6c, 7a, 8c |
Exhibit C-2. Item-by-item description of NHES:2007 School Readiness Interview and Parent and Family Involvement in Education Interview–Continued
PSE1900 |
Grade or grades child repeated |
Research question 3b |
Research questions 1g, 1h, 6a, 6c, 7a, 8c |
PSE2320 - PSE2380 |
Has child had an out-of-school/in-school suspension/been expelled/changed schools because of problem behaviors |
|
Research questions 1g, 1h, 6a, 6c, 7a, 8c |
PSE2400 |
Introduction to child’s future education |
|
Transition statement |
PSE2440 |
Expectation of how far child will go in their education |
|
Research question 1h |
PSE2500 |
Family member plans to pay for child’s education after high school |
|
Research question 1h |
PSE2520 |
What family has done to prepare for college expenses |
|
Research question 1h |
PSE2600 |
Has anyone applied for a scholarship/grant for the child |
|
|
PFS1060 |
Introduction regarding family’s involvement in child’s school |
|
Transition statement |
PFS1140 - PFS1680 |
Family member attended school meeting/parent teacher conference/school/class event/volunteered/raised funds/served on a committee/met with student counselor |
|
Research questions 1d, 1f, 1g, 1h, 2a, 3c, 4e, 5a, 5b, 5c, 8a 8c, |
PFS1720 |
Number of times household member went to meetings/participated in activities at child’s school |
|
Research questions 1d, 1f, 1g, 1h, 2a, 3c, 4e, 5a, 5b, 5c, 8a, 8c |
PSP1120 - PSP1200 |
Child’s teacher/school contacted you first before you contacted them |
|
Research questions 3a, 3c, 3d |
PSP1300 - PSP1580
|
School reports on how child is doing between report cards/how to help with homework/why child is in a certain group/planning for college/vocational school/parents’ expected role at school |
|
Research question 1g, 3a-3c |
PIS1280 - PIS1360 |
Satisfaction with child’s school/teachers/academic standards/discipline/staff interaction with parents |
|
Research questions 4e, 8e |
PFP1100 |
Introduction to factors affecting involvement |
|
Transition statement |
PFP1140 |
School holds meetings that fit work/family schedules |
|
Research question 4e, 5c |
PFP1180 |
Lack of childcare prevented participation in school meetings or activities |
|
Research question 4e, 5c |
PFP1220 - PFP1300 |
Parents know how to help child do well in school/parents trust school staff/school is welcoming to the family/parents’ responsibility to teach value of education/parents should attend meetings with teachers |
|
Research question 1f |
PFP1440 |
Contact with child’s school/teacher if parent disagrees with a school decision |
|
Research questions 1f, 1g, 3c, 4e, 5a, 5b, 5c |
Exhibit C-2. Item-by-item description of NHES:2007 School Readiness Interview and Parent and Family Involvement in Education Interview–Continued
PFP1540 |
Difficult to participate in school activities because a family member speaks a language other than English |
|
Research question 5a |
PFP1560 - PFP1580 |
Are interpreters available that speak your language for meetings or have newsletters translated |
|
Research questions 3b, 3c, 4a, 4b, 4c, 4d, 4e, 5a |
PSW1100 |
Introduction to questions about child’s homework |
|
Transition statement |
PSW1120 |
How often does child do homework per week outside of school |
|
Research questions 3c, 4b, 6a, 6b, 6d |
PSW1140 |
Hours per week child spends on homework outside of school |
|
Research question 6 |
PSW1200 |
Feelings about amount of homework child is assigned |
|
Research question 3c, 4a, 4b, 4c, 4d, 6a, 8c |
PSW1240 |
Place in home set aside for him/her to do homework |
|
Research questions 3c, 4b, 6a, 6c, 6d |
PSW1260 |
Family rules about doing homework |
|
Research question 6d |
PSW1320 |
Adult in household checks to see if homework is done |
|
Research questions 3c, 4b, 6a, 6b, 6d |
PSW1700 |
How often people help him/her with homework/week |
|
Research questions 3c, 4b, 6a, 6b, 6d |
PSW1790 |
Parents received information about free tutoring |
|
Departmental information needed for NCLB |
PSW1800 |
Has child received free tutoring outside of regular school |
|
Departmental information needed for NCLB |
PSW1810 |
Parents’ satisfaction with tutoring services |
|
Departmental information needed for NCLB |
PSW1820 |
Has child received any other tutoring this school year? |
|
Departmental information needed for NCLB |
PSW1830 |
Overall satisfaction with other tutoring services |
|
Departmental information needed for NCLB |
PSW1840, PSW1850, PSW1860 |
Amount household pays for child’s tutoring |
|
Departmental information needed for NCLB |
PHA1100 |
Introduction to child’s activities with family members in past week |
|
Introduction to child’s activities with family members |
PHA1140 |
Number of books child owns |
Research question 1a |
Research questions 3c, 4b, 7a |
PHA1160 |
Number of times someone in family read to child in past week |
Research question 1a |
Research questions 3c, 4b, 7a |
PHA1260 |
Who in family read to child in past week |
Research question 1a |
Research questions 3c, 4b, 7a |
PHA1460 |
How many minutes per day did family member read to him/her |
Research question 1a |
Research questions 3c, 4b, 7a |
Exhibit C-2. Item-by-item description of NHES:2007 School Readiness Interview and Parent and Family Involvement in Education Interview–Continued
PHA1560 - PHA1680 |
Do people stop reading and ask child what is in picture/point out letters/ask child to read with you/talk about what happened |
Research question 1a |
Research questions 3c, 4b, 7a |
PHA1740 |
Child can read story books on his/her own |
Research question 1b |
|
PHA1780 |
Child reads words in book, looks at book/pretends to read |
Research question 1b |
|
PHA1800 |
Child looks at a book with pictures and pretends to read |
Research question 1b |
|
PHA1820 |
Number of times child read/pretended to read to a family member in the past week |
Research question 1a |
Research questions 3c, 4b, 7a |
PHA1840 |
Use of electronic learning systems such as Leap Pad |
Research question 1a |
|
PHA1880 - PHA1960 |
Activities of child with family members in past week: Preschoolers |
Research question 1d |
Research questions 3c, 4b, 7a |
PHA1980 - PHA2100 |
Activities of child with family members in past week: Elementary school children |
Research question 1d |
Research questions 3c, 4b, 7a |
PHA2120 - PHA2160 |
Activities of child with family members in past week: Children in middle and high school |
Research question 1d |
Research questions 3c, 4b, 7a |
PHA2170 |
Number of times family has eaten dinner together in past week |
Research question 1d |
Research question 7a |
PHA2220 - PHA2380 |
Activities of child with family members in past month |
Research question 1d |
Research questions 3c, 4b, 7a |
PHA2870 |
Introduction to television viewing |
Transition statement |
|
PHA2900 |
Whether child watches TV/videos on a weekday |
Research question 1c |
|
PHA2905 |
Number of hours child watches TV/videos on a weekday |
Research question 1c |
|
PHA2920 |
Whether child watches TV/videos on a day in the weekend |
Research question 1c |
|
PHA2925 |
Number of hours child watches TV/videos on a day in the weekend |
Research question 1c |
|
PHA2960, PHA2980 |
TV networks/channels child watches at least once/week |
Research question 1c |
|
PHA3100 |
Channel child watches most often |
Research question 1c |
|
PHA3160 |
Family rules about what TV programs or how much TV child can watch |
Research question 1g |
Research question 7 |
PHA3280 |
Whether child participated in any school activities |
|
Research questions 7a |
PHA3380 - PHA3520 |
Activities child participates in outside of school during this school year |
|
Research questions 3c, 4b, 7a |
Exhibit C-2. Item-by-item description of NHES:2007 School Readiness Interview and Parent and Family Involvement in Education Interview–Continued
PHA4040 |
Last week how often did you read a book/newspaper/magazine in print or online |
Research question 1 |
|
PRP1100 |
Introduction to role of parents in preparing child for school |
Transition statement |
|
PRP1140 - PRP1240 |
Role of mother/father in participating in school readiness activities with child |
Research question 6 |
|
PCS1100 |
Introduction to contacts with other parents/community organizations/classes/support services |
|
Transition statement |
PCS1120 |
How many parents do you talk to regularly in neighborhood with children about same age as yours |
|
Research question 2a |
PHD1100 |
Introduction to questions about child’s health |
Transition statement |
Transition statement |
PHD1140 |
Child weighed less than 5 and a half pounds at birth |
Research question 5a |
|
PHD1160 |
Child weighed less that 3 pounds when they were born |
Research question 5a |
|
PHD1200 |
Was child born more than 4 weeks premature? |
Research question 5a |
|
PHD1220 |
Number of days in hospital after child was born |
Research question 5a |
|
PHD1260 |
Early Intervention Services/Individualized Family Service Plan before age 3? |
Research question 5a |
Research questions 8b, 8c, 8d |
PHD1280 |
General rating of child’s health |
Research question 5a |
Research questions 8a, 8c |
PHD1300 |
Child’s health insurance |
Research question 5b |
Research question 8 |
PHD1340 |
Doctor/health professional concerned about child’s weight |
Research question 5a |
Research question 8a |
PHD1350 |
Doctor/health professional concerned about child’s overweight/underweight |
Research question 5a |
Research questions 8a, 8c |
PHD1360 – PHD1560 |
Does child have a disability diagnosed by a health professional |
Research question 5d |
Research questions 8a, 8b, 8c |
PHD1600 - PHD1680 |
Is child receiving services for his/her condition |
Research question 5d |
Research question 8d |
PHD1740 |
Services provided through an Individualized Educational Program/Plan |
|
Research questions 8d, 8e |
PHD1780 |
Did you work with the school to develop/change his/her IEP |
|
Research question 8f |
PHD1800 |
Is child enrolled in any special education classes/services? |
|
Research questions 8d, 8e |
PHD1840 - PHD1900 |
Satisfaction with aspects of child’s IEP or special education classes or services |
|
Research question 8g |
PHD1980 |
Does child’s disability affect his/her ability to learn |
Research question 5c, 5d |
Research question 8c |
PRC1100 |
Introduction to questions about child’s background |
Transition statement |
Transition statement |
Exhibit C-2. Item-by-item description of NHES:2007 School Readiness Interview and Parent and Family Involvement in Education Interview–Continued
PRC1120, PRC1140 PRC1160 |
State, country or territory where child was born |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PRC1200 |
Age when child first moved to U.S./50 states /D.C. |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PRC1240- PRC1280 |
Origin and race of child |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PFG1160 |
Introduction to items about child’s mother/female guardian |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PFG1200 |
Age of mother/female guardian when first became mother |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PFG1240 |
Marital status of mother |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PFG1300 |
Mother/guardian living with a partner |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PFG1340, PFG1360 |
First language mother/guardian learned to speak |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PFG1420, PFG1440 |
Language mother/guardian speaks most at home now |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PFG1480, PFG1500, PFG1520 |
State/country/territory where mother/guardian was born |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PFG1580, PFG1620, PFG1630 |
Mother’s origin, and race |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PFG1640, PFG1660, PFG1680 |
Highest grade/year of school mother/female guardian completed |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PFG1700, PFG1740 |
Education of mother/female guardian |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PFG1820 |
Did child’s mother work a job for pay/income last week |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PFG1840 |
Mother on leave/vacation from a job last week |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PFG1860 |
Total hours mother works for pay/income per week |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Exhibit C-2. Item-by-item description of NHES:2007 School Readiness Interview and Parent and Family Involvement in Education Interview–Continued
PFG1940 |
Number of months mother worked for pay/income in last year |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PFG1980, PFG2000 - PFG2060 |
Child’s mother actively looking for work and how |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PFG2080 |
Mother is attending school/college/university/adult learning center/job training center |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PMG1100 |
Introduction to father/male guardian |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PMG1140 |
Father/guardian’s marital status |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PMG1200 |
Father/guardian living with a partner |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PMG1220, PMG1240
|
First language father spoke |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PMG1300, PMG1320 |
Language father speaks most at home now |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PMG1360, PMG1380, PMG1400 |
State/country/territory where father was born |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PMG1480, PMG1520, PMG1530 |
Father’s origin and race |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PMG1540, PMG1560, PMG1580, PMG1600, PMG1640 |
Education of father |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PMG1720 |
Child’s father worked a job for pay/income last week |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PMG1740
|
Child’s father on leave/vacation during the past week |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PMG1760 |
Total hours per week child’s father works for pay/income |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Exhibit C-2. Item-by-item description of NHES:2007 School Readiness Interview and Parent and Family Involvement in Education Interview–Continued
PMG1860 |
Number of months father worked in past year |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PMG1900, PMG1920 -PMG1980 |
Father actively looking for work and how |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PMG2000 |
Father enrolled in school/college/adult learning center |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PHH1100 |
Introduction to questions about household |
Transition statement |
Transition statement |
PHH1130 |
Internet access at home |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic /background characteristics |
PHH1140 |
Zip code of household |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PHH1320 - PHH1440 |
Welfare benefits received in last 12 months |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PHH1460 |
Number of times family moved from one home/household to another in past 3 years |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
PHH1500, PHH1520, PHH1540, PHH1560, PHH1580 |
Income of all persons in household |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
CLS1100 CLS1120 |
Thanks for participating, need to speak to anyone else in household |
Demographic/background characteristics |
Demographic/background characteristics |
The major focus of AEWR-NHES:2007 is the participation of adults in work-related in educational activities. The AEWR interview largely replicates portions of the NHES:2003 survey on work-related adult education, but also shares many items in common with broader NHES adult education collections. (See Appendix A for the AEWR questionnaire.) Information on participation is collected separately for distinct types of adult education for work-related reasons. The following measures collected in AEWR-NHES:2003 are also included in AEWR-NHES:2007:
Participation in college or university degree or certificate programs; vocational and technical diploma, degree, or certificate programs; apprenticeship programs; and work-related courses;
Reasons for participation;
Outcomes of participation;
Instructional provider;
Credit hours or instructional hours;
Personal expenses for tuition, fees, books, and materials;
Employer support and involvement;
Factors associated with participation in work-related educational activities;
Informal work-related learning activities;
Characteristics of adults, including educational attainment, race and ethnicity, language background, major occupation, and labor force status; and
Household characteristics, including ZIP Code and household income.
In addition to these measures, the survey includes items concerning distance education using a number of technologies and the specific types of educational activities involved. These items were initially fielded as part of the AE-NHES:2005 collection.
Background information (e.g., educational attainment, employment status in the past 12 months, and language background) is collected from all respondents at the outset of AEWR-NHES:2007 interview. Based on the responses to these items, respondents are asked the appropriate questions about their participation in educational activities in the past 12 months and any employer support they may have received. Questions pertaining to educational activities are designed to collect information about participation in various types of formal educational activities for work-related reasons or work-related less formal learning activities. Finally, additional background information on the adults and the characteristics of their households are collected.
Initial Background (AIB1100-AIB1300). These initial items determine several key skip patterns throughout the interview for each adult respondent, such as whether to administer questions about certificate programs and questions about employer support for educational activities. The items collecting information regarding educational attainment of adults are used as classification variables in analyzing participation in AEWR activities and for weighting the participation rate for the sample to the national totals.
Information concerning educational experience is collected for all respondents. Some items will be used to determine the highest level of education adults completed. Information is collected on whether the respondents have a high school diploma or equivalent, and whether they finished their high school requirements through GED testing.
Items concerning employment in the past 12 months are included in this section to determine whether respondents are to be asked about employer support for their participation. This information will also allow for examination of how employment is related to participation in AEWR activities.
Following the collection of the above information, respondents are asked about their participation in various types of educational activities as listed below. These sections cut across most of the AEWR research questions, including items concerned with participation (research question 1), employment status during and after participation (research question 2), adults’ educational attainment and intent to pursue additional educational credentials (research question 3), reasons for participation (research question 4), work-related outcomes of participation (research question 5), the costs of participation (research question 8) and the role of employer support (research question 10). Exhibit C-3, following this text, provides linkages between individual items (or item clusters) and the AEWR research questions.
College or University Degree or Certificate Programs (ACU1100-ACU1552). This section of the interview addresses adults’ educational experiences in postsecondary institutions that lead to a college or university degree, such as an associate’s, bachelor’s, master’s, doctoral, or professional degree. The items will provide the opportunity to report how many adults take part in college or university degree or post-degree certificate programs, the types of degree/certificate program (such as a post-bachelor’s, post-master’s, or post-doctoral), the major field of study, whether the respondent is to receive an industry, occupational, or company certificate, the number of courses and credit hours, the instructional provider, personal expenses for tuition/fees and books, and employer support.
Vocational or Technical Diploma, Degree, or Certificate Programs (AVT1100-AVT1620). This section of the questionnaire addresses adults’ educational experiences in vocational and technical schools that lead to a vocational diploma, technical diploma, associate’s degree, or certificate. The items will provide the opportunity to report how many adults take part in vocational and technical diploma programs, the type of diploma, degree, or certificate program, the major field of study, and whether the respondent is to receive an industry, occupational, or company certificate. As with the college or university degree programs section, the provider and employer support will also be ascertained. The items will provide the opportunity to report how many adults take part in vocational or technical programs, whether the respondent is to receive an industry, occupational, or company certificate, the number of instruction hours, the instructional provider, personal expenses for tuition/fees and books, and employer support.
Apprenticeship Programs (AAP1100-AAP1380). Questions in this section focus on adults’ participation in a formal apprenticeship program leading to journeyman status in a skilled trade or craft, information on the trade or craft, the sponsor of the apprenticeship program, hours of classroom instruction, and specific reasons for not completing apprenticeship programs. The information will provide the opportunity to estimate how many adults have participated in formal apprenticeship programs in the 12 months prior to the interview. It can also be used to address issues regarding business involvement in strengthening the connection between education and work.
Work-Related Training or Courses (AWR1100-AWR1630). In this section of the AEWR interview, information is collected on training and learning activities for a job or career. Information is collected on the specific reasons for participation, the instructional provider, the hours of participation, personal expenses, and employer support. Changes in the world of work, including the proliferation of “high-performance” work organizations, the growth of the service-producing economy, the increased demand for new technological advancements, and the burgeoning need for professional and technical workers are likely contributing to increased calls for a better educated workforce. Workplace training along with diverse work-related learning activities plays an important role in helping adults to become and remain productive members of society.
Factors Associated with Participation (AFP1100-AFP1180). This section contains a series of questions about participation in work-related educational activities. Included is a question designed to ascertain reasons that respondents did not participate in work-related adult education during the previous 12 months, or did not take additional activities in which they were interested.
Informal Learning Activities (AIL1100-AIL1340). This section contains a series of items about participation in informal learning for work-related reasons. Included is a question focusing on the Secretary’s Commission on Achieving Necessary Skills, or SCANS.
Distance Learning (ADL1100-ADL1600). These items collect information on the extent to which adults participate in educational activities through distance education, using a variety of instructional technologies. In addition to information on the technologies used, the types of educational activities for which distance education technologies are used and the extent of use will be collected.
Remaining Background Items (ARB1100-ARB1740). This section contains several sets of background items on the adult’s demographic characteristics, labor force status, and professional requirements for continuing education. The first subset of items is used to gather demographic characteristics including age, race/ethnicity, Hispanic origin, and marital status. These characteristics will be used as classification variables in the analysis of the AEWR data.
A detailed set of questions will be used to help classify the respondent on labor force status and hours worked per week. Respondents are also asked for the number of months they worked in the past 12 months. Both currently employed respondents and those employed some time in the past 12 months are asked about their income, occupation, and industry of their main job. Adults who worked in the past 12 months are also asked whether their job has legal or professional requirements for continuing training or education. Industry and occupation coding will provide useful information on the characteristics of the respondents’ main employment and the extent to which these characteristics are associated with participation in adult education for all adults and employer support for AEWR activities among participants.
Household Characteristics (PHH1100-PHH1360). This final series of items collects information about ZIP code, and household income. These items will be asked once in each household during the first extended interview and will be copied to the records of other interviews in the household. The household income measure, along with home ownership and telephone number variables from the Screener, will be used in forming weighting classes for estimating national statistics. The ZIP Code variable allows for the linkage of NHES data to demographic information from the decennial Census of Population. Questions on household income are used to classify adults according to the economic resources available to them. Note that some items in the household section, which is common to SR/PFI and AEWR, are asked only in the SR/PFI interview, as we want to collection this information from the person who knows the most about the child. These items include neighborhood safety, family moves, and receipt of public assistance.
Exhibit C-3. Item-by-Item description of NHES:2007 Adult Education for Work-Related Reasons Interview
Item |
Description |
Purpose or research question |
AIB1100 INTRO1 |
Introduction if person not screener respondent |
Inform respondent of sponsor, purpose, voluntary nature, and confidentiality |
AIB1120 INTRO2 |
Introduce purpose of interview to learn kinds of educational activities adults take part in |
Provide additional information on purpose and content |
AIB1140 – AIB1143 |
Highest grade/year of school completed |
Required for skip patterns and research questions 1g, 3b |
AIB1160 |
Earn vocational or technical diploma/degree/certificate |
Research question 1g |
AIB1180 |
Earn high school diploma or GED |
Research question 1g |
AIB1200, AIB1210 |
Earn high school diploma at high school/through GED |
Research question 1g |
AIB1220 |
Field of study for highest postsecondary degree |
Research questions 1g, 3a |
AIB1240 |
Work for pay/income in the past 12 months |
Required for skip patterns and research questions 1g, 2a, 6b |
AIB1260 |
Self-employed within past 12 months |
Research question 1g |
AIB1280 |
Self-employed and also work for another employer |
Required for skip patterns and research question 1g |
AIB1300 |
Number of different employers in past 12 months |
Research question 1g |
ACU1100 INTRO3 |
Introduction to education/training questions |
Informs respondent of framework for upcoming questions |
ACU1120 |
Taking classes for college degree/certificate during the past 12 months |
Research questions 1a, 1g, 2a, 2b, 2c, 11c. |
ACU1140 – ACU1147 |
Types of college degree/certificate programs to which adult enrolled |
Research question 1a. |
ACU1160 |
Major subject or field of study of degree/certificate program |
Research questions 1a, 3a. |
ACU1180 |
Degree/certificate program taken for work-related reasons? |
Research questions 1a, 1g, 2a, 2b, 2c, 11c. |
ACU1200 |
Most recent college degree/certificate program enrolled in for work-related reasons |
Research question 1a |
ACU1220 |
Currently taking/completed/stopped taking college degree/certificate program |
Research questions 1a, 7, 11a. |
ACU1240 – ACU1254 |
Reasons for taking college degree/certificate program |
Research questions 2b, 4, 11a, 11b, 11c, 12. |
ACU1260 |
Take certification/licensing test to get certificate or license |
Used to link testing with certification/licensure |
ACU1280 |
Certificate or license received before (month), in (month), since then, or not yet received in 2006 |
Used to establish the timeframe for receipt of certification/licensure |
ACU1300, ACU1305 |
Type college where degree/certificate program taken (2-year/4-year, public/private college) |
Research question 9. |
ACU1320 – ACU1332 |
Total credit hours (semester/quarter/trimester) enrolled in college degree/certificate program in past 12 months |
Research questions 6a, 6b. |
ACU1340 – ACU1350, ACU1360 |
Amount of money spent on tuition, fees, books, materials |
Research question 8a. |
ACU1380 – ACU1386 |
Financial support from government, unions, private foundations or trade organizations |
Research question 8b. |
ACU1400, ACU1402 |
Month/year completed/expect to complete college degree/certificate program |
Used to confirm program was taken in the previous 12 months |
ACU1420 |
Employment during college degree/certificate program |
Research questions 2a, 6b. |
Exhibit C-3. Item-by-Item description of NHES:2007 Adult Education for Work-Related Reasons Interview–Continued
ACU1440 |
College degree/certificate program taken at workplace |
Research question 9, 10b |
||
ACU1460 |
Taking degree/cert program during regular work hours |
Research question 10c. |
||
ACU1480 |
Paid by employer for hours taking degree/cert program |
Research question 10d. |
||
ACU1500 – ACU1510 |
Employer payment for tuition/fees/books/materials |
Research question 10a. |
||
ACU1520 |
Tuition/fees and/or books/materials paid through self-employed business |
Used to establish if any monies paid from self-employed business |
||
ACU1540 – ACU1552 |
Outcomes from participation in college degree/certificate program |
Research questions 2c, 5a |
||
AVT1100 |
Enrollment in program for vocational/technical diploma, degree, or certificate |
Research questions 1b, 1g, 2a, 2b, 2c, 3b, 11c |
||
AVT1120 – AVT1130 |
Types of vocational/technical programs to which adult enrolled |
Research question 1b |
||
AVT1140 |
Major subject or field of study for voc/tech program |
Research questions 1b, 3a |
||
AVT1160 |
Voc/tech program taken for work-related reasons |
Research questions 1b, 1g, 2a, 2b, 2c, 3b, 11c |
||
AVT1180 |
Most recent voc/tech program enrolled in for work-related reasons |
Research question 1b |
||
AVT1200 |
Currently taking/completed/stopped taking voc/tech program |
Research questions 1b, 7, 11a. |
||
AVT1220 – AVT1234 |
Reasons for taking voc/tech program |
Research questions 2b, 4, 11a, 11b, 11c, 12 |
||
AVT1240 |
Take certification/licensing test to get certificate/license |
Used to link testing with certification/licensure |
||
AVT1260 |
Certificate or license received before (month), in (month), since then, or not yet received in 2006 |
Used to establish the timeframe for receipt of certification/licensure |
||
AVT1280 – AVT1285 |
Weeks/months attended classes for voc/tech program in past 12 months |
Research questions 6a, 6b. |
||
AVT1290 |
Hours attended classes during each week/month |
Research questions 6a, 6b |
||
AVT1300 – AVT1310, AVT1320 |
Amount of money spent on tuition, fees, books, materials |
Research question 8a. |
||
AVT1340 – AVT1346 |
Financial support from government, unions, private foundations or trade organizations |
Research question 8b. |
||
AVT1360, AVT1370 |
Month/year completed/expect to complete voc/tech program |
Used to confirm program was taken in the previous 12 months |
||
AVT1380 |
Employment during voc/tech program |
Research questions 2a, 6b |
||
AVT1400 |
Voc/tech program taken at workplace |
Research question 9, 10b |
||
AVT1420 |
Taking voc/tech program during regular work hrs |
Research question 10c. |
||
AVT1440 |
Paid by employer for hours taking voc/tech program |
Research question 10d. |
||
AVT1460 – AVT1470 |
Employer payment for tuition/fees/books/materials |
Research question 10a. |
||
AVT1480 |
Tuition/fees and/or books/materials paid through self-employed business |
Used to establish if any monies paid from self-employed business |
||
AVT1500 – AVT1620 |
Outcomes from participation in voc/tech program |
Research questions 2c, 5a |
||
AAP1100 |
Enrollment in apprenticeship program in trade/craft |
Research question 1c, 1g |
||
AAP1120 |
Trade or craft within which adult apprenticed |
Research questions 1c, 3a. |
||
AAP1140 |
Currently taking/completed/stopped taking apprenticeship program |
Research questions 1c., 7. |
Exhibit C-3. Item-by-Item description of NHES:2007 Adult Education for Work-Related Reasons Interview–Continued
AAP1160 – AAP1170 |
Who provided trade/craft apprenticeship |
Research question 9. |
AAP1180 |
Total instructional hours in apprenticeship program in past 12 months |
Research questions 6a, 6b. |
AAP1200 |
Apprenticeship program taken at workplace |
Research questions 9, 10b. |
AAP1220 – AAP1226 |
Financial support from government, unions, foundations or trade organizations |
Research question 8b. |
AAP1240, AAP1246 |
Month/year completed/expect to complete apprenticeship program |
Used to confirm program was taken in the previous 12 months |
AAP1260 – AAP1380 |
Reasons left apprenticeship program prior to completion |
Research question 7. |
AWR1100 |
Work-related courses/training in last year |
Research questions 1d, 1g, 2a, 2b, 2c, 11c |
AWR1120 |
Courses on basic skills, computer skills, diversity etc. |
Research questions 1d, 1g, 2a, 2b, 2c, 11c |
AWR1140 – AWR1150 |
Course roster and associate probes |
Research question 1d and required for sampling and wording displays. |
AWR1160, CRVERF1 |
Other courses on basic skills/computer skills/diversity in last 12 mo |
Routing item |
AWR1161, CRVERF2 |
Any other work-related courses in last 12 months |
Routing item |
AWR1165 |
Introduction to work-related courses |
Intro to work-related trainings/courses |
AWR1185 |
Introduction to a particular training course(s) |
Intro to particular trainings/course(s) |
AWR1200 |
Currently taking/completed/stopped taking course |
Research questions 1d, 11a. |
AWR1220, AWR1230 |
School/organization/business that taught course |
Research question 9. |
AWR1240, AWR1245 |
Location where course was taught |
Research question 9. |
AWR1260, AWR1262, AWR1272, AWR1275 |
Reason taking work-related course |
Research questions 4, 12. |
AWR1268 |
Employer required you to take work-related course |
Research questions 11a, 11c. |
AWR1271 |
Employer recommended you take work-related course |
Research question 11b, 11c. |
AWR1273 – AWR1274 |
Taking work-related course to change jobs/enter workforce, or start a business |
Research question 2b. |
AWR1280 |
Certification/licensing test for certificate/license |
Used to link testing with certification/licensure. |
AWR1300 |
Certificate or license received before (month), in (month), since then, or not yet received in 2006 |
Used to establish the timeframe for receipt of certification/licensure. |
AWR1320 |
Total hours attended work-related course/training/seminar. |
Research questions 6a, 6b. |
AWR1340 –AWR1350, AWR1360 |
Amount of money spent on tuition/fees/books/materials |
Research question 8a. |
AWR1380 – AWR1386 |
Usefulness of training course skills/knowledge in job |
Research question 5a. |
AWR1388 – AWR1392 |
Outcome of taking training/course/seminar was a new job/changed career field or started a business |
Research question 2c. |
Exhibit C-3. Item-by-Item description of NHES:2007 Adult Education for Work-Related Reasons Interview–Continued
AWR1400, AWR1420 |
Usefulness of taking work-related course skills/knowledge for job |
Research question 5b. |
AWR1440 – AWR1446 |
Financial support from government, unions, private foundations or organizations |
Research question 8b. |
AWR1460 – AWR1464 |
College credit or certification/license credit for course |
Research question 9. |
AWR1480, AWR1490 |
Earn continuing education units (CEUs) for course |
Research question 4 |
AWR1500, AWR1515 |
Instructional provider also employer |
Research question 9. |
AWR1520, AWR1530 |
Work-related courses taken at workplace |
Research question 9, 10b. |
AWR1540, AWR1550 |
Taking work-related course during regular work hours |
Research question 10c. |
AWR1560, AWR1570 |
Payment by employer for time spent in course |
Research question 10d. |
AWR1580, AWR1590, AWR1600, AWR1610 |
Employer payment for tuition/fees or books/materials |
Research question 10a. |
AWR1620, AWR1630 |
Self-employed business payment for tuition/fees or books/materials |
Research question 8a |
AFP1100 |
Interest in taking work-related courses in last 12 mo |
Research question 14a. |
AFP1120 |
Did interest in taking course lead to looking for info |
Research question 14a. |
AFP1132 |
Introduction to usefulness of additional training |
Intro to usefulness of additional training |
AFP1140 – AFP1148 |
Usefulness of work-related training to job |
Research question 14b. |
AFP1162 – AFP1174 |
Employer offers benefit of tuition/books/materials, pay for time spent in course or course at workplace |
Research question 14c. |
AFP1180 |
Chose not to participate in class due to benefits/other reasons |
Research question 14c. |
AIL1100 – AIL1112 |
Participation in informal training/demonstrations/ “brown-bag” presentations/attended conferences |
Research question 1e, 1g, 2a, 2c |
AIL1120 – AIL1134 |
Basic reading/oral communication/decision making in informal learning activities |
Research question 1f, 15. |
AIL1140 |
Participation in informal work-related activities to get/keep certificate/license |
Research question 12. |
AIL1160 |
Take certification/licensing test to get certificate/license |
Used to link testing with certification/licensure. |
AIL1180 |
Certificate or license received before (month), in (month, since then, or not yet received in 2006 |
Used to establish timeframe for receipt of certification/licensure. |
AIL1200 |
Less-formal activities during work time or own time |
Used to establish when primarily engaged in informal work-related learning activities. |
AIL1220 – AIL1280 |
Usefulness of doing less-formal learning activities on skills/knowledge, employability/advancement in job |
Research question 5a |
AIL1300 – AIL1340 |
Got a new job/changed career field or started new business after doing less-formal learning activities |
Research question 2c. |
ADL1100 |
Introduction to courses using distance education |
Research question 13a, 13b. |
Exhibit C-3. Item-by-Item description of NHES:2007 Adult Education for Work-Related Reasons Interview–Continued
ADL1120 – ADL1380 |
Use of distance education instruction (video tapes, CDs/TV or radio/Internet or World Wide Web/, computer conferencing/by mail/telephone) |
Research question 13a, 13b. |
ADL1460 – ADL1520
|
Use of distance education by college/vocational/apprenticeship programs/work-related training |
Research question 13b. |
ADL1540 – ADL1600 |
All instruction administered by distance education |
Research question 13b |
ARB1100, ARB1110 |
Month and year adult was born |
Research question 1g |
ARB1120 |
Confirmation of age |
Research question 1g |
ARB1140 |
Is adult Spanish/Hispanic/Latino |
Research question 1g |
ARB1160, ARB1170 |
Race(s) of adult |
Research question 1g |
ARB1180, ARB1200 |
Marital status of adult |
Research question 1g |
ARB1220 |
Long-term physical/mental/emotional/problem of adult |
Research question 1g |
ARB1240 – ARB1255 |
State, country or territory of birth |
Research question 1g |
ARB1257 – ARB1259 |
First language adult learned to speak |
Research question 1g |
ARB1260 – ARB1265 |
Language spoken most at home now |
Research question 1g |
ARB1280 – ARB1285 |
Language spoken most at work |
Research question 1g |
ARB1300 |
Highest grade/year of school mother completed |
Research question 1g |
ARB1320 |
Highest grade/year of school father completed |
Research question 1g |
ARB1340 |
Work for pay/income during past week |
Research question 1g |
ARB1360 |
On leave or vacation from job during past week |
Research question 1g |
ARB1380 |
Total hours per week usually worked for pay/income |
Research question 1g |
ARB1400 |
Months worked for pay/income during past 12 months |
Research question 1g |
ARB1420 |
Actively looking for work during the past 4 weeks |
Research question 1g |
ARB1440 – ARB1446 |
Activities during past 4 weeks to find work |
Research question 1g |
ARB1460 |
Ever worked at a job for pay/income |
Research question 1g |
ARB1480 |
Year last worked for pay/income |
Research question 1g |
ARB1500 |
Plan to work at a job for pay/income next year |
Research question 1g |
ARB1520, ARB1530 |
Name of employer (company/business) and type of industry |
Research question 1g, 3a. |
ARB1540 |
Is this respondent’s own business |
Research question 1g |
ARB1560 – ARB1564 |
Kind of work and most important activities/duties |
Research question 1g, 3a. |
ARB1580 |
Currently work for employer/your business |
Research question 1g |
ARB1600 |
Number of years worked for employer/your business |
Research question 1g |
ARB1620 |
Leave workforce or retire in the next year |
Research question 1g |
ARB1640 |
Total number of persons who work for employer |
Research question 1g |
ARB1660 – ARB1662 |
Amount earned before taxes/other deductions this yr |
Research question 1g |
ARB1680 |
Occupation have legal requirements for continuing education/lifelong learning |
Research question 1g, 12. |
Exhibit C-3. Item-by-Item description of NHES:2007 Adult Education for Work-Related Reasons Interview–Continued
ARB1700 |
Attending school/college/adult learning center or receiving vocational education/job training |
Research question 1g |
ARB1720 |
Member of a labor union or a labor organization |
Research question 1g |
ARB1740 |
Covered by a union contract or collective bargaining agreement |
Research question 1g |
PHH1100 |
Introduction to questions about household |
Informs respondent of topic of next questions |
PHH1140 |
Zip code |
Used for linkages of NHES data with data from Census |
PHH1260 |
Was total income less or more than $25,000 |
Used for purpose of weighting and required for skip patterns |
PHH1280 |
Income less or more than $50,000 |
Used for purpose of weighting and required for skip patterns |
PHH1320 |
Income $5,000 or less to $25,000 |
Used for purpose of weighting and required for skip patterns |
PHH1340 |
Income $25,001 to $50,000 |
Used for purpose of weighting and required for skip patterns |
PHH1360 |
Income $50,001 to over $100,000 |
Used for purpose of weighting and required for skip patterns |
CLS1120 |
Close |
Close interview. |
The purpose of the NHES:2007 reinterview is to examine the response variability of a selected subset of items. The selection of reinterview items took into account those items that had been tested in prior administrations, items that are new to the survey, and items that are indicators of significant research or policy issues.
The NHES:2007 reinterview will focus on five sets of questions: school choice, identification of the child’s school using a school look-up, tutoring, television viewing, and factors affecting parent participation. The importance of each of these items to the PFI survey was addressed in section C.2. The reasons these items were selected for the reinterview are as follows:
School choice. Families’ ability to choose which schools their children will attend is an important issue in education and is feature of the No Child Left Behind initiative. School choice items have not been tested in prior NHES reinterviews.
School identification. The ability to link NHES data with administrative data on children’s school will enhance the analytical utility of the data. This is a new feature of the NHES program and has not been tested. Findings from other studies suggest that not all parents are able to identify their children’s schools unambiguously, and some give incorrect school names.
Tutoring Services. The provision of tutoring by schools and school districts is a feature of the No Child Left Behind initiative. Substantial response variability may suggest that parents are poorly informed about this program, or may indicate recall problems with the items. These items are new to NHES and have not been tested previously.
Television Viewing. Questions on television viewing have not been tested for the PFI population in NHES surveys in previous years. However, past experience with younger children suggests considerable response variability in parent estimates of television viewing. The reinterview will provide an opportunity to examine this for children in kindergarten through second grade.
Factors affecting Parent Participation. The current NHES PFI survey has new questions focusing on possible barriers to parent participation in school. Previous reinterview work for the Adult Education survey indicated relatively high response variance for items concerning barriers to AE participation. The reinterview will provide an opportunity to assess whether this is the case for parent reports of barriers to their participation at their children’s schools.
In addition to the questions above, the reinterview includes additional items designed to identify possible sources of inconsistency. These include questions about whether the child has changed schools and when tutoring services began.
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File Type | application/msword |
Author | WAITS_T |
Last Modified By | DoED |
File Modified | 2006-09-18 |
File Created | 2006-09-18 |