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pdfScreening for Specific
Population Groups in Mail
Surveys
Douglas Williams, Jill M. Montaquila,
J. Michael Brick, Mary C. Hagedorn
Presented at the 65th Annual AAPOR Conference
Chicago, Illinois
The views presented in this paper are those of the authors and do
not represent the official views of the United States Department of
Education.
May 15, 2010
Introduction
Screening for Specific Population Groups
• In cross-sectional surveys generally conducted
through RDD
Inexpensive method of screening large number of
households
May need to sample from within households
Attractiveness of completing the topical survey during the
screening contact
2
Introduction (Cont.)
• Problems with RDD screening approaches
Declining response rates: (Steeh et al. 2001; Curtin,
Presser and Singer 2005; Battaglia et al. 2008)
Declining coverage rates for landline RDD
• January-June 2009: 22.7% of households were cellonly, and another 1.9% were phoneless (Blumberg
and Luke 2009)
• Exclusion of about 20% of landline telephone
households (Fahimi, Kulp, and Brick, POQ 2009)
3
Introduction (Cont.)
• Using mail as an alternative: single-phase
Use Address Based Sample – increasing population
coverage relative to landline RDD (Fahimi; Presented at
2010 FedCASIC workshop)
Much of the questionnaire is irrelevant to most sampled
addresses
Uncontrolled sampling
4
Introduction (Cont.)
Two-phase Mail Approach
• Mail screener to all households
• Use returned screeners to determine eligibility and
perform sampling
• Mail topical survey only to sampled persons (in
eligible households)
• Nonresponse bias is a concern
Education/Income biases with mail mode
Potential for differential response between target and nontarget population
5
Introduction (Cont.)
The National Household Education Surveys Program
• Sponsored by the National Center for Education
Statistics
• Targets households with children
• Surveys roughly every 2 years 1991-2007
• All surveys through 2007: RDD/CATI
• Declining response rates
Screener response: Low 80’s in early years – 53% in 2007
Topical rates: 90% in early years – 75% in 2007
• 2009 Pilot Study of address-based sample
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Overview of Design
• NHES targets households with children
• Key elements of screener experiment – screener
versions tested
Screen-out: 1 page 11x17; only asked about children
Core: 4 pages 8½x11; asked about children and 9
household questions
Engaging: 6 pages 8½x11; same as core with
additional 16 questions on education
7
Overview of Design (Cont.)
• Purpose of screener versions
Does a child-focused survey request (screen-out) result in
different response propensities for households with
children?
Does increasing content of the survey (engaging) to
engage the respondent result in different response
propensities for all households?
Does screener version result in different response
propensities to the topical survey?
Does screener version affect the composition of
respondents?
8
Overview of Design (Cont.)
• Key elements of screener experiment
Two-phase data collection
• Screener
• Topical survey (personalized)
Test in a national sample (n = 10,200)
Mail contacts based on general procedures outlined by
Dillman et al. (2009)
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Key Findings
•
Response rates: National Sample
National sample rates
Overall Screener response rate
Screenout
Core
Engaging
63.6%*
58.3%
60.1%
* Significantly different from core and engaging versions p < 0.05
10
Key Findings (Cont.)
•
Response rates: National Sample
National sample rates
Screenout
Core
Engaging
Overall Screener response rate
63.6%*
58.3%
60.1%
Initial Mailing only
28.3%*
23.2%
23.2%
1st follow-up mailing
25.8%
23.6%
23.6%
2nd follow-up mailing (FedEx)
31.8%
29.4%
32.5%
* Significantly different from core and engaging versions p < 0.05
11
Key Findings (Cont.)
•
Proportion of households identified with eligible
children: National Sample
Estimates from ACS suggest this should be ~35%
National sample rates
Overall Proportion w/children
Screenout
Core
Engaging
30.6
31.5
32.7
12
Key Findings (Cont.)
•
Proportion of households identified with eligible
children: National Sample
National sample rates
Screenout
Core
Engaging
Overall Proportion w/children
30.6
31.5
32.7
Initial Mailing only
25.8
26.2
31.4
1st follow-up mailing
33.1*
34.8*
31.2
2nd follow-up mailing (FedEx)
37.0*
35.2*
35.6
*significantly different from initial mailing of same version p < 0.05
13
Key Findings (Cont.)
•
Response rates: Targeted Sample (n = 800) of
households identified by sample vendor to
included children.
Targeted sample rates
Overall Screener response rate
Screenout
Core
Engaging
80.7%*
70.3%
71.9%
* Significantly different from core version p < 0.05
14
Key Findings (Cont.)
•
Proportion of households identified with eligible
children: Targeted Sample
Targeted sample rates
Overall Proportion w/children
Screenout
Core
Engaging
80.7%
83.5%
82.5%
15
Key Findings (Cont.)
•
Response to topical survey (2nd phase response)
National sample
Screenout
Core
Engaging
Topical Response
73.1
74.8
76.3
Targeted sample
Screenout
Core
Engaging
Topical Response
86.4
85.2
85.3
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Key Findings (Cont.)
•
Sensitive Questions – Phone number & Child’s
First Name
National sample
Percent providing phone
number
Screenout
Core
Engaging
N/A
69.9*
56.7
* Significantly different from engaging version p < 0.05
National sample
Screenout
Core
Engaging
First Name
77.5*
75.1*
61.5
Initials/Nickname
20.4
20.7
30.8
No Name
2.1
4.2
7.7
* Screen-out and core significantly different from engaging version p < 0.05
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Key Findings Topical Respondents
•
Homeownership
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Key Findings Topical Respondents (Cont.)
•
Education
19
Key Findings Topical Respondents (Cont.)
•
Income
20
Key Findings Topical Respondents (Cont.)
•
Presence of non-English Speaking household
members
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Summary
• Overall, screening for households with children by
mail in a two-phase approach was successful
• Pilot was too small to detect some potential
differences
• 2011 larger methodological Field Test
Screenout & Engaging version
Test request for child’s name vs. no name
22
Contact Information
Douglas Williams
1600 Research Blvd., RE 457
Rockville, MD 20850
[email protected]
23
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Key Findings Topical Respondents (Cont.)
•
Cell only and no-phone households
25
Key Findings
• Pilot study response compared to NHES:2007
Screener response rate: 59% vs. 53% in NHES:2007
Topical response rate: 74% vs. 75% in NHES:2007
Process worked, people gave information on their children
26
File Type | application/pdf |
File Title | National Household Education Surveys Program (NHES) |
Author | Jill Montaquila |
File Modified | 2010-06-01 |
File Created | 2010-06-01 |