Appendix C System Design Documents

Att_NAEP System Sample Design Documents for 2011-2013Appendix C.pdf

National Assessment of Education Progress (NAEP) 2011-13 System Clearance

Appendix C System Design Documents

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NATIONAL ASSESSMENT OF
EDUCATIONAL PROGRESS

APPENDIX C
EXAMPLE OF SAMPLE DESIGN DOCUMENT
(2009 ASSESSMENT)
SYSTEM CLEARANCE PROPOSAL

NAEP SURVEYS
FOR THE YEARS 2011-2013

October 26, 2009

C-1

Date:

June 27, 2008

To:

Holly Spurlock, NCES Michael Lapp, ETS
Clyde Reese, ETS
David Freund, ETS
Connie Smith, Pearson Dianne Walsh
Lauren Byrne
Debby Vivari
Rob Dymowski
William Wall
John Burke
Lou Rizzo
Susan Fuss
David Ferraro
Chris Averett
Kavemuii Murangi

From:

Lloyd Hicks and Keith Rust

Memo: 20092.3A/1.3B/1.3G/1.3D/1.2E

Subject: Sample Design for 2009 NAEP
Changes since previous version:
1)
2)
3)

Some details about the High School Transcript Study sample are provided;
The session types for the ICT assessments have been amended;
The student sampling specifications for the grade 12 beta and epsilon samples have been
revised, to give a more efficient administration;
Details of the student sampling plans for the grade 12 delta schools are included, having
been omitted inadvertently in the previous version.

4)

I.

Introduction

For 2009, the NAEP assessment involves several components:
„

National assessments in reading, math, and science at grades 4, 8 and 12;

„

State-by-state and Urban District (TUDA) assessments in reading, math, and science for
public schools at grades 4 and 8;

„

State-by-state assessments in reading and math for public schools at grade 12, in eleven
states;

„

National assessment probes in Science Hands-On Tasks (HOT) and Science Interactive
Computer Testing (ICT) at grades 4, 8, and 12;

„

Pilot tests in reading and math at grades 4 and 8 and in civics, US history, and
geography at grades 4, 8, and 12.

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M:\NAEPLIB\2009\Memos\School Sampling\Public Grades 4 & 8-A\2009-m02v03a.doc

Memorandum 2009-2.3A/1.3B/1.3G/1.3D/1.2E

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June 27, 2008

Below is a summary list of the features of the 2009 sample design.
1.

As in recent NAEP studies, Urban District Assessment (TUDA) samples will form part
of the corresponding state samples, and the state samples will form part of the national
sample. The same ten participants as in 2007 will be involved, plus an additional seven
new districts. They include Los Angeles, San Diego, Atlanta, Chicago, Boston, New
York City, Charlotte, Cleveland, Austin, and Houston as the continuing districts, and
Fresno, Miami-Dade, Jefferson County, KY, Baltimore, Detroit, Philadelphia, and
Milwaukee.

2.

A major change from 2007 is that there will be two public school samples, and two
private school samples at each grade. Small PSU-based samples, known as the beta
samples (for public schools) and the epsilon samples (for private schools), will be used
for science HOT and ICT, and all pilot tests. The other samples (the alpha sample for
grades 4 and 8 public, the gamma sample for grade 12, delta for private schools at
grades 4, 8, and 12) will be used for the operational assessments in reading,
mathematics, and science, including trend/bridging samples for reading and
mathematics.

3.

Unlike 2005 and 2007, there will be no large state oversampling for the reading, math,
and science assessments at grades 4 and 8, nor any charter school oversampling.

4.

There is to be no special study of charter schools, and no oversampling of charter
schools.

5.

At grades 4 and 8, all jurisdictions but Alaska, Kansas, Nebraska, Vermont, and the
District of Columbia have signed on for science. All jurisdictions doing science will
receive a 1:1:1 RS spiral, and the five that did not will receive a 9:9:1 RN spiral to ensure
that these states are sufficiently represented in the national science sample. A 1:1:1 RS
spiral means science is spiraled in at the same rate as reading and math. The 9:9:1 RN
spiral means that for every 9 math and 9 reading booklets there will be 1 science
booklet.

6.

At grades 4 and 8, all BIE schools sampled for the operational assessments will receive a
9:9:1 RN spiral.

7.

At grades 4 and 8, private schools sampled for the operational assessments will receive a
1:1:1 RS spiral (the RN spiral will not be used for private schools).

8.

All seventeen TUDA districts will do science in grade 4 and 8 since all their associated
states have signed on for science. Thus for the operational assessments they will receive
the RS spiral.

9.

At grade 12, there will be two different spirals for the operational reading, mathematics,
and science assessments. One (denoted RS) will be used for providing national samples.
The other (RM) will be used for providing supplemental samples for reading and
mathematics in public schools in the eleven states participating in the state-by-state
assessments. The eleven states participating at the state level for reading and

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Memorandum 2009-2.3A/1.3B/1.3G/1.3D/1.2E

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June 27, 2008

mathematics are Arkansas, Connecticut, Florida, Idaho, Illinois, Iowa, Massachusetts,
New Hampshire, New Jersey, South Dakota, and West Virginia.
10.

There will be no samples in territories, other than for Puerto Rico in math at grades 4
and 8. Schools samples are to be selected for Puerto Rico, although it is very likely that
they will not be utilized for any assessments.

11.

As in 2007, there will be larger samples of BIE schools in the grades 4 and 8 operational
assessments than in earlier years. All BIE schools and students will be included in the
sample. This is designed to provide detailed national results for American Indian and
Alaskan Native (AIAN) students in reading and mathematics as part of the National
Indian Education Study (NIES). Because science will be spiraled with math and reading,
the science sample will be spread across almost all BIE schools at grades 4 and 8.

12.

In a handful of states (Washington, Oregon, Arizona, North Carolina, Minnesota, and
Utah) the public school sample at grades 4 and 8 will be increased somewhat, so as to
give publishable results for AIAN students. This will affect school sampling only. There
will be no special student sampling procedures for this purpose. This will be achieved
by increasing, by an appropriate factor, the measures of size of schools that are in
specially designated strata with a relatively high proportion of AIAN students.

13.

As in 2007, the Department of Defense Schools will be reported as a single jurisdiction
(DoDEA), instead of the two components of domestic (DDESS) and overseas
(DoDDS). However, for design purposes, we will still sample and weight these as two
separate entities.

14.

As in 2007, at grades 4 and 8, private schools will be oversampled in sufficient numbers
so as to be able to report Catholic and non-Catholic schools separately. There will be no
special oversampling as implemented in 2002, 2003, and 2005 for grades 4 and 8. There
will be no oversampling of private schools at grade 12.

15.

There will be a High School Transcript Study (HSTS) conducted. This will be similar to
that conducted in 2005 (there was no HSTS in 2007). The grade 12 schools and
students from the mathematics and science (but not ICT and HOT) will be included in
the HSTS, with the exception that school subsampling will be carried out in those states
that are participating in the grade 12 state NAEP pilot.

The sample sizes of assessed students for these various components are shown in Table 1 (which
also shows the approximate numbers of participating schools). Note that the sample size for 4th and
8th grade public schools for science reflects the appropriate Science sample from each of the five
“nonparticipating” states and BIE schools in order to ensure nationally representative samples.

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Memorandum 2009-2.3A/1.3B/1.3G/1.3D/1.2E

Table 1.

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June 27, 2008

Target sample sizes of assessed students, and expected number of participating
schools, for 2009 NAEP
Spiral

nat'l/state math
nat'l/state reading
nat'l/state science
Total - alpha
Total - delta
Maximum students per school
Average assessed students per school
Total schools - alpha, delta

Jurisdictions

Students

States
Public
(incl. DC,
school
Spiral
BIE,
Urban
students
Indic. DoDEA) districts (with NIES)
Grade 4
RS, RN
53
17
170,600
RS, RN
53
17
170,600
RS, RN
47
17
156,000
2
497,200
1 (RS)
90
54
9,207

C-5

Private
school
students

Total

3,000
3,000
3,000

173,600
173,600
159,000

9,000
90
24
375

Memorandum 2009-2.3A/1.3B/1.3G/1.3D/1.2E

Table 1.

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June 27, 2008

Target sample sizes of assessed students, and expected numbers of participating
schools for 2009 NAEP (cont’d)
Spiral

civics pilot test
math pilot test
reading pilot test
National science ICT
National science HOT
US history pilot test
geography pilot
Total beta, epsilon
Maximum students per school
Average assessed students per school
Total schools – beta, epsilon
math – PR
Total alpha PR
Maximum students per school
Average assessed students per school
Total public schools – alpha PR
Total Number of Schools – grade 4
Total Number of Students – grade 4
nat’l/state math
nat’l/state reading
nat’l/state science
Total – alpha
Total – delta
Maximum students per school
Average assessed students per school
Total schools – alpha, delta
civics pilot test
math pilot test
reading pilot test
Nat’l science ICT
Nat’l science HOT
US history pilot test
geography pilot
Total beta, epsilon
Maximum students per school
Average assessed students per school
Total schools – beta, epsilon

Jurisdictions
Students
States
Public
(incl. DC,
school
Private
Spiral
BIE,
Urban
students
school
Indic. DoDEA) districts (with NIES)
students
Grade 4
PI
900
100
PI
2,700
300
PI
4,050
450
CE, CS
1,800
200
SH
1,800
200
PI
900
100
PI
900
100
4
13,050
1,450
54
54
36
20
363
73
PR
1
3,000
1
3,000
30
27
111
9,681
448
513,250
10,450
Grade 8
RS, RN
53
17
170,600
3,000
RS, RN
53
17
170,600
3,000
RS, RN
47
17
156,000
3,000
2
497,200
1 (RS)
9,000
90
90
70
25
7,103
360
PI
900
100
PI
2,700
300
PI
2,700
300
CE, CS
1,800
200
SH
1,800
200
PI
1,350
150
PI
1,350
150
4
12,600
1,400
52
52
40
24
315
58

C-6

Total
1,000
3,000
4,500
2,000
2,000
1,000
1,000

3,000

10,129
523,700
173,600
173,600
159,000

1,000
3,000
3,000
2,000
2,000
1,500
1,500

Memorandum 2009-2.3A/1.3B/1.3G/1.3D/1.2E

Table 1.

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June 27, 2008

Target sample sizes of assessed students, and expected numbers of participating
schools for 2009 NAEP (cont’d)
Spiral

math - PR
Total alpha PR
Maximum students per school
Average assessed students per school
Total public schools - alpha PR
Total Number of Schools - grade 8
Total Number of Students - grade 8
national math
national reading
national science
reading trend (mixed)
reading trend (old)
math trend (mixed)
math trend to 2005 (old)
state math
state reading
Total - gamma
Total - delta
Maximum students per school
Average assessed students per school
Total schools - gamma, delta
reading pilot test
math pilot test
civics pilot test
Nat'l science ICT
Nat'l science HOT
US history pilot test
geography pilot
Total beta, epsilon
Maximum students per school
Average assessed students per school
Total schools - beta, epsilon
Total Number of Schools - grade 12
Total Number of Students - grade 12

Jurisdictions

Students

States
Public
(incl. DC,
school
Spiral
BIE,
Urban
students
Indic. DoDEA) districts (with NIES)
Grade 8
PR
1
3,000
1
3,000
30
27
111
7,529
512,800
Grade 12
RS
8,100
RS
9,900
RS
9,900
RS
5,400
RS
6,300
RS
5,400
RS
6,300
RM
11
23,700
RM
11
23,700
2
98,700
1 (RS)
80-150
70
1,410
0
0
PI
900
CE, CS
1,800
SH
1,800
PI
900
PI
900
4
6,300
52
35
180
1,590
105,000

GRAND TOTAL SCHOOLS
GRAND TOTAL STUDENTS

18,800
1,131,050

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Private
school
students

Total
3000

418
10,400

7,947
523,200

900
1,100
1,100
600
700
600
700

9,000
11,000
11,000
6,000
7,000
6,000
7,000
23,700
23,700

5,700
150
30
190
0
0
100
200
200
100
100
700
52
25
28
218
6,400

1,808
111,400

1,084
27,250

19,884
1,158,300

0
0
1,000
2,000
2,000
1,000
1,000

Memorandum 2009-2.3A/1.3B/1.3G/1.3D/1.2E

II.

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June 27, 2008

Assessment Types

In 2009, there will a total of eight different assessment types, or “spirals”. At any one grade six or
seven of these will be used. These different assessment types are summarized in Table 2. Session
IDs contain 6 digits, traditionally. The first two digits identify the assessment “type” (subjects and
type of spiral in a general way). Grade is contained in the second pair of digits, and the session
sequential number (within schools) in the last 2 digits.
Note that the reading and mathematics assessments at each grade actually involve three
subcomponents: new (corresponding to the new frameworks in each subject), old, corresponding to
the most recent past assessments in these subjects (2007 for grades 4 and 8, 2005 for grade 12), and
braided, using a combination of new and old material.
Table 2.

NAEP 2009 assessment types and IDs

ID

Type

RM

Operational

Reading (new),
math (new)

12

RS

Operational

Reading, math,
science

4, 8, 12

RN

Operational

CE

Probe

CS

Probe

SH

Probe

PI

Pilot

PR

Puerto Rico

III.

Subjects

Reading, math,
science
Science ICT,
Extended prompt
first
Science ICT, Short
prompt first
Science HOT
Reading (4, 8), math
(4, 8), civics, US
history, geography
Some form of
mathematics
assessment

Grades

4, 8

Schools
Public, in 11
participating
states

Public &
private

Public & BIE

Comments
For state-by-state reading and
math results
1:1:1 reading, math, Science spiral
at grades 4 and 8, for states signed
on for Science, and private schools.
At grade 12 the relative
proportions are as needed for
national samples, and will be used
in all samples.
9:9:1 reading, math, science spiral:
For states not signed on for
science, and BIE schools.

4, 8, 12

Public &
private
Public &
private
Public &
private

4, 8, 12

Public &
private

National sample

Public

Booklets will not be used in any
other jurisdiction.

4, 8, 12
4, 8, 12

4&8

National sample

National sample
National sample

Sample Types and Sizes

In similar fashion to 2005 (but somewhat extended), we will identify five different types of school
samples: Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta, and Epsilon). These distinguish sets of schools that will be
conducting distinct portions of the assessment.

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Memorandum 2009-2.3A/1.3B/1.3G/1.3D/1.2E

1.

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June 27, 2008

Alpha Samples at Grades 4 and 8

These are public school samples for grades 4 and 8. They will be used for the operational state-bystate assessments in reading, math, and science, and contribute to the national samples for these
subjects as well. There will be alpha samples for each state, DC, DoDEA, BIE, and Puerto Rico.
The details of the target student sample sizes for the alpha samples are as follows:
A.

At each grade, the target student sample size for a state depends on whether or not it
signed on for science. For each state that signed on for science, the target student
sample size is 9,450: 3,150 each for math, reading, and science. In these states the RS
session type will be used. For the four states not signed on for science, plus DC and
BIE, the target student sample sizes are 6,650: 3,150 each for math and reading and 350
for science. In these jurisdictions the RN session type will be used.

B.

In DC, DoDEA, BIE, and several small states, all students will be included (those states
in which there are fewer students than are required in the above sample sizes, or just a
few more than that).

C.

There will be samples for seventeen TUDA districts. For the five largest (New York
City, Los Angeles, Chicago, Miami-Dade, and Houston), the student target sample sizes
are three-quarters the size of a state (7,088). For the other twelve districts the student
target sample sizes are one-half the size of a state (4,725). All TUDA assessments will
use the RS session type.

D.

Note that above there is a conflict between sample size requirements at the state level,
and the TUDA district level. This will be resolved as in previous years: the districts will
have the target samples indicated in C. For the states that contain one or more of these
districts, the target sample size indicated in A will be used to determine a school
sampling rate for the state, which will be applied to the balance of the state outside the
TUDA district(s).

E.

In Puerto Rico, the target sample size is 3,150 per grade. Only mathematics will be
assessed in Puerto Rico (PR session type).

As in past state-by-state assessments, schools with fewer than 20 students in the grade in question
will be sampled at a moderately lower rate than other schools (at least half, and often higher,
depending upon the size of the school). This is in implicit recognition of the greater cost and burden
associated with surveying these schools.
As mentioned above, the NAEP 2009 design includes an oversample of high proportion American
Indian schools (as part of the NIES design). These schools will be sampled at higher rates than the
other schools. The NIES oversample will take place in Arizona, Minnesota, North Carolina,
Oregon, Utah, and Washington. Schools with relatively large percentages of American Indian
students will be separately stratified, as explained below, and oversampled by factors ranging from 2

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Memorandum 2009-2.3A/1.3B/1.3G/1.3D/1.2E

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June 27, 2008

to 6 based on state and grade. Table 3 below shows the thresholds used to define the NIES
oversampling strata along with their corresponding oversampling factors.
Table 3.

Percent American Indian thresholds and oversampling factors for the NIES school
oversample by state and grade

State
Arizona
Utah
Minnesota
North Carolina
Oregon
Washington

Grade 4
Percent American
Oversampling
Indian thresholds
factor
50
3
5
5
10
5
15
6
10
6
10
6

Grade 8
Percent American
Oversampling
Indian thresholds
factor
50
2
5
5
10
4
10
6
15
4
15
6

Table 4 shows the counts of schools to be selected in the alpha samples, along with the school and
student frame counts, and final target student sample sizes by state and TUDA districts for grades 4
and 8. The school sample sizes reflect the undersampling of very small schools. However, they do
not reflect the impact of the oversampling of high percentage American Indian schools in the six
states listed in Table 3. The table also identifies the jurisdictions where we take all schools and where
we take all students.
Table 4.

Grade 4 and 8 school and student frame counts, expected school sample sizes, and
initial target student sample sizes for the 2009 state-by-state and TUDA district
assessments (alpha samples)
Grade 4

Jurisdiction
Alabama

755

138

Alaska

359

Arizona

1,110
514

Arkansas
Bureau Of Indian
Education
California

Grade 8

Overall
Schools
target
Schools in
in
Students
student
frame
sample in frame sample size

Overall
Schools
target
Schools in
in
Students
student
frame
sample in frame sample size

58,253

9,450

480

120

59,066

9,450

200

9,660

6,650

281

136

10,254

6,650

137

80,785

9,450

713

130

79,822

9,450

148

35,818

9,450

329

125

36,824

9,450

140

140

3,839

3,839

120

120

3,561

3,561

5,698

316

478,659

24,526

2,550

235

476,256

24,644

**

**

Colorado

967

156

58,127

9,450

466

124

58,659

9,450

Connecticut

598

138

43,521

9,450

261

112

43,976

9,450

Delaware

107

107

9,353

9,353

**

55

55

9,751

9,751

**

District Of Columbia

126

126

5,174

5,174

**

54

54

4,503

4,503

**

DoDEA Schools

131

131

8,239

8,239

**

67

67

5,742

5,742

**

Florida

1,968

184

203,335

15,262

1,066

167

202,242

15,316

Georgia

1,174

173

121,798

13,332

484

125

123,356

12,839

Hawaii

196

137

14,147

9,450

69

69

13,051

9,450

Idaho

349

162

19,940

9,450

189

110

20,248

9,450

C-10

*

Memorandum 2009-2.3A/1.3B/1.3G/1.3D/1.2E

Table 4.

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June 27, 2008

Grade 4 and 8 school and student frame counts, expected school sample sizes, and
initial target student sample sizes for the 2009 state-by-state and TUDA district
assessments (alpha samples) (cont’d)
Grade 4

Jurisdiction
Illinois

2,300

Indiana

1,123
686

Iowa

Grade 8

Overall
Schools
target
Schools in
in
Students
student
frame
sample in frame sample size
226

Overall
Schools
target
Schools in
in
Students
student
frame
sample in frame sample size

156,987

14,558

1,543

209

160,233

14,633

141

79,531

9,450

483

111

81,376

9,450

187

34,520

9,450

397

136

36,854

9,450

Kansas

736

149

34,063

6,650

414

126

34,911

6,650

Kentucky

747

193

49,113

12,828

398

143

49,880

12,914

Louisiana

747

148

51,437

9,450

489

131

50,570

9,450

Maine

360

217

14,494

9,450

220

136

15,710

9,450

Maryland

864

203

62,185

13,144

320

147

65,742

13,242

Massachusetts

1,021

213

71,651

12,942

472

139

75,007

13,444

Michigan

1,974

213

123,765

13,396

1,055

169

131,165

13,508

931

152

59,705

9,450

670

137

63,660

9,450

443

134

38,179

9,450

285

114

39,291

9,450

1,128

163

67,206

9,450

673

133

71,518

9,450

Minnesota
Mississippi
Missouri
Montana

413

288

10,797

9,450

280

190

11,755

9,450

Nebraska

705

196

21,193

6,650

405

139

22,112

6,650

Nevada

339

119

32,723

9,450

144

86

33,157

9,450

New Hampshire
New Jersey
New Mexico

266

164

15,249

9,450

136

97

16,301

9,450

1,349

139

101,057

9,450

717

117

102,106

9,450

417

162

24,512

9,450

207

112

25,659

9,450

New York

2,343

177

198,642

13,294

1,253

161

209,701

13,497

North Carolina

1,346

174

109,359

13,322

13,369

276

276

7,140

7,140

2,026

226

134,367

North Dakota
Ohio

680

141

110,404

197

197

7,830

7,830

13,603

1,101

196

141,653

13,885

**

Oklahoma

898

181

46,592

9,450

597

151

46,908

9,450

Oregon

741

166

40,687

9,450

371

128

41,332

9,450

Pennsylvania

1,799

194

130,786

13,180

867

159

142,456

13,309

Puerto Rico

1,022

110

44,476

3,150

411

105

41,856

3,150

Rhode Island

186

160

11,109

9,450

60

60

11,998

9,450

South Carolina

597

125

52,356

9,450

277

109

54,236

9,450

South Dakota

334

334

8,999

8,999

269

269

9,624

9,624

Tennessee
Texas
Utah
Vermont

**

975

139

72,426

9,450

561

120

71,722

9,450

3,971

271

342,664

20,625

2,060

181

333,813

21,230

524

130

39,959

9,450

205

108

38,108

9,450

227

227

6,807

6,807

126

126

7,047

7,047

Virginia

1,120

129

89,984

9,450

378

107

95,321

9,450

Washington

1,200

147

75,870

9,450

604

123

79,640

9,450

440

203

20,525

9,450

200

117

21,555

9,450

1,128

249

60,347

13,164

618

179

64,652

13,231

194

194

6,234

6,234

99

99

6,503

6,503

West Virginia
Wisconsin
Wyoming

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**

**

**

*
**

**

**

Memorandum 2009-2.3A/1.3B/1.3G/1.3D/1.2E

Table 4.

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June 27, 2008

Grade 4 and 8 school and student frame counts, expected school sample sizes, and
initial target student sample sizes for the 2009 state-by-state and TUDA district
assessments (alpha samples) (cont’d)
Grade 4

Urban districts
(TUDA)

Grade 8

Overall
Schools
target
Schools in
in
Students
student
frame
sample in frame sample size

Overall
Schools
target
Schools in
in
Students
student
frame
sample in frame sample size

Atlanta

62

62

4,209

4,209

21

21

3,670

3,670

**

Austin

76

61

6,360

4,725

21

21

5,247

5,247

**

123

86

6,790

4,725

61

49

6,499

4,725

34

34

4,569

4,569

**

35

35

9,398

4,725

*

444

108

32,186

7,088

83

83

4,753

4,753
4,725

Baltimore City

**

Boston

78

78

4,022

4,022

Charlotte

90

55

9,856

4,725

Chicago

462

109

32,784

7,088

81

81

4,468

4,468

Detroit

148

70

10,184

4,725

83

55

9,227

Fresno

67

57

6,219

4,725

25

25

5,965

4,725

193

93

16,701

7,088

58

47

14,268

7,088

Cleveland

Houston
Jefferson County

**

**

93

63

6,998

4,725

36

36

6,657

4,725

Los Angeles

483

85

57,291

7,088

121

73

51,742

7,088

Miami

227

83

27,406

7,088

98

65

26,074

7,088

Milwaukee

125

91

6,437

4,725

89

64

6,481

4,725

New York City

699

89

68,125

7,088

373

83

67,430

7,088

Philadelphia

176

66

13,752

4,725

123

59

13,061

4,725

San Diego

135

67

10,340

4,725

47

35

9,824

4,725

**
*
*

1) Counts for states include counts for their constituent TUDA districts.
2) Target student sample sizes reflect sample sizes prior to attrition due to exclusion,
ineligibility, and nonresponse.
3) * identifies jurisdictions where all schools for the given grade are included in the NAEP
sample.
4) ** identifies jurisdictions where all students for the given grade are included in the NAEP
sample.
Stratification
In the six states where the NIES oversampling is taking place (Arizona, Minnesota, North Carolina,
Oregon, Utah, and Washington), we will first create a separate stratum of schools with relatively
large percentages of American Indians (those above the thresholds given in table 3). These
oversampling strata will not be further broken down. The remaining schools will be further stratified
as described below.
Each state and grade will be stratified separately, but using a common approach in all cases. TUDA
districts will be separated from their state, and each part stratified separately. The first level of
stratification will be based on urban-centered type of location. This variable has 12 levels (some of
which may not be present in a given state or TUDA district), and these will be collapsed so that each
of the resulting location categories contains at least 9 percent of the student population. Within each
of the resulting location categories, schools will be assigned a minority enrollment status. This is
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June 27, 2008

based on the two race/ethnic groups that are the second and third most prevalent within the
location category. If these groups are both low in percentage terms, no minority classification will be
used. Otherwise three (or occasionally four) equal-sized groups (generally high, medium, and low
minority) will be formed based on the distribution across schools of the two minority groups.
Finally, within the resulting location and minority group classes (of which there are likely to be from
three to fifteen, depending upon the jurisdiction), schools will be sorted by a measure derived from
school level results from the most recent available state achievement tests at the relevant grade. In
general, mathematics test results will be used, but where these are not available, reading results will
be used. In the few states that do not have math or reading tests at grades 4 and 8 (or where we are
unable to match the results to the NAEP school frame), instead of achievement data, schools will be
sorted using a measure of socio-economic status. This is the median household income of the 5-digit
ZIP Code area where the school is located, based on 2000 Population Census data. Schools in the
American Indian oversampling strata (in the six states having such strata) will be sorted by
percentage of American Indian enrollment.
Once the schools are sorted by location class, minority enrollment class, and achievement data (or
household income or AIAN enrollment data), a systematic sample of schools will be selected using a
random start. Schools will be sampled with probability proportional to size. The exact details of this
process are described in the individual sampling specification memos.
2.

Beta Sample

The beta samples at grades 4, 8, and 12, are public school samples. These samples will be used to
conduct the IC, SH, and PI assessments in public schools.
The first stage of sampling for the beta samples is the selection of a sample of geographic primary
sampling units (PSUs). These will be selected using the same design as for the 2008 Long Term
Trend assessment, but minimizing the overlap of with the PSUs in that assessment. A total of 62
PSUs will be selected, representing the U.S. (but not including Puerto Rico, or DODEA schools
that are located outside the 50 states and D.C.).
This PSU component is needed because of the operational complexities of administering the science
ICT assessment. A select group of staff will be trained to administer ICT. The HOT (SH) and pilot
test (PI) samples included in the beta sample for efficiency. This makes the school samples more
efficient, and reduces complications in spiraling.
The school stratification of the beta sample within PSUs will be by type of location and median
household income.
3.

Gamma Sample

This is the public school sample at grade 12, used for the reading, mathematics, and science
assessments. It will consist of a single sample of schools but with a mixture of two assessment types.
Schools in the eleven state-by-state participants will each receive a mixture of these two assessment

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June 27, 2008

types, which can be administered with a common administration, whereby students assigned to
either of these assessment types can be assessed in the same room, under common conditions.
As in past assessments, modest oversampling of Black and Hispanic students will be undertaken in
this sample. This will be carried out at the school level. Each school with more than 15 percent
Black and Hispanic students will be given twice the selection probability of a low minority school of
comparable size. This means that while about 53 percent of the student population (including over
90 percent of the Black and Hispanic students) are in “high” minority schools, about 70 percent of
the sample students will come from these schools. This oversampling will not be applied in the
eleven states participating in the state-by-state assessment.
In the eleven states participating in the state-by-state trial/pilot, each school in the sample will be
assigned a combination of the RM and RS session types. In the balance of the US the RS session
type will be used.
Stratification
Unlike the other samples, the Gamma sample will have an explicit stratification at the highest level.
The schools will be stratified by state, for the eleven state-by-state participants, and the balance of
the US, giving 12 explicit strata. In each of the eleven states, stratification will be carried out in the
same way as for the alpha samples. The last level sorting variable will be median household income,
as there are no achievement data available at the school level for grade 12.
For the explicit stratum containing the balance of the US, the highest level of sorting will be by
Census Division. This gives 8 implicit strata (the balance of New England is too small to be an
effective stratum, and is combined with the balance of the Mid-Atlantic Division). The next stratifier
in the hierarchy is type of location, which has twelve categories. Many of the type of location strata
nested within Census divisions will be collapsed with neighboring type of location cells (this will
occur if the expected school sample size within the cell is less than 4.0). These geographic strata will
be subdivided using a dichotomous high minority status category. Schools are in the high minority
stratum if they had more than 10 minority students and greater than 15 percent minority students
(minority defined as Black or Hispanic). Otherwise the school will be put in a low minority stratum.
If the expected sample size within these strata is less than 8.0, they will be left as is. If the expected
sample size is greater than 8.0, then the high-or-low minority strata will be subdivided into up to
four substrata (two for expected sample size up to 12.0, three for expected sample size up to 16.0,
and four for expected sample size greater than 16.0). For the low minority strata, the subdivision will
be by state or groups of contiguous states. For the high minority strata, the subdivision will be by
minority percentage. Within these substrata, the schools are to be sorted by school type (public,
BIE, DoDEA) and median household income from the 2000 Census (using a serpentine sort within
the school type substrata).

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4.

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June 27, 2008

Delta Samples

These are the private school samples at grades 4, 8, and 12, for conduction the operational
assessments in reading, math, and science. Schools in the three grade-specific samples will be
assigned the RS session type.
Stratification
The private schools are to be explicitly stratified by private school type (Catholic/non-Catholic).
Within each private school type, stratification will be by Census region (4 categories), type of
location (12 categories), and enrollment size. In general, where there are few or no schools in a given
stratum, categories will be collapsed together always preserving the Catholic/non-Catholic
stratification.
5.

Epsilon Samples

These samples are analogous to the beta samples, but for private schools. The same PSUs will be
used as for the beta samples, and the IC, SH, and PI session types will be conducted. The school
stratification within PSUs will be based on Catholic/non-Catholic status, type of location, and
enrollment size.
IV.

New Schools

To compensate for the fact that files used to create the NAEP school sampling frames are at least
two years out of date at the time of frame construction, we will supplement the Alpha, Gamma, and
Delta samples with new school samples at each grade.
The new school samples will be drawn using a two-stage design. At the first stage, a minimum of ten
school districts (in states with at least ten districts) will be selected from each state for public
schools, and ten Catholic dioceses will be selected nationally for the private schools. The sampled
districts and dioceses will be asked to review lists of their respective schools and identify new
schools. Frames of new schools will be constructed from these updates, and new schools will be
drawn with probability proportional to size using the same sample rates as their corresponding
original school samples.
The school sample sizes in the above tables do not reflect new school samples.
V.

Substitute Samples

Substitute samples will be selected for each of the Beta, Gamma, Delta, and Epsilon samples. The
substitute school for each original will be the next “available” school on the sorted sampling frame,
with the following exceptions:

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VI.

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June 27, 2008

1.

Schools selected for any NAEP samples will not be used as substitutes.

2.

Private schools whose school affiliation is unknown will not be used as substitutes. Also,
unknown affiliated private schools in the original samples will not get substitutes.

3.

Schools can only be substitutes for one and only one sample. (If a school is selected as a
substitute school for grade 12, for example, it can not be used as a substitute for either
grade 4 or grade 8.)

4.

A public school substitute will always be in the same state as its original school.

Student Sampling

Students within the sampled schools will be selected with equal probability. The student sampling
parameters vary by sample type (Alpha, Beta, Gamma, Delta, and Epsilon), assessment type, and
grade, as described below.
Sample Alpha, Grade 4 Schools (Except Puerto Rico), and Sample Delta, Grade 4
For alpha schools in states signed on for Science, and delta schools:
1.

All students, up to 102, will be selected.

2.

If the school has between 103 and 120 students (inclusive), the school will be asked if it
wishes to have all students selected, or a sample of 90. If the school elects to have all
students selected, all students will be selected. If the school asks for a sample of 90
students, a systematic sample of 90 students will be selected.

3.

If the school has more than 120 students, a systematic sample of 90 students will be
selected.

4.

In some schools, the school may be assigned more than one ‘hit’ in sampling. In these
schools we will select a sample of size 90 times the number of hits, taking all students if
this target is greater than or equal to 90/102 of the total grade 4 enrollment.

5.

All students will be assigned to assessment type RS.

For alpha schools in states not signed on for Science:
1.

All students, up to 68, will be selected.

2.

If the school has between 68 and 120 students (inclusive), the school will be asked if it
wishes to have all students selected, or a sample of 63. If the school elects to have all
students selected, all students will be selected. If the school asks for a sample of 63
students, a systematic sample of 63 students will be selected.

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3.

If the school has more than 120 students, a systematic sample of 63 students will be
selected.

4.

In some schools in small jurisdictions, the school may be assigned more than one ‘hit’
in sampling. In these schools we will select a sample of size 63 times the number of
hits, taking all students if this target is greater than or equal to 63/68 of the total grade 4
enrollment.

5.

All students will be assigned to assessment type RN.

Sample Alpha, Grade 8 Schools (Except Puerto Rico), and Sample Delta, Grade 8
For alpha schools in states signed on for Science, and delta schools:
1.

All students, up to 102, will be selected.

2.

If the school has more than 102 students, a systematic sample of 90 students will be
selected with no oversampling.

3.

In some schools, the school may be assigned more than one ‘hit’ in sampling. In these
schools we will select a sample of size 90 times the number of hits, taking all students if
this target is greater than or equal to 90/102 of the total grade 8 enrollment.

4.

All students will be assigned to assessment type RS.

For alpha schools in states not signed on for Science:
1.

All students, up to 68, will be selected.

2.

If the school has more than 68 students, a systematic sample of 63 students will be
selected with no oversampling.

3.

In some schools in small jurisdictions, the school may be assigned more than one ‘hit’ in
sampling. In these schools we will select a sample of size 63 times the number of hits,
taking all students if this target is greater than or equal to 63/68 of the total grade 8
enrollment.

4.

All students will be assigned to assessment type RN.

Sample Alpha, Puerto Rico Grades 4 and 8
1.

All students, up to 34, will be selected.

2.

If the school has more than 34 students, a systematic sample of 30 students will be
selected with no oversampling.

3.

All students will be assigned to assessment type PR.

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June 27, 2008

Samples Beta and Epsilon, Grades 4, 8, and 12
The session types involves in these samples are the two ICT session types (CE and CS), the HOT
(SH), and the pilot tests (PI). When a school is assigned to do ICT, the session type of CE or CS will
be assigned at the school level, with half of the ICT schools doing each type.
At grade 4, 2/29 of the students will be assigned to CE, 2/19 to CS, and 4/29 to HOT (SH), with
21/29 assigned to the pilot tests (PI). No school will be assigned more than one of CS, CE, or SH.
Thus in a school of sufficient size there will be a sample of 54 students, with 14 or 15 students
assigned to either CS, CE, or SH and the remainder to PI. In schools with fewer than 16 students, all
students will be assigned to one of CS, CE, SH, or PI.
At grade 8, 1/14 of the students will be assigned to CE, 1/14 to CS, and 1/7 to HOT (SH), with
5/7 assigned to the pilot tests (PI). No school will be assigned both more than one of CS, CE, and
SH. Thus in a school of sufficient size there will be a sample of 52 students, with 14 or 15 students
assigned to either CE, CS, or SH and the remainder to PI. In schools with fewer than 16 students, all
students will be assigned to one of CS, CE, SH, or PI.
At grade 12, 1/7 of the students will be assigned to CE, 1/7 to CS, and 2/7 to HOT (SH), with 3/7
assigned to the pilot tests (PI). Thus in a school of sufficient size there will be a sample of 52
students, with 14 or 15 students assigned to either CE or CS, 14 or 15 assigned to SH, and the
remainder to PI. In schools with between 16 and 26 students inclusive, 4/7 of the students will do
one of CE, CS, or SH, and 3/7 will do PI. One quarter of such schools will do CE, one quarter will
do CS, and one half will do SH. In schools with fewer than 16 students, all students will be assigned
to one of CE, CS, SH, or PI.
Samples Gamma and Delta, Grade 12
For schools in states not signed on for the state-by-state assessments in reading and math
for gamma, and for all schools in delta:
1.

All students, up to 170, will be selected.

2.

If the school has more than 170 students, a systematic equal probability sample of 150
students will be selected.

3.

All students will be assigned to assessment type RS.

For gamma schools in Florida:
1.

All students, up to 150, will be selected.

2.

If the school has more than 150 students, a systematic equal probability sample of 125
students will be selected.

3.

Three-fifths of the students in each school will be assigned to assessment type RM, and
2/5 to RS.

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June 27, 2008

For gamma schools in Illinois:
1.

All students, up to 140, will be selected.

2.

If the school has more than 140 students, a systematic equal probability sample of 120
students will be selected.

3.

Five-eighths of the students in each school will be assigned to assessment type RM, and
3/8 to RS.

For gamma schools in New Jersey:
1.

All students, up to 120, will be selected.

2.

If the school has more than 120 students, a systematic equal probability sample of 100
students will be selected.

3.

Three-quarters of the students in each school will be assigned to assessment type RM,
and 1/4r to RS.

For gamma schools in Massachusetts:
1.

All students, up to 110, will be selected.

2.

If the school has more than 110 students, a systematic equal probability sample of 95
students will be selected.

3.

15/19 of the students in each school will be assigned to assessment type RM, and 4/19
to RS.

For gamma schools in Arkansas, Connecticut, and Iowa:
1.

All students, up to 100, will be selected.

2.

If the school has more than 100 students, a systematic equal probability sample of 85
students will be selected.

3.

15/17 of the students in each school will be assigned to assessment type RM, and 2/17
to RS.

For gamma schools in Idaho, New Hampshire, South Dakota, and West Virginia:
1.

All students, up to 95, will be selected.

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June 27, 2008

2.

If the school has more than 95 students, a systematic equal probability sample of 80
students will be selected.

3.

15/16 of the students in each school will be assigned to assessment type RM, and 1/16
to RS.

VIII. Weighting Requirements
The Operational Samples
These samples will have a single set of weights for each subject (reading, math, and science at grades
4, 8 and 12) applied to reflect probabilities of selection, school and student nonresponse, any
trimming, and the random assignment to the particular subject. There will be a separate replication
scheme by grade and public/private.
The exact nature of the weighting for the reading assessments at all three grades, and the
mathematics assessment at grade 12, will depend upon the decisions as to which of the components
of new, mixed, and old booklets will be used in reporting. These decisions will be informed by the
actual assessment data. It is possible that multiple sets of weights will be required for some of these
assessments. Thus it will most likely not be possible to produce weights for the reading assessments
at grades 4 and 8 on a schedule that is consistent with six-month reporting.
The Probe Samples
There will also be a set of weights for the national Science HOT assessment, and an additional set
for the Science ICT assessment, at each grade. These weights will render the data representative of
the U.S.
The Pilot Test Samples
We will not weight the students in the pilot test studies. However, preliminary weights will be
available for pilot test samples, if needed.
The NIES Samples
The NIES survey samples consist of two grade-specific samples, comprising students selected for
each of the grade 4 and 8 operational samples. We will create one set of weights for each gradespecific sample. The NIES weights are designed for any aggregation of the NIES data, not involving
NAEP achievement data. NIES analyses involving NAEP achievement data should use the
appropriate NAEP operational weights.

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June 27, 2008

The HSTS Samples
The students eligible for the HSTS sample will be those gamma and grade 12 delta sample students,
from either the RS or RM sessions, assigned either a mathematics or a science booklet. However,
the complete set of such students is too large for the resources available for the HSTS. Thus some
subsampling will be required, as follows:
a) In ten of the eleven states participating in the pilot grade 12 program, a subsample
of the gamma sample schools will be selected. Florida is the exception; there all of
the gamma sample schools will be retained for the HSTS. In the 10 states the
subsampling will be such that the rate of sampling in the HSTS from these states
will be the same as from the remaining states not participating in the pilot state
program. Thus the HSTS sample will be a national sample, supplemented by a
state sample in Florida.
b) Depending upon available resources, students taking the ‘old’ mathematics
assessment booklets may be dropped from the HSTS sample.
More details of the HSTS subsampling process, and the resulting school and student sample sizes,
will be provided in other internal Westat 2009 sampling memos.

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