Field Test Results

Appendix 5 HSLS09 2012 Update Field Test Results.docx

High School Longitudinal Study of 2009 (HSLS:09) High School Transcript and 2013 Update Full Scale Study and Panel Maintenance

Field Test Results

OMB: 1850-0852

Document [docx]
Download: docx | pdf

March 19, 2013



High School Longitudinal Study of 2009 (HSLS:09)

College Update and Transcript Main Study (2013)




Appendix 5

2012 Update Field Test Results





Request for OMB Review
OMB# 1850-0852 v.11




Submitted by


National Center for Education Statistics

U.S. Department of Education

The 2012 Update field test was designed to be a brief survey conducted between the first and second follow-ups to learn about students’ plans after high school. In this summary of the field test, results are provided for data collection, the use of the Mahalanobis distance function to minimize nonresponse bias, and the validation study conducted to test the reliability of parent and student responses to the questionnaire. Field test results will be included as an appendix in the 2013 Update/Transcript Data File Documentation (DFD).


Data Collection Results

The purpose of the 2012 Update field test was to test procedures for having either the student or parent complete a 20-minute questionnaire about the student’s plans for the fall of 2012 and beyond. Data collection was conducted in three phases:

  • Phase 1 consisted of a two week web-only period.

  • Phase 2 was a three week period (weeks 3 through 5) with telephone prompting and outbound interviewing added to web data collection.

  • Phase 3 comprised the remainder of data collection (weeks 6 through 15) with the introduction of incentives for high-distance cases based on a Mahalanobis distance score calculation at the start of the phase.

For 69 percent of nonresponding cases at the start of Phase 3, a $5 pre-paid incentive was mailed to the sample member with the promise of an additional $10 incentive for completing the questionnaire. The remaining cases received no incentive.


Response rates and mode of response for the 2012 Update are provided in Table 5.1. Overall, 68 percent of sample members responded to the 2012 Update. The students provided 57 percent of the responses compared to 43 percent parent responses. Both students and parents were more likely to participate via Web than telephone. Table 5.2 shows response by enrollment status as of the first follow-up. Of the students still enrolled at the base-year school as of the first follow-up, 74 percent participated. Students or parents of transfer students had a response rate of 49 percent. Due to small sample sizes, students who had dropped out of school, graduated early, were home-schooled, or had an unknown status were grouped together and 65 percent participated.




Table 5.1. 2012 Update response rates by sample member , first follow-up enrollment status, and mode of completion

 

Number  of sample members

Percentage of sample members

Total Sample

754

100

Overall response

514

68.2




Student

292

56.8

Web

159

54.5

CATI

133

45.5




Parent

222

43.2 

Web

141

63.5

CATI

81

36.5




Mode



    Web

300

58.4

    CATI

214

41.6




Table 5.2. 2012 Update response rates by first follow-up enrollment status

 

Total sample members

Number responding

Percent responding

Total

754

514

68.2

   Enrolled at base-year school

537

398

74.1

   Transferred

157

77

49.0

   Other/Unknown

60

39

65.0



Mahalanobis Distance Function

The 2012 Update field test utilized a responsive design methodology to strategically target nonresponse cases that could potentially contribute to bias if they remained nonrespondents. The methodology centered on identifying nonrespondent cases most unlike respondent cases, and targeting these nonresponding cases in a manner that was intended to increase the likelihood that they would become respondents. A Mahalanobis distance function score was used to rank nonresponding cases in terms of their overall difference from existing respondents.

A combination of survey variables, sample frame variables, and paradata were used in building the model to select target cases. Both student- and parent-level variables were considered for use in the Mahalanobis distance calculations. The variables used to calculate Mahalanobis distance are shown in Table 5.3.

Additional survey variables were considered (performance on the assessment, educational expectations, etc…) for the models, but many of the candidate variables had a large number of unknown values for cases in the field test sample. Imputing missing values for survey variables was ruled out due to the high level of missing values. At the time of calculating the Mahalanobis distance, 210 parent cases had responded, leaving 544 pending cases that were available for consideration for nonresponse follow up period. The 375 highest-distance nonrespondents were selected as the target cases for Phase 3. These 375 targeted cases had a mean Mahalanobis value of 8.33. Non-targeted non responding cases had a mean Mahalanobis value of 5.75. Phase 3 targeted cases and non-targeted cases had response rates (54 percent and 59 percent, respectively) that were not statistically different (x2 = 1.08, p = .2996).  This may suggest that the phase 3 pre-paid $5 incentive with the offer of $10 more upon completion may have had some effect in encouraging participation from the targeted group of cases, given that they were likely more challenging.  Table 5.4 shows the response by phase of data collection.

Table 5.3. Variables used for calculation of Mahalanobis Distance

Source

Variables

Survey variables

Enrollment status

Gender

Sample frame variables

School type

Metro area

Race

Paradata

Whether sample member contacted the help desk

Whether sample member logged in but did not complete the College Update questionnaire

Number of contact attempts in the early data collection period

Whether sample member made an appointment to complete the interview

Whether sample member told interviewer they would do the web interview

Student base year and first follow-up response outcomes

Parent base year and first follow-up response outcomes

Parent response in the panel maintenance update

Student enrollment status at first follow-up

Reason for prior student nonresponse (refusal, absent) if applicable

Call counts in base year and first follow-up





Table 5.4. 2012 Update field test response by data collection phase


Total

Participated

Percent

Total

754

514

68.2

Phase 1

754

81

10.7

Phase 2

673

129

17.1

Phase 3

544

304

55.9

High Distance

375

204

54.4

Low distance

169

100

59.2



The primary goal of offering an incentive to cases with high Mahalanobis distance scores is to reduce the potential for nonresponse bias in key survey estimates. Key survey estimates were examined for indications of reduced nonresponse bias resulting from the third phase of data collection. To do this, estimates produced from the combined set of respondents including phase 1, phase 2 and the non-targeted phase 3 respondents were compared against the full respondent set that also includes the phase 3 respondents. Non-targeted and targeted cases were also compared to determine if differences existed between these sets of cases. Five key variables were analyzed: 1) earned a high school diploma, 2) taking classes at a college or university, 3) applied to college, 4) completed a FAFSA, and 5) currently working. Differences in estimates would suggest that the incentives offered in Phase 3 were effective in lowering the potential for bias by capturing responses from sample members who would otherwise have not participated. The estimates are shown in Table 5.4.

An examination of the estimates shows that the targeted cases who responded were less likely than the non-targeted cases to have earned a high school diploma, less likely to be taking college or university classes, less likely to have applied to a postsecondary institution, less likely to have completed a FAFSA, and more likely to be working. All these differences in point estimates were significant at the .05 level. The Mahalanobis distance function identified cases that were different, but importantly, these identified and targeted cases appear different in their survey responses. Examining these estimates suggests that the high-distance cases were a good choice of nonresponding cases to target. While the estimates of the targeted cases that participated look different from the overall set of respondent estimates, the non-targeted phase-3 cases that participated look more similar to the overall respondent set. Targeting the nonresponding non-targeted set of cases would likely have brought into the respondent pool cases that look similar to those who had already been interviewed, a nonresponse follow-up scenario that is not advisable (Schouten, Cobben, and Bethlehem, 2009).



Table 5.5. Survey estimates with and without phase 3 respondents

Variable

Phase 3 targeted cases (n = 201)

Phase 3  non targeted cases (n=84)

Phase 1, phase 2 and phase 3 non targeted cases (without phase 3 targeted cases, n = 313)

Overall estimate (n=514)

Earned a high school diploma

84.6

94.0

96.5

91.8

Did not earn a high school diploma

15.4

6.0

3.5

8.2

Taking classes at a postsecondary institution

68.7

85.7

87.5

80.2

Applied to postsecondary institution(s)

36.3

54.8

61.7

51.8

Completed a FAFSA

62.7

81.0

77.3

71.6

Currently working

56.2

42.7

47.6

50.1



Validation Study

In addition to the primary data collection, a validation study was conducted to determine the reliability between student and parent responses on the same items. The 2012 Update interview was designed to be administered to either the teenage sample member or one of his/her parents. When selecting items for the instrument, preference was given to factual questions that could be answered by either the teenager or the parent and had the highest likelihood of consistent teenager-parent responses. However, some important questions that were subjective in nature were included as well.

To evaluate consistency of responses, the complete interview was conducted with both the student and one of his/her parents for 112 pairs. At the beginning of the data collection cycle, student and parent respondents who reached the end of the interview were asked to provide contact information for the other (i.e., students were asked to provide parent contact information and parents were asked to provide student contact information) so that RTI could follow up for the validation study. Student-parent pairs were recruited regardless of the mode of the first interview, self-administered web interview or CATI. RTI then attempted to contact and interview the other or encourage completion by web. When at least 100 pairs of completed interviews had been achieved, participants were no longer recruited.

For analysis of the results, before the percentage agreement was calculated for a variable, cases with a “don’t know” response or a nonresponse to the question were eliminated from the analysis. In other words, both the student and the parent had to have a response other than “don’t know” to be considered a valid pair for comparison. Additionally, continuous variables were categorized and job earnings were placed on the same scale (annual earnings). When questions pertained to a particular institution named by the respondent, care was taken to only compare responses when the institutions named by the student and the parent were the same. When the two respondents listed the same schools but in a different order, the responses were matched up by institution before comparison.

Many of the items in the 2012 Update provided an explicit “don’t know” option for students and parents. However, students and parents who did not know may have also left the question unanswered. Therefore, for the comparison of the percentage of “don’t know” responses, both explicit and implicit forms of “don’t know” were counted. Cases where an item was legitimately skipped based on instrument routing were excluded from the analysis.

Results from the validation study analysis are presented in table 5.6. The table presents the number of valid student-parent pairs, the percent agreement within valid pairs, and the percent of students and parents who either answered with a “don’t know” category, or left the item missing. In summary, 108 items had sufficient and appropriate data to conduct an analysis. Among the 108 items, 45 items (41.7 percent) had at least 85 percent of valid pairs giving the same answer, 36 items (33.3 percent) had 70 to 84.9 percent of valid pairs in agreement, and 27 items (25 percent) had less than 70 percent of pairs in agreement. Furthermore, 78 items (72.2 percent) had less than 10 percent of students answering “don’t know” or skipping the item, while 30 items (27.8 percent) had 10 percent or more of respondents answering “don’t know” or skipping the item. Among parents, 66 items (61.1 percent) had less than 10 percent of respondents who answered “don’t know” or skipped the item, and 42 items (38.9 percent) that had 10 percent or more “don’t know” or nonresponse.

Results from the analysis were presented to the Technical Review Panel. Along with the results from the analysis, additional measures of distribution, and expert knowledge of the content, the Technical Review Panel reviewed the instrument and made recommendations for the 2013 Update instrument, which have been incorporated into the main study design.

Table 5.6. Percent agreement of valid pairs and percent of students and parents who did not answer item

Variable name

Variable label

Number of valid pairs

Percent agreement of valid pairs

Percent of respondent who answered don’t know or did not answer

Student

Parent

CUHSCRED

Earned high school credential and credential type

112

97.3

0.0

0.0

HSCREDDATE

Combined month and year high school credential awarded (recode)

108

88.9

2.7

0.9

CUENROLLHS12

High school enrollment status

#

#

#

#

CULASTHSMO

Month last attended high school

#

#

#

#

CULASTHSYR

Year last attended high school

#

#

#

#

CULASTHS

Last attended BY school, F1 school or another school

111

100.0

0.9

0.0

CULASTHSNAME

Name of high school last attended

#

#

#

#

CUOTHHS

Has attended any other high school besides BY school & most recent

110

100.0

0.0

1.8

CUOTHHSNAME

Name of other high school attended

#

#

#

#

CUOTHERHS

Attended any other high schools

#

#

#

#

CUDUALMATH

Has taken a math course for college credit

91

81.3

8.9

13.4

CUDUALSCIENCE

Has taken a science course for college credit

90

83.3

9.8

13.4

CUDUALOTHER

Has taken a course in another subject for college credit

105

84.8

1.8

4.5

CUCLGUNIV

Taking classes at a college or university in fall 2012

107

97.2

4.5

0.0

CUOCCSCHOOL

Taking classes at a school for occupational training in fall 2012

91

84.6

10.7

9.8

CUCERTLIC

Studying for an industry certification or license in fall 2012

91

92.3

12.5

6.3

CUAPPRENTICE

Participating in an apprenticeship program in fall 2012

91

98.9

11.6

9.8

CUOTHTRAIN

Receiving another form of training in fall 2012

93

93.6

8.0

8.9

CUWORK

Working in fall 2012

83

69.9

16.1

10.7

CUMILITARY

Serving in the military fall 2012

100

99.0

1.8

8.9

CUFAMILY

Starting a family or taking care of children in fall 2012

103

99.0

0.9

7.1

CUHS

Attending high school in fall 2012

#

#

#

#

CUGEDCOURSE

Attending a GED completion course in fall 2012

#

#

#

#

CUFOCUS

Teenager's main focus in fall 2012

27

92.6

0.0

4.5

CUBACHELOR

Enrolling in Bachelor's degree program

100

92.0

0.0

1.0

CUAABA

Enrolling in Associate's degree program-plans to transfer to BA/BS

100

91.0

0.0

1.0

CUAANOBA

Enrolling in Associate's degree program-no plans to transfer to BA/BS

100

99.0

0.0

1.0

CUCERTPROG

Enrolling in certificate/diploma program at school providing occupational training

100

99.0

0.0

1.0

CUNOPROG

Not enrolling in program, just taking classes

100

96.0

0.0

1.0

CUOTHPROG

Enrolling in another type of program

100

100.0

0.0

1.0

CUDK

Don't know what type of program will enroll in

100

97.0

0.0

1.0

CUCLGFT

Enrolling full-time or part-time

95

96.8

6.7

1.0

CUCLGIPEDS

Fall 2012 postsecondary institution

91

98.9

1.0

2.9

CUMAJORGEN01

Major in Fall 2012 postsecondary institution

82

73.2

12.6

9.6

CUWORKFT

Working full-time

24

83.3

19.2

2.3

CUACTDUTY

On active duty

#

#

#

#

CUAPPCLG

Applied to any (other) colleges

112

76.8

0.0

0.0

CUCLGAPPNUM

Number of colleges applied to

58

70.7

0.0

1.4

CUAPP1IPEDS

(Other) college applied to - 1

57

80.7

1.4

0.0

CUAPP2IPEDS

(Other) college applied to - 2

45

57.8

8.1

5.4

CUCHOICEAPP

First choice of schools applied to, not considering cost

50

72.0

0.9

1.8

CUAPP1STATUS

Status of application at (other) college applied to - 1

46

97.8

1.4

2.9

CUAPP2STATUS

Status of application at (other) college applied to - 2

26

100.0

0.0

0.0

CUCHOICEACC

First choice of schools accepted to, not considering cost

46

91.3

0.9

0.9

CUAPPFAFSA

Completed a FAFSA

96

96.9

10.7

4.5

CUNODEBT

Did not complete FAFSA because didn't want debt

9

55.6

6.7

13.6

CUCANAFFORD

Did not complete FAFSA because can afford college/school without it

11

81.8

0.0

4.5

CUINELIGIBLE

Did not complete FAFSA because thought ineligible/unqualified

11

63.6

0.0

9.1

CUDKHOW

Did not complete FAFSA because didn't have information on how to

10

70.0

0.0

13.6

CUFORMWORK

Did not complete FAFSA because too much work or time

11

81.8

0.0

9.1

CUDKCOULD

Did not complete FAFSA because didn't know could

10

80.0

0.0

13.6

CUNOPOSTSEC

Did not complete FAFSA because don't plan to continue education

9

100.0

0.0

18.2

CUNOQUALFAM

Thought would not qualify because another family member didn't qualify

5

80.0

0.0

7.1

CUNOQUALCRED

Thought would not qualify because of credit score

5

100.0

0.0

14.3

CUNOQUALINC

Thought would not qualify because income is too high

5

60.0

0.0

7.1

CUNOQUALTEST

Thought would not qualify because grades or test scores too low

5

80.0

0.0

14.3

CUNOQUALPT

Thought would not qualify because will attend part-time

5

80.0

0.0

14.3

CUNOQUALOTH

Thought would not qualify for another reason

4

75.0

16.7

21.4

CUAPPOTHAID

Completed financial aid applications besides FAFSA

75

86.7

21.4

13.4

CUFLSTAFFORD

Fall 2012 college offered Stafford loan for first academic year

41

80.5

36.6

22.1

CUFLOTHLOAN

Fall 2012 college offered other loan for first academic year

46

63.0

23.2

22.1

CUFLWKSTD

Fall 2012 college offered work-study for first academic year

46

84.8

17.1

22.1

CUFLPELL

Fall 2012 college offered Pell grant for first academic year

37

86.5

30.5

25.6

CUFLOTHGRNT

Fall 2012 college offered other grant for first academic year

59

79.7

11.0

12.8

CUFLOTHAID

Fall 2012 college offered other financial aid for first academic year

38

73.7

25.6

32.6

CUFLNOAID

Fall 2012 college offered no financial aid for first academic year

33

69.7

30.5

36.0

CUCHSTAFFORD

First choice accepted college offered Stafford loan for 1st academic yr

2

100.0

63.6

36.4

CUCHOTHLOAN

First choice accepted college offered other loan for 1st academic yr

3

100.0

18.2

36.4

CUCHWKSTD

First choice accepted college offered work-study for 1st academic yr

3

100.0

18.2

36.4

CUCHPELL

First choice accepted college offered Pell grant for 1st academic yr

1

100.0

45.5

45.5

CUCHOTHGRNT

First choice accepted college offered other grant for 1st academic yr

3

33.3

0.0

45.5

CUCHOTHAID

First choice accepted college offered other financial aid for 1st academic yr

1

100.0

27.3

45.5

CUCHNOAID

First choice accepted college offered no financial aid for 1st academic yr

3

33.3

18.2

36.4

CUAIDANYCLG

Offered financial aid apart from offers from these schools

103

72.8

5.4

2.7

CUCOSTFALLCLG1

Total cost of fall 2012 college for 2012-2013 school year

86

76.7

12.6

6.7

CUFALLBORROW1

Amount will borrow to pay for fall 2012 college

70

90.0

21.4

13.5

CUFALLSCHOLAR1

Amount will receive in scholarships and grants for fall 2012 college

81

72.8

13.6

9.6

CUCOSTCHOICE1

Total cost of 1st choice accepted college for 2012-2013 school year

7

42.9

18.8

16.7

CUCHCBORROW1

Amount would have borrowed to pay for 1st choice accepted college

7

71.4

18.8

16.7

CUCHCSCHOLAR1

Amount would have received in scholarships and grants for 1st choice accepted college

7

57.1

12.5

16.7

CUREPUTATION

Importance of academic quality/reputation when choosing fall 2012 college/school

91

75.8

1.0

4.8

CUCOSTATTEND

Importance of cost of attendance when choosing fall 2012 college/school

72

75.0

1.9

1.9

CUCLOSEHOME

Importance of being close to home when choosing fall 2012 college/school

42

73.8

1.0

1.9

CUFARHOME

Importance of being far from home when choosing fall 2012 college/school

15

73.3

6.8

11.5

CUJOBPLC

Importance of job placement when choosing fall 2012 college/school

69

60.9

4.9

12.5

CUGRADSCHPLC

Importance of graduate school placement when choosing fall 2012 college/school

59

67.8

6.8

12.5

CU4YRBAPLC

Importance of placement in 4-yr Bachelor's program when choosing fall 2012 college/school

61

57.4

8.7

19.2

CUSPORTS

Importance of opportunity to play sports when choosing fall 2012 college/school

14

71.4

4.9

4.8

CURECOMMEND

Importance of family/friend recommendations when choosing fall 2012 college/school

45

64.4

5.8

6.7

CUOFFERSPGRM

Importance of program of study when choosing fall 2012 college/school

80

76.3

2.9

4.8

CUSOCIALLIFE

Importance of good social life when choosing fall 2012 college/school

59

64.4

4.9

6.7

CUWHERELIVE

Where student will live in fall 2012

101

95.1

1.0

0.0

CUDISLIKESCH

Not attending school in fall 2012 because does not like school

6

66.7

0.0

0.0

CUDIDPOORLY

Not attending school in fall 2012 because did not do well in school

6

83.3

0.0

12.5

CUCANTAFFORD

Not attending school in fall 2012 because can't afford it

6

66.7

0.0

12.5

CURATHERWORK

Not attending school in fall 2012 because needs to/would rather work

5

40.0

22.2

0.0

CUNOTACCEPTED

Not attending school in fall 2012 because not accepted where wanted

2

100.0

0.0

0.0

CUBADOPTIONS

Not attending school in fall 2012 because did not want to go where accepted

2

100.0

0.0

0.0

CUDEFER

Not attending school in fall 2012 because deferred enrollment

2

100.0

0.0

0.0

CUNOTENOUGH

Not attending school in fall 2012 because didn't receive enough financial aid

6

66.7

0.0

12.5

CUOTHRSN

Not attending school in fall 2012 for another reason

6

50.0

0.0

12.5

CUJOBNOW

Currently working for pay

30

73.3

0.0

0.0

CUJ1OCC2

Current job

18

72.2

3.0

5.7

CUJOBRELATE

Current job's relationship to job wants to have when education completed

19

79.0

3.0

0.0

CUAPPRENTSHP

Current job is a formal apprenticeship

20

65.0

0.0

2.9

CULICENSEHRS

Earning hours for license for occupational field on current job

15

100.0

9.1

11.4

CUHSJOB

Started current job while in high school

20

90.0

0.0

0.0

CUHSPRG

Got current job through high school-arranged program

20

100.0

0.0

0.0

CUHSASSIST

Got current job with other assistance from high school

20

95.0

0.0

0.0

CUJOBEARN

Job earnings (Recoded)

15

66.7

6.1

17.1

CUJOBPLAN

Plans to have current job on November 1, 2012

19

89.5

0.0

2.9

CUJ2OCC2

Job plans to have on November 1, 2012

2

0.0

29.6

41.2

CUCNSLCLG

How well counselor prepared teenager to gain admission to college

102

49.0

2.7

6.3

CUCNSLAID

How well counselor prepared teenager to apply for financial aid

98

38.8

5.4

7.1

CUCNSLJOB

How well counselor prepared teenager to find a job

88

40.9

4.5

17.9

1 Continuous variable categorized for analysis.

# No data available


File Typeapplication/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
AuthorDebbie Herget
File Modified0000-00-00
File Created2021-01-28

© 2024 OMB.report | Privacy Policy