2-SED-OMB_2016_SecA_Final

2-SED-OMB_2016_SecA_Final.pdf

Survey of Earned Doctorates

OMB: 3145-0019

Document [pdf]
Download: pdf | pdf
SF-83 SUPPORTING STATEMENT
for
Survey of Earned Doctorates
for SED 2016 and 2017 survey cycles

TABLE OF CONTENTS
SECTION A: JUSTIFICATION ................................................................................................. 4
A.1. Necessity for Information Collection ................................................................................. 4
A.2. Uses of Information ............................................................................................................ 5
Current Uses of the SED at the Federal Level ................................................................. 6
Academic Uses of the SED ............................................................................................ 10
A.3. Consideration of Using Improved Technology................................................................. 10
A.4. Efforts to Identify Duplication .......................................................................................... 12
A.5. Efforts to Minimize Burden on Small Business ............................................................... 14
A.6. Consequences of Less Frequent Data Collection.............................................................. 14
A.7. Special Circumstances ...................................................................................................... 15
A.8. Federal Register Announcement and Consultations Outside the Agency ........................ 15
Consultations Outside the Agency ................................................................................. 15
A.9. Payment or Gifts to Respondents ...................................................................................... 16
A.10. Assurance of Confidentiality .......................................................................................... 16
A.11. Justification for Sensitive Questions ............................................................................... 17
A.12. Estimate of Respondent Burden ...................................................................................... 17
A.13. Cost Burden to Respondents ........................................................................................... 19
A.14. Cost to the Federal Government ..................................................................................... 19
A.15. Program Changes or Adjustments................................................................................... 19
A.16. Tabulation and Publication Plans and Project Schedule ................................................. 20
Project Schedule............................................................................................................. 20
A.17. Display of OMB Expiration Date ................................................................................... 21
A.18. Exception to the Certification Statement ........................................................................ 21

SECTION B: Collection of Information Employing Statistical Methods ............................ 22
Survey Data Collection Procedures Background ...................................................................... 22
B.1. Universe and Sampling Procedures................................................................................... 22
B.2. Survey Methodology ......................................................................................................... 24
B.3. Methods to Maximize Response ....................................................................................... 24
B.4. Testing of Procedures ........................................................................................................ 25
Data Collection Related Tests ........................................................................................ 25
Survey Quality Tests and Research ............................................................................... 27
Proposed Tests and Research ......................................................................................... 30
B.5. Individuals Consulted....................................................................................................... 31

LIST OF ATTACHMENTS
Attachment 1: Proposed 2016 SED Questionnaire & Current 2015 Questionnaire
Attachment 2: Changes to the SED 2016-2017 Questionnaire Compared with SED 2015
Attachment 3: Authorizing Legislation of Sponsoring Agencies
Attachment 4: Current Representatives from Sponsoring Agencies
Attachment 5: List of Persons who reviewed the SED
Attachment 6: Federal Register Announcement
Attachment 7: NSF Staff and Contractor Data Use Agreement for Individuals
Attachment 8: Materials Sent to Institutional Contacts
8.1 Example of the Institutional Profile
8.2 Example of the Institution Contact Administrative Tool (ICAT) (Web Collection
Pin/Password for Institutions)
8.3 Institutional Contact Transmittal Form
8.4 Example of the Interim Results Form
8.5 Address Roster Form
8.6 Missing Information Roster
8.7 Dean/Contact Change Form
Attachment 9: Example of Non-Respondent Follow-Up Letter
Attachment 10: SED Methodological Research Listing

SECTION A: JUSTIFICATION
This request is for OMB clearance for two years covering the 2016 and 2017 cycles of the
Survey of Earned Doctorates (SED). The request represents an extension of a currently
approved data collection (OMB No. 3145-0019). The SED underwent a review process this year
which generated recommendations for a small number of changes to the questionnaire. The
purpose of the review was to identify revisions and additions that would reduce respondent
burden, improve data quality, increase consistency across agency surveys, reduce costs, and
increase the efficiency of administrative processes in order to hasten the release of the survey
data. The recommended changes from this review process and the reports supporting these
recommendations are described in section B.4 of this report. Both the current (SED 2015) and
recommended (SED 2016) questionnaire instruments are presented in Attachment 1. A list of
methodological reports that have informed changes to the SED over the past 15 years appears in
Attachment 10.
A.1. Necessity for Information Collection
The SED began in 1957–58 to collect data annually on the number and characteristics of
individuals receiving research doctoral degrees from accredited U.S. institutions. All individuals
receiving research doctorates from accredited U.S. institutions are asked to complete the survey.
A research doctorate is a doctoral degree that (1) requires the completion of an original
intellectual contribution in the form of a dissertation or an equivalent culminating project (e.g.,
musical composition) and (2) is not primarily intended as a degree for the practice of a
profession. The most common research doctorate degree is the PhD. Doctorate recipients of
professional doctorate degrees such as MD, DDS, JD, DPharm, and PsyD are not included in the
survey. The results of this annual survey are used to assess characteristics and trends in doctorate
education and degrees. This information is vital for educational and labor force planners within
the federal government and in academia.
The SED is sponsored by the National Science Foundation in collaboration with the National
Institutes of Health (NIH), the U.S. Department of Education (ED), the U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA), the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH), and the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). Sponsoring agencies typically provide funding
for the SED, obtain special tabulations from the survey each year customized to their unique
needs, and receive uniform data tabulations/reports. The representatives of each sponsoring
agency and the list of persons who have been consulted and/or have reviewed the SED 20162017 questionnaire are listed in Attachment 5. The National Center for Science and Engineering
Statistics 1 (NCSES) within the National Science Foundation has monitoring responsibility for
the project, which is currently conducted under contract by NORC at the University of Chicago.
1

NCSES is a federal statistical agency that reports to the National Science Foundation’s Directorate for Social,
Behavioral, and Economic Sciences. Formerly known as the Division of Science Resources Statistics (SRS), NCSES
was established by the America COMPETES Reauthorization Act of 2010. The new name reflects broadened
responsibilities for the collection, interpretation, analysis, and dissemination of objective data on the science and
engineering enterprise.

Survey of Earned Doctorates

Page 4 of 31

NORC at the University of Chicago was competitively awarded a new procurement in 2012 that
covers the SED operations from 2013 to 2016.
The authority to collect information for the SED is established under the National Science
Foundation Act of 1950, as amended, Public Law 507 (42 U.S.C. 1862), Section 3(a) (6), which
directs the NSF “…to provide a central clearinghouse for the collection, interpretation, and
analysis of data on scientific and engineering resources and to provide a source of information
for policy formation by other agencies of the federal government…” Furthermore, Executive
Order 10521 (March 17, 1954) states: “The Foundation shall continue to make comprehensive
studies and recommendations regarding the Nation’s scientific research effort and its resources
for scientific activities, including facilities and scientific personnel, and its foreseeable scientific
needs, with particular attention to the extent of the federal government’s activities and the
resulting effects upon trained scientific personnel.” More recently, the NCSES was established
within the National Science Foundation by Section 505 of the America COMPETES
Reauthorization Act of 2010 and given a broader mandate to collect data related to STEM
education, the science and engineering workforce, and U.S. competitiveness in science,
engineering, technology, and R&D.
Statutory authority for collection of information for fields other than science and engineering
comes from legislation for the other Federal sponsoring agencies. The following is a list of the
applicable legislation:
1. NIH: Title I of the National Research Act of 1974 (PL 93 348);
2. ED: Education Sciences Reform Act of 2002;
3. NEH: Section 956(k) of the Arts, Humanities, and Museums Amendments of 1990, as
enacted in Public Law 10 1 -512;
4. USDA: Title XIV of the Agriculture and Food Act of 1977 (PL 95-113) as amended,
and Title V of the Equity in Educational Land-Grant Status Act of 1994 (PL 013-382)
as amended, Sec. 354;
5. NASA: Title 42 of The Public Health and Welfare and Chapter 26 of the National
Space Program.
Attachment 3 provides the cited legislation for each sponsoring agency; these agencies may
change depending on their continuing funding for the SED.
A.2. Uses of Information
The SED has been conducted annually since 1958 and is jointly sponsored by six federal
agencies in order to avoid duplication in data collection. The purpose of the SED is to compile
data on all recipients of earned research doctorates awarded by U.S. universities. It is an
accurate, timely source of information on one of our nation’s most precious resources – highly

Survey of Earned Doctorates

Page 5 of 31

educated individuals. The burden on respondents is relatively light and the resulting information
is used extensively and further analyzed by many federal agencies for program evaluation and
policy formulation.
The SED is the only data source that provides comprehensive information on the education and
early career commitments of persons who have recently received research doctorates from U.S.
universities. The resulting information is a valuable resource for other government agencies,
academic researchers and policymakers, as well.
The results of the SED each academic year become part of the Doctorate Records File (DRF), a
virtually complete database of more than 1.9 million U.S.-educated doctorate recipients from
1920 to 2013.
The six sponsoring agencies have made extensive use of the SED. Detailed tables, tabulations,
and the computer files are available to representatives of the agencies that sponsor the SED for
use in program planning/evaluation, policy development, and dissemination. The heads of the
agencies use the data in their reports and speeches, as well as in national forum discussions of
educational policy.
There is no public-use SED file available; however, organizations and individuals can request
information from the SED database and these special tabulations are provided at cost by the
survey contractor. In addition, selected SED data items are available to the public on the internet
through the WebCASPAR database (http://webcaspar.nsf.gov) and the SED Tabulation Engine
(https://ncses.norc.org/NSFTabEngine/#WELCOME). Doctorate-granting institutions
participating in the SED may receive a cumulative micro-level data file of their own institution’s
doctorate recipients free upon request. Doctorate-granting institutions also receive preliminary
institution files during the course of a survey cycle, also free upon request. Researchers at U.S.
institutions may gain access to the cumulative micro-level data file by completing an NCSES
Restricted-Use Data Licensing Agreement (http://www.nsf.gov/statistics/license/). Statistical
data from the SED are widely used by other federal agencies, Congress, state agencies,
universities, professional societies, and individuals doing research in science policy, graduate
education, economics, and human resource planning.
Current Uses of the SED at the Federal Level
The uses made of the data from the SED reflect the fact that the survey is the most
comprehensive, accurate, and timely source of data on research doctorate degree awardees in the
United States. The use of SED data and reports is widespread among sponsoring federal agencies
and other federal organizations. The data are used for policy development, in carrying out
program responsibilities of the agencies, and in the administration of agency programs. The data
are disseminated extensively throughout the agencies. Some of the more important recent uses,
organized by user agency, are listed below. The participating federal agencies are subject to
change, pending funding availability; the current liaisons for each sponsoring agency are listed in
Attachment 4.
a. The National Science Foundation

Survey of Earned Doctorates

Page 6 of 31

The National Science Foundation has been a sponsor of the SED since 1958. The uses made of
the data on science and engineering (S&E) doctorates are many:
•

The SED is used as the universe frame for selecting the sample of doctoral scientists to be
included in the NSF’s Survey of Doctorate Recipients (SDR), a longitudinal survey of
doctorate recipients in science, engineering, and health fields.

•

Many programs within the NSF, especially those dealing with women, minorities, and
persons with disabilities, use data from the SED for program planning. While these
programs focus on U.S. citizens, data on foreign citizens studying here for their PhD are
also useful for international comparisons and for quantifying the attraction of the U.S.
graduate education around the world. In addition, the SED has served as a measure of
program effectiveness, in that the Graduate Research Fellowship Program has used the
information on those who complete the PhD to evaluate the effectiveness of the program
and its design requirements.

•

Several reports are published on science and engineering doctorates by the NSF for
internal and external use. The first report to be released each year is available publicly in
November, eleven months after survey closeout. Additional reports follow which
provide more detailed data or more analysis of the results from the SED.

Special tabulations of data from the survey constitute a key resource in meeting policy and
program information needs of the Foundation. Examples of uses within the Foundation include:
•

Data on doctorates awarded to minorities and women for presentation to the National
Science Board for their use in examining participation of these groups.

•

Data on foreign scholars provided to an interagency committee studying foreign access to
U.S. science and engineering at American colleges and universities.

•

Data in support of the Careers of Doctorate Holders project, an international effort led by
the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) to improve the
quality and comparability of international data on doctorate holders.

•

Baccalaureate institutions of science and engineering doctorate recipients supplied to the
NSF’s Division of Undergraduate Education for use in a study of institutions’
contributions to the highly trained labor force.

•

Data supplied by the NSF to outside users. At the national level, within recent years,
major data users have included the White House Office of Science and Technology
Policy, the National Academy of Sciences, and others.

•

Published results in widely distributed NSF publications. Data are included in two of the
Foundation's Congressionally-mandated biennial reports, Science and Engineering
Indicators (http://www.nsf.gov/statistics/seind14/), and Women, Minorities and Persons

Survey of Earned Doctorates

Page 7 of 31

with Disabilities in Science and Engineering
(http://www.nsf.gov/statistics/wmpd/2013/start.cfm).
•

A range of topics related to doctorate recipients addressed in selected data tables that are
available electronically on the NCSES Web Site (www.nsf.gov/statistics/doctorates).

Aggregated data on selected variables are available for each institution through the
WebCASPAR database, available to the public (http://webcaspar.nsf.gov). A complementary
tool, the SED Tabulation Engine, provides additional variables to the public at
(https://ncses.norc.org/NSFTabEngine/#WELCOME).
b. The National Institutes of Health
For more than 30 years, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) has used the results of the SED
to meet a variety of planning, evaluation, and reporting needs:
•

Planning for the medical research workforce. NIH relies on the results of the SED to
monitor PhD production in the biomedical, behavioral, and clinical sciences. This
information helps NIH determine the need for investigators in these fields and, in turn,
the size and distribution of its research training programs.

•

Evaluating NIH research training programs. Because the SED has proven to be such
a reliable and comprehensive source of information on new PhDs, NIH routinely uses
SED results to track the educational outcomes of NIH predoctoral trainees and fellows
and to assess its research training programs. By comparing its internal records with the
results of the SED, NIH regularly monitors PhD completion rates for students
participating in NIH-sponsored training programs, their time to degree, and their plans for
postdoctoral study or employment. In evaluating its research training programs, NIH also
uses the SED to identify comparison groups of non-NIH-sponsored students in the same
fields of study.

•

Fulfilling reporting requirements. By allowing comparisons and sustained tracking of
selected doctoral recipients, the SED is a critical tool in Government Performance and
Results Act (GPRA) reporting on the effectiveness of NIH predoctoral training grants. In
addition, since 2008, NIH has used the results of the SED to report on the number and
type of graduate degrees awarded with NIH support, in its biennial report to Congress.

c. The Department of Education
The U.S. Department of Education (ED) has sponsored the SED since 1958. The Department’s
National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), Postsecondary Education Statistics Division,
funds the survey and makes extensive use of a range of SED data. Reports have been published
on a time-series analysis of doctorates in the field of education, as well as in other fields.

Survey of Earned Doctorates

Page 8 of 31

NCES has also used data on the postgraduate plans of new doctorates. Trend data are compiled
each year and displayed in tables in the Center’s publication Digest of Education Statistics.
NCES has also published a report containing tables from the Doctorate Records File comparing
education doctorates to doctorates in other fields, by selected characteristics.
Data from the SED are also used for evaluation by ED’s programs, such as the Office of Student
Financial Aid, the individual program offices, and by the Office of Planning, Evaluation, and
Policy Development.
d. The Department of Agriculture
The U. S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), a sponsor since 1988, has developed a list of
discipline areas in which it has particular concerns, analogous to the subsets developed by the
National Science Foundation and the other sponsors, and has requested trend tabulations on
doctorate recipients in these fields. Data collected in the SED are used to evaluate how
widespread these programs and fields are in the United States. Data are also used in the
evaluation and planning of 1890 Land Grant and Tribal College programs. A considerable and
expanding number of tabulations from the SED are also available on their Food and Agricultural
Education Information System (FAEIS) and other websites.
e. The National Endowment for the Humanities
The authorizing legislation for the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) tasks the
Endowment to “develop a practical system of national information and data collection on the
humanities, scholars, educational and cultural groups, and their audiences.” The SED gives
university administrators, federal funding agencies, and private foundations an annual reading of
a vital index of teaching and scholarship, the national output of humanities doctorates. NEH is
currently participating in an effort led by the American Academy of Arts and Sciences to
develop and regularly release via the web, a set of Humanities Indicators. SED data on doctorate
production provides a key “indicator” of the health of the humanities workforce.
f. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration
As a sponsor since 1995 of the SED, the Education Division of the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (NASA) has developed a program for the utilization of data from the SED
in its planning and information dissemination activities. SED data have been useful in providing
information on the progress of women and minorities in science and engineering.
g. Other Federal Agencies and Congress
Other Federal agencies have utilized the SED in several ways – through requests for special
tabulations and tables, data requests from NSF, and licensing agreements. Congressional staffers
have contacted NSF for information on several topics relevant to legislation development (such
as the percent of degrees awarded to temporary visa holders and debt levels of science doctorates
at graduation) and national security interests (such as nuclear engineering doctorates awarded to
foreign citizens).

Survey of Earned Doctorates

Page 9 of 31

Academic Uses of the SED
The nation’s doctorate-granting institutions not only contribute to the SED data set but also
utilize the data for many purposes. Each year since 1997, the sponsors have provided to the dean
of each graduate school profiles of their doctorate recipients’ demographic characteristics, debt
status, postgraduation plans, employment and other activities, compared with national and peerinstitution data (see Attachment 8.1 for an example of an Institutional Profile).
Graduate and baccalaureate institutions use the data in program planning, comparison with other
institutions or with national figures, and in the development of affirmative action plans. SED
data on the number of research doctorates awarded to racial/ethnic minorities are used
extensively by institutions as the only reliable source of the supply of persons with particular
characteristics for academic positions. Site visits have confirmed the usefulness of the data to
institutions. In the past few years, NSF has seen the increasing use of data by graduate deans to
address issues of changes in the composition of the graduate schools and the time it takes to
complete the doctorate, etc., and they have relied on the SED as the “ready-made” database on
their graduates.
Over the past two years, almost 120 requests for data by graduate deans, other academic
administrative offices, and individual researchers have been fulfilled, 61of which were requests
for institutional datasets. In 2009 NSF eliminated the fee for these datasets, allowing institutions
even greater access to their own data. The SED also provides preliminary institution files to
graduate deans during the course of a survey cycle, allowing institution researchers more
immediate access to their graduates’ data for analysis. The U.S. universities help administer the
SED to their doctorate recipients, and it is clear that they get something back from the survey
because they can use the data for their own purposes; this is a symbiotic data collection effort.
In addition, researchers can apply to use selected microdata from the SED under the NCSES
Restricted-Use Data Licensing Agreement if publicly available data do not address the specific
needs of their study. The NCSES Licensing Agreement is executed between an institution and
NCSES. The NCSES license is a legal document that requires that stringent security procedures
be taken to ensure that the confidential data will be protected against unlawful disclosure.
A.3. Consideration of Using Improved Technology
Planning for the development of an electronic questionnaire administration of the SED was
begun in late 1999 and has been refined, implemented, and expanded since that time. The
purposes of instituting an electronic, web-based option were to ease the burden on students by
offering alternative completion modes, to help assure continued high response rates, and provide
an option for institutions using electronic graduation packages.
The population for this survey, graduating doctoral students, is virtually all computer literate and
familiar with the internet. Offering a paperless survey version which can be submitted
electronically is not only appealing to many students, it is also very practical for respondents

Survey of Earned Doctorates

Page 10 of 31

who are often relocating at the close of their studies and are not near the graduate offices for
submission of their completed questionnaires.
The phase-in of the SED electronic procedures was gradual and consisted of three parts: a web
survey instrument to parallel the paper version; non-respondent follow-up via email for missing
questionnaires; and a web interface for institutions, which is password-protected for each school
(see Attachment 8.2). The web version of the instrument was carefully developed and tested to
assure that mode effects between it and the paper version were minimal and non-biasing.
Students access the web survey directly upon registering with the SED and are also provided
with a PIN/Password via email should the student decide to complete the survey at a later date.
Students who do not complete the survey before graduation receive a PIN/Password via an email
or letter prompt. Because web survey design has evolved since 1999, an expert review of the
web-based data collection instrument occurred in 2009, with suggested changes implemented in
the 2010 SED survey cycle. Additionally, in 2011, a set of NSF-supported methodologists
reviewed the SED web-instrument as part of a comprehensive review of NSF web surveys. Most
of the recommendations from this review were incorporated in the 2014-2015 questionnaires.
Finally, further methodology work is continuing in advance of the 2016 data collection effort to
modernize the design of the web instrument, including updating its general appearance,
advancing functional operations, and establishing flexibility across web platforms (including
mobile and tablet).
NSF has made a Web Institution Interface (WII) available to all participating institutions that
allows Institutional Contacts (ICs) to enter their own password-protected site to monitor
completion rates for their graduates, link to various SED reports, and print questionnaires from
PDF document files. For the 2014 survey cycle, the WII was redesigned to improve the interface
and enhance usability and was renamed the Institutional Contact Administrative Tool (ICAT).
The ICAT also allows ICs to compare their list of graduates, and their completion status, with the
SED contractor-maintained database in order to track the response rate for their institution. The
ICAT includes two levels of interaction. Level 1 includes general information and
communication, including a calendar with important survey dates, a forms library with generic
and publicly available forms, and a multimedia library with instructional videos. Level 2, which
is institution specific and only available to each unique IC user, includes current student roster
data, address rosters, and missing information rosters. ICs review these data and upload revised
files with student-level updates as well as review the current survey completion status of active
rounds.
The web-based data collection system is becoming more widely accepted by both graduates and
institutions. In the 2013 SED, 84 percent of completed questionnaires were completed in the web
mode. This demonstrates a steady increase from 2011 and 2012, when web questionnaires
constituted 39 percent and 63 percent, respectively, of all completed questionnaires. The web
completes include students who graduate from schools that use the web survey as the primary or
secondary method of completion, and students who are reached via the non-respondent followup process. NSF expects that the proportion of students using the web version of the SED will
continue to grow as more graduate schools move to web-based systems for managing the degree
completion paperwork of their doctoral students.

Survey of Earned Doctorates

Page 11 of 31

The degree-awarding institution is the main SED interface with the doctorate recipient. The IC
at the institution (usually located in the graduate dean’s office) helps administer the survey,
either via the registration URL or the hard copy, tracks the completion status, collects and
submits the completed questionnaires and final graduation lists to the SED survey contractor.
However, because the SED work is just one of many duties performed by the ICs, SED data
collection staff adjust the IC coordination tasks, as needed, to fit with each institution’s
procedures for processing and awarding doctoral degrees. The work of maintaining the overall
cooperation of the schools while phasing in web-based systems remains a continuing challenge.
However, the final decision on how best to conduct the SED is left to the administrators at each
participating institution based on their individual preferences and capabilities.
Over the past few years, the SED has made significant efforts to increase web participation
among the largest SED schools. As part of this outreach, a number of schools were offered
direct assistance from SED staff, who explained the web process, answered questions, and
provided technical support. As an added incentive, these schools were also given the opportunity
to receive, shortly after the graduation period, the unedited data from their institution’s
respondents who had completed the web version of the SED during the academic term. The
quick availability of this unedited SED data enables institutional researchers at participating
universities to analyze SED data contemporaneously with data collected by their own surveys of
students (e.g., graduate student “exit surveys”). In the normal SED data processing cycle, the
fully edited SED data on an institution’s recently graduated doctorate recipients, complete with
the data collected via the survey contractor’s follow-up procedures, is made available to
universities 17 months after the end of the academic year. A small but growing number of
institutions are taking advantage of the opportunity to access and analyze unedited SED data
soon after the end of the graduation period. To further facilitate transition to the web survey
mode, institutions are also able to link the SED web survey to their institution-specific exit
survey, which enables students to move immediately from the completion of one survey into the
initial web-page of the other survey. This feature not only reduces respondent burden, it will
reduce the need of both the survey contractor and the institutions to prompt students to complete
the surveys.
A.4. Efforts to Identify Duplication
During collaborations with other agencies, the National Science Foundation has reviewed and
determined that no other government survey gathers identical or even similar information. In
addition, the National Science Foundation actively maintains contacts with professional societies
and groups, such as the Council of Graduate Schools, within both the higher education and data
collection communities, so that information about any surveys similar to the SED would be
immediately known.
SED survey content is coordinated with NSF’s Survey of Doctorate Recipients (SDR) and with
the SESTAT data collections on scientists and engineers. The SDR is designed to provide
demographic and career history information about a sample of individuals with doctoral degrees
in science, engineering and health fields. The results of the SDR are vital for educational
planners within the federal government and in academia. The SDR results are also used by

Survey of Earned Doctorates

Page 12 of 31

employers in all sectors (education, industry, and the government) to understand trends in
employment and salaries in S&E fields for doctorate holders and to evaluate the effectiveness of
equal opportunity efforts. NSF finds the results important for internal planning because most
NSF grants and fellowships go to individuals with doctoral degrees. The Doctorate Records File
from the SED is used to identify SDR respondents in science, engineering and health fields.
Contact information obtained in the SED is necessary for contacting new PhD’s, who are added
to the SDR sample every two years. The coordination of content and procedures is, therefore,
critical to the success of both the SED and SDR surveys.
The database system known as the Scientists and Engineers Statistical Data System (SESTAT)
combines data from the SDR, the National Survey of College Graduates, and the National
Survey of Recent College Graduates (now defunct). The SESTAT system is designed to provide
a comprehensive picture of the number and characteristics of individuals with training and/or
employment in science and engineering in the United States. The SED survey content is
coordinated with the SESTAT surveys to avoid unnecessary duplication of items and to assure
relevant uniform approaches on similar items such as race/ethnicity and specific functional
limitations.
Differences between the SED and the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS),
which collects some information on doctoral degrees, are outlined below. The IPEDS
Completions survey, conducted by the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) of the
Department of Education, collects aggregate data from institutions on numbers of degrees at each
level by discipline and gender. IPEDS provides data on aggregates of institutional doctorate
recipients (including race/ethnicity and gender) and not data by individuals.
The SED obtains information from the individual research doctorate recipient on over two dozen
variables, information not collected through the IPEDS survey. As mentioned earlier, NCES uses
the SED to present data that are not available from IPEDS.
There are four data items collected on both the SED and IPEDS that may appear, on the surface,
to be duplicative: field of degree and the demographic variables of citizenship, gender, and
race/ethnicity. However, important purposes are served by including these variables in both
surveys:
•

In the SED, field of degree, citizenship, gender, and race/ethnicity are frequently used in
analyses that link these variables with other key variables, such as the length of time
spent pursuing the degree and the amount of debt accumulated during graduate
education. These other linked variables cannot be collected from the institutions that
provide information to IPEDS. The field of degree and demographic variables are also
used to identify individuals in “rare subgroups” for oversampling in the SDR (described
above). Without these questions, the SDR would need to be greatly expanded to meet the
needs for the congressionally mandated report, Women, Minorities and Persons with
Disabilities in Science and Engineering, for education and labor market data.

•

It is not a feasible option to exclude collection of the information about doctoral degree
recipients from IPEDS, because inclusion of field of degree, citizenship, gender, and

Survey of Earned Doctorates

Page 13 of 31

race/ethnicity permits comparative analyses of trends in degree production at different
degree levels. SED data cannot be substituted for the IPEDS in such comparisons because
of the inevitable differences between an institutional survey and a demographic survey.
For example, individuals’ racial/ethnic self-identification on these variables may differ
from those maintained by the institutions. Also, as IPEDS collects data on types of
doctoral degrees that are explicitly excluded from the SED – the “doctorate degreesprofessional practice” and the “first professional” types of doctoral degrees – eliminating
doctoral degrees from the IPEDS data collection would result in a loss of information
about these important types of degrees.
•

Including field of degree, citizenship, gender, and race/ethnicity questions on both
surveys also provides important validity checks for both surveys at the aggregate level.

A.5. Efforts to Minimize Burden on Small Business
Not applicable. The SED does not collect information from small businesses.
A.6. Consequences of Less Frequent Data Collection
The SED is an important source for monitoring changes in academic fields of study and
participation in disciplines by demographic groups of interest (including U.S. and non-U.S.
citizens on both permanent and temporary visas). These data provide an annual barometer of the
market conditions encountered by new doctoral degree recipients and are therefore an integral
component in policy implementation and program design.
Less frequent data collection would result in a more complicated administration of the survey in
the graduate deans’ offices. The survey collects data from each person receiving a research
doctorate at the time they complete the requirements for their degree. Staff at the graduate deans’
offices include the link to the web survey with their other electronic documents, post the PDF
version of the survey on their website, or insert the SED questionnaire into the package of
materials for doctorate recipients. Any less frequent collection of the SED would yield far lower
response rates because the graduate deans’ offices would be uncertain about the timing and
distribution of questionnaires to prospective doctoral graduates, a process which now occurs
continuously throughout the survey year. Discussions with the Council of Graduate Schools and
several universities confirm that graduate schools would face extreme difficulty if the survey
were operated on a non-annual basis. Stability of both the survey questionnaire and of the survey
collection process is imperative for the usefulness of the data to the federal agencies and for the
ease of collection by universities. A continuation of the current survey methodology serves the
best interests of all involved.
If the SED were conducted less frequently, there would also be significant repercussions to the
success of the Survey of Doctorate Recipients (SDR). The Doctorate Records File is the sample
frame used to identify SDR sample members. Locating information obtained from the SED is
necessary for contacting the new PhDs who are added to the SDR sample. The coordination of

Survey of Earned Doctorates

Page 14 of 31

timing, content, and procedures of these two studies is, therefore, critical to the success of both
the SED and SDR surveys.
A.7. Special Circumstances
Not applicable. This data collection does not require any of the reporting requirements listed.
A.8. Federal Register Announcement and Consultations Outside the Agency
The Federal Register announcement for the SED appeared on November 24, 2014 (see
Attachment 6). No public comments were received during the 60-day comment period.
Consultations outside the Agency
In the many years of operation of the SED, the six federal sponsors and the survey contractors
have consistently invited others to comment on the SED. The comments come from the federal
sponsors themselves, an expert panel convened by NCSES, the Council of Graduate Schools, and
other governmental and academic institutions. Comments and suggestions regarding the SED
and the manner in which it is conducted have been received from individual respondents,
university faculty advisors, graduate deans’ offices, and professional researchers by telephone,
email, mail, and in-person contacts. University representatives have been sought out for
consultation at venues such as professional conferences, meetings and personal site visits to
institutions. These consultations have helped to determine if there are problems in the conduct of
the survey or in the interpretation of certain items. These problems are discussed with graduate
deans for their conceptual validity and applicability to all fields of study, and the need for such
information is weighed against respondent burden.
The federal sponsors meet together at least twice a year to discuss the SED design, operation and
dissemination activities, and to plan future activities. The federal sponsors also review recent
trends in the number of doctorate recipients receiving degrees in emerging fields of study – that
is, fields of study not currently coded within the SED taxonomy – and in fields of study for
which there are few graduates. This review is the basis for the decision made every two years on
taxonomy changes for the SED.
NCSES has convened multiple meetings of a Human Resources Experts Panel (HREP) in order
to help improve data collection on the education and employment of the S&E labor force through
review and renewal of the S&E personnel surveys, and to promote use of the data for research
and policy analysis purposes. HREP accomplishes its mission by: 1) suggesting methods to
publicize and promote the data; 2) providing advice on efforts to improve the timeliness and
accuracy of S&E education and labor force data; 3) providing a mechanism for obtaining
ongoing input from both researchers and policy analysts interested in S&E personnel data; 4)
providing perspectives on the data needs of decision makers; 5) identifying issues and trends that
are important for maintaining the relevance of the data; 6) identifying ways in which S&E
personnel data could be more useful and relevant for analyses; and 7) proposing ways to enhance

Survey of Earned Doctorates

Page 15 of 31

the content of the NCSES human resources surveys. The panel consists of a rotating
membership of between 12 and 15 individuals who represent the sciences, academia,
business/industry, government, researchers and policy makers. The SED was the main topic at
the January 2010 meeting which was focused on eliciting the expert panelists’ ideas for
prospective questionnaire items to be included in future versions of the SED.
Formal site visits have been conducted by National Science Foundation and survey contractor
staff for the purpose of consulting with graduate deans and campus administrators. The
institutions visited include those with poor response rates, primarily to resolve the survey
collection problems at those institutions. However, the site visits also allow for the discussion of
the uses of the SED by the federal sponsors and by the universities themselves.
Other Consultations
The SED has also been informed by numerous other contacts between NSF and the user
community, including staff of organizations such as the National Postdoctoral Association, the
Association of American Medical Colleges, the Association for Institutional Research, the
Council of Graduate Schools, and the Organization for Economic Co-operation and
Development. Routine information requests also provide insight into the interests of the general
public.
NSF has also held several meetings with representatives of the American Association of
Universities (AAU), a nonprofit association of 60 U.S. and two Canadian research universities,
to discuss the feasibility and desirability of linking the web-SED instrument to the web-based
exit-survey instruments of AAU institutions, merging SED data with exit-survey data, and
incorporating commonly-used exit-survey items within the SED.
A.9. Payment or Gifts to Respondents
No incentives in the form of payment or gifts to the doctoral graduates are used in the SED.
A.10. Assurance of Confidentiality
The SED is collected in conformance with the strict confidentiality requirements found in the
NSF Act of 1950, as amended. The SED is also collected in conformance with the Privacy Act of
1974, including the section of the Privacy Act requiring notification of the respondent
concerning the uses to be made of the data and the voluntary nature of his/her responses. The
confidentiality pledge to the SED respondents is:
This information is solicited under the authority of the National Science Foundation Act
of 1950, as amended. All information you provide is protected under the NSF Act and the
Privacy Act of 1974, and will be used only for research or statistical purposes by your
doctoral institution, the survey sponsors, their contractors, and collaborating researchers
for the purpose of analyzing data, preparing scientific reports and articles, and selecting

Survey of Earned Doctorates

Page 16 of 31

samples for a limited number of carefully defined follow-up studies. The last four digits
of your Social Security Number are also solicited under the NSF Act of 1950, as
amended; provision of it is voluntary. It will be kept confidential. It is used for quality
control, to assure that we identify the correct persons, especially when data are used for
statistical purposes in Federal program evaluation. Any information publicly released
(such as statistical summaries) will be in a form that does not personally identify you or
other respondents. Your response is voluntary and failure to provide some or all of the
requested information will not in any way adversely affect you.
The time needed to complete this form varies according to individual circumstances, but
the average time is estimated to be 20 minutes. If you have comments regarding this time
estimate, you may write to the National Science Foundation, 4201 Wilson Blvd.,
Arlington, VA 22230, Attention: NSF Reports Clearance Officer. A Federal agency may
not conduct or sponsor a collection of information unless it displays a currently valid
OMB control number.
Specific procedures for protecting both hard copy and electronic data are used by the survey
contractor, and all project staff are required to sign confidentiality agreements before they first
have access to any SED data, and on a yearly basis thereafter (see Attachment 7). Data files with
personal identifiers are provided to NIH, a federal sponsor, and its contractors. NIH receives the
personal identifiers only after they have executed an NCSES Restricted-Use Data Licensing
agreement and all contractors have signed data use agreements. As indicated explicitly in the
confidentiality statement, the graduate dean of the respondent’s institution may request data for
respondents from that institution only with a written agreement to use such data for statistical
and program evaluation purposes only. No one outside of these groups can obtain data files with
direct identifiers such as phone numbers and addresses. Qualifying researchers can obtain SED
microdata (but no direct identifiers) only by executing an NCSES Restricted-Use Data Licensing
Agreement with NSF through their employer.
A.11. Justification for Sensitive Questions
The SED recognizes the growing sensitivity of requesting respondents’ Social Security numbers
to an increasing segment of the population. The SED is allowed to collect respondent Social
Security numbers under the NSF Act of 1950 (42 U.S.C. 1861 et seq.), as amended, and in
accordance with the Privacy Act of 1974. However, the SED only collects the last four digits of
the Social Security number to be used to ascertain the correct identity of the survey respondent in
survey operation and evaluation purposes.
A.12. Estimate of Respondent Burden
The SED is a census of all individuals receiving a research doctorate in the United States in an
academic year. In 2016, approximately 55,000 individuals are expected to receive research
doctorates from U.S. institutions. The estimated average response time for the 2016 SED, 20
minutes, was based on cognitive interviews and tests conducted by the survey contractor. Given

Survey of Earned Doctorates

Page 17 of 31

the lack of substantial changes between the 2016 SED and 2015 SED – one follow-up question
and one response option added and the wording of two response options modified – the
estimated average response time for the 2016 SED remains 20 minutes. An expected response
rate of 92% would indicate 50,600 respondents. Thus, the total respondent burden for completing
the survey questionnaire is estimated to be 16,867 hours.
The estimated cost to respondents for this data collection is $486,613, based on the estimated
16,867 hours of response burden at a time-cost of $28.85 per hour. The $28.85 per hour timecost estimate is derived from results from the 2013 SED which indicate that the median income
for doctorate recipients was $60,000. Assuming a 40-hour work week and 52 weeks of work per
year, this $60,000 income per year figure works out to $28.85 of income per hour.
In addition to the actual survey, the SED also requires the collection of administrative data from
participating institutions. The IC at the institution helps distribute the registration URL or hard
copy survey, track it, collect it, and submit the completed questionnaires and graduation lists to
the SED survey contractor. This requires that the following materials be sent to the ICs (see
Attachments 8.3 through 8.7 for examples of the materials):
•
•
•
•
•

Transmittal Form, to be included in the package of completed surveys or with a
graduation list, asks for the total number of graduates for the graduation date in question,
the total number of surveys enclosed, and contact information for each non-respondent;
Interim Result Form, reports the number of graduates currently accounted for on each
graduation date;
Address Roster Form asks for a physical mailing and/or e-mail address for nonrespondents that were not already provided on the Transmittal Form;
Missing Information Roster asks for the critical items for any non-respondents and the
missing critical items for respondents;
Dean/Contact change form is available on the ICAT for the institution to submit any
change to the contact information of the dean or IC.

Based on focus groups conducted with ICs, it is estimated that the SED demands no more than
1% of the IC’s time over the course of a year, which computes to 20 hours per year (40 hours per
week x 50 weeks per year x .01). At an estimated average wage rate of $29/hour for ICs, and
with 570 participating programs, the total estimated time-cost to ICs of administering the SED is
$330,600 per year. The $29/hour wage estimate is derived from the Bureau of Labor Statistics
“Occupational Employment and Wages, May 2013” for a combination of Office and
Administrative Support Occupations (60% of ICs) and Education Administrators, Postsecondary
(40% of ICs).
The chart below summarizes the annual burden anticipated for all the tasks involved with
conducting the SED:

Description
Doctorate Recipient SED Questionnaire

Survey of Earned Doctorates

# of
Responses
50,600

Page 18 of 31

Respondent
Burden
20 minutes

Annual
Burden
Hours
16,867

Annual Cost
Burden
$486,613

Institutional Contacts
Total SED Annual Burden

570

20 hours

11,400
28,267

$330,600
$817,213

NSF anticipates conducting methodological research over the clearance cycle that would involve
respondents (see Section B.4 for description of possible methodological research). These tasks
would most likely involve cognitive interviews of as many as 100 individuals. NSF plans to
conduct this research under the Generic Clearance of Survey Improvement Projects (OMB
Control #3145-0174).
A.13. Cost Burden to Respondents
There is no cost to the SED respondents other than the burden hour cost noted in A.12.
Respondents need not purchase, operate, or maintain capital equipment, software, or storage
facilities.
A.14. Cost to the Federal Government
The cost to the Federal Government for this annual data collection is approximately $3.76
million per year. This amount was based on the negotiated contract cost for the 2016 SED.
A.15. Program Changes or Adjustments
There are two adjustments in the SED 2016 that will impact data collection processes and costs.
The first is the annual expected increase in SED universe size, which would result in an increase
in survey costs due to the higher number of respondents. The second is the removal of the
Missing Information Letter (MIL) as a survey data collection mode, which will result in a slight
decrease of per respondent burden. In regards to institutions, there are no adjustments to the data
collection processes that would impact the per institution burden indicated in A.12 above.
A.16. Tabulation and Publication Plans and Project Schedule
The results of the SED will be disseminated in a number of ways. To release the data, NSF will
publish a set of approximately 70 online Summary Report Data Tables. These tables will be
descriptive in nature and will provide extensive information on the education and employment
plans of doctoral graduates by field of study, doctorate granting institution, and demographic
characteristics such as race/ethnicity, citizenship status, sex and disability status. NSF will also
publish a Summary Report Digest, a short publication with approximately 30 figures
highlighting many of the important findings from the survey. The Digest will be available in
both print and electronic formats.
The printed Digest is provided free of charge to responding institutions participating in the SED
and to individuals and institutions who have requested past survey results.

Survey of Earned Doctorates

Page 19 of 31

The SED data will also be used in the development of key NSF reports, including the
Congressionally-mandated reports Science and Engineering Indicators and Women, Minorities,
and Persons with Disabilities in Science and Engineering. Both of these publications, plus
additional detailed tables, will become available on NSF’s NCSES website.
Aggregated data on selected SED variables are publicly available through the WebCASPAR
database (http://webcaspar.nsf.gov ). SED data for race/ethnicity, sex, and citizenship for 2007
and later years are no longer available in WebCASPAR but are available in the SED Tabulation
Engine, a tool developed in early 2011 that includes a disclosure control mechanism that protects
the identity of respondents when reporting gender, race/ethnicity and citizenship variables.
Additionally, SED data will be available to researchers via the NSF’s data enclave, a secure
environment (currently in the pilot stage) that provides researchers remote access to microdata
while still protecting respondent confidentiality.
The Scientists and Engineers Statistical Data System (SESTAT), which resides on the Web,
includes some variables taken from the SED that pertain to SDR respondents (e.g., past
educational degrees). The SESTAT system, described in section A.4, can be used to produce
tabulations from the component surveys, providing a rich resource to those within and outside
the government. As noted above, microdata are also disseminated to federal co-sponsors and
collaborating researchers (with current data use licenses) so that they can conduct specialized
studies. These, in turn, are expected to result in reports and other publications that further
disseminate the data. Finally, it is anticipated that substantive analyses of the SED data will be
presented at appropriate professional meetings, such as the annual meetings of the Association
for Institutional Research, the Council of Graduate Schools, the American Educational Research
Association, the American Statistical Association, the American Economic Association, the
American Sociological Association, etc.
The SED project schedule was shortened starting with the 2013 round. The 2016 survey covers
the period from July 1, 2015 to June 30, 2016. The paper SED questionnaires will be mailed to
the graduate schools and the web version will be uploaded upon OMB approval for continuous
distribution to graduate students as they complete the requirements for their doctorate. Returned
survey questionnaires will be edited and coded until survey close-out, which is December 2016
for the 2016 academic year (SED 2016). After the survey close-out, data variables will be
constructed, edited, evaluated, and reviewed for trend consistency in January 2017. In February
2017, the file will be further evaluated and quality control checks will be made. Data will be
tabulated in April 2017 and prepared for publication by November 2017. Aggregate data will be
made available to the public in November 2017 via the on-line Summary Report Data Tables on
the NCSES website.
Project Schedule
The 2016 SED survey schedule follows. The 2017 SED survey schedule is expected to be similar
except lagging by one year.
Phase

Survey of Earned Doctorates

Time

Page 20 of 31

Receive OMB clearance approval
Survey Instrument available to students
Data collection close-out
Preparation of data file
Production of tabulations
Release of data by NSF
Interagency Report released

May 2015
May 2015
December 2016
February 2017
April 2017
November 2017
November 2017

A.17. Display of OMB Expiration Date
The OMB Expiration Date will be displayed, as indicated.
A.18. Exception to the Certification Statement
The 2016-2017 SEDs will comply with the certification statement on form OMB 83-1.

Survey of Earned Doctorates

Page 21 of 31


File Typeapplication/pdf
File TitleLIST OF ATTACHMENTS
Authorwebber-kristy
File Modified2015-03-17
File Created2015-03-17

© 2024 OMB.report | Privacy Policy