Part A School Pulse Panel Monthly Data Collections

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School Pulse Panel Preliminary Activities

OMB: 1850-0963

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School Pulse Panel



OMB# 1850-0963 v.4




Supporting Statement Part A





National Center for Education Statistics

Institute of Education Sciences

U.S. Department of Education





August 2021




Table of Contents

Section Page



Appendices


A Communication Materials

B Full survey instrument


A.1 Circumstances Making Collection of Information Necessary

This is an emergency request to collect voluntary responses from a nationally representative sample of public schools to better understand how schools, students, and educators are responding to the ongoing stressors of the coronavirus pandemic. This is the second of two emergency requests that will be required to allow the new School Pulse Panel study to begin data collection on time to satisfy the requirements of EO 14000.

The School Pulse Panel is a new study conducted by the National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), part of the Institute of Education Sciences (IES), within the United States Department of Education, to collect extensive data on issues concerning the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on students and staff in U.S. public primary, middle, high, and combined-grade schools. The survey will ask school staff about topics such as instructional mode offered; enrollment counts of subgroups of students using various instructional modes; strategies to address pandemic-related learning needs; safe and healthy school mitigation strategies; mental health services; use of technology; and information on staffing. Because this data collection is extremely high priority and time sensitive, it will undergo Emergency Clearance. It will also simultaneously go through 60-day public and 30-day public comment periods. Furthermore, we anticipate that some new content will be rotated in (and some rotated out) on a quarterly basis. Therefore, we plan for proposed new content to be collected in the second quarter (December through February) to be added as part of the 30-day public comment period. Subsequent new content additions (estimated to take place on a quarterly basis) will take place as revisions with 30-day public comment periods for each subsequent quarterly collection.

The administration of the School Pulse Panel study is in direct response to President Biden’s Executive Order 14000: Supporting the Reopening and Continuing Operation of Schools and Early Childhood Education Providers. It will be one of the nation’s few sources of reliable data on a wealth of information focused on school reopening efforts, virus spread mitigation strategies, services offered for students and staff, and technology use, as reported by school principals and other staff in U.S. public schools. About 2400 (1200 in an initial sample and 1200 in a reserve sample) public elementary, middle, high, and combined-grade schools have been initially selected to participate in a panel where school staff will be asked to provide requested data monthly during the 2021-22 school years. This approach provides the ability to collect detailed information on various topics while also assessing changes in reopening efforts over time. Given the high demand for data collection during this time, the content of the survey may change on a quarterly basis.

A.1.1 Purpose of This Submission

The purpose of this submission is to obtain clearance to begin the School Pulse Panel study which will collect extensive data on issues concerning the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on students and staff in U.S. public primary, middle, high, and combined-grade schools. The survey will ask school staff about topics such as instructional mode offered; enrollment counts of subgroups of students using various instructional modes; strategies to address pandemic-related learning needs; safe and healthy school mitigation strategies; mental health services; use of technology; and information on staffing. Specifically, this submission will include communication materials to request sampled schools to participate in the monthly collections, as well as the instrument that will be administered for the first three months of collections.

A.1.2 Legislative Authorization

NCES is authorized to conduct the School Pulse Panel by the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 (ARP 2021; Sec. 2010) and the Education Sciences Reform Act of 2002 (ESRA 2002; 20 U.S.C. §9543).

A.1.3 Prior and Related Studies

The School Pulse Panel is essentially a continuation of the National Assessment of Education Progress (NAEP) 2021 School Survey (OMB# 1850-0957) that was fielded in the spring of 2021. This NAEP 2021 School Survey met the need of Executive Order 14000 by using an existing sample and survey data collection infrastructure to quickly collect information on instructional mode offerings and enrollment counts of various subgroups of students using the various instructional modes. The School Pulse Panel intends to continue to collect this critical information, along with other priority items for the White House, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and Department of Education program offices throughout the 2021-22 school year.

Additionally, the recruitment operation for the School Pulse Panel was cleared under an Emergency Clearance (OMB# 1850-0963) and went through 30-day public comment. This included a generic application to be sent to districts that require special approval prior to conducting research within their schools, recruitment materials to inform sampled schools of the study, and a brief, eight question survey asking about summer school plans.

A.1.4 Study Design

The U.S. Census Bureau will collect the School Pulse Panel data on behalf of NCES. The School Pulse Panel will be a self-administered, online survey (as built in Qualtrics). It is estimated for the survey to require a total of about 2-3 hours of staff time.

The sampled school will be offered up to a total reimbursement of $5,000 for their participation in the study over the course of 12 months (including September 2021 through August 2022). The reimbursement will be paid out quarterly in the form of a debit card and will be prorated to include the dollar amount that reflects the number of months of participation for that quarter. If a school district does not permit its schools to receive any form of payment, the reimbursement will be sent to a point of contact in the district or the reimbursement will be withheld. Principals, or the school staff most knowledgeable about COVID-19 impacts on the school environment and instructional offerings, can complete the survey, however it is encouraged for school staff to seek assistance in responding from other school staff or district staff to help reduce burden. No classroom time is involved in the completion of this survey.

The School Pulse Panel will provide aggregate estimates for public schools across the nation. A stratified sample design was used to select approximately 1,200 U.S. public schools. In addition, a reserve sample of replacement schools was selected to boost the number of responses if any schools from the initial sample do not respond. The sample is designed to provide national estimates of primary, middle, and high schools taking into account the type of locale (urbanicity) and racial/ethnic student enrollment.

The sampling frame for the School Pulse Panel is derived from the Common Core of Data (CCD), the universe of public schools supplied annually by state educational agencies to NCES. Only public schools in the 50 states and the District of Columbia will be included in the School Pulse Panel sampling frame. Certain types of schools are excluded, including newly closed schools, home schools, virtual schools, ungraded schools, private schools, and schools with high grades of kindergarten or lower. Regular public schools, charter schools, alternative schools, special education schools, vocational schools, correctional facilities/juvenile justice facilities, and schools that have partial or total magnet programs are included in the frame. For sample allocation purposes, strata are defined by instructional level, type of locale (urbanicity), region, and percent minority enrollment.

A.2 Purposes and Uses of the Data

The January 21, 2021 Executive Order on Supporting the Reopening and Continuing Operation of Schools and Early Childhood Education Providers states that the Department of Education must “coordinate with the Director of the Institute of Education Sciences to facilitate, consistent with applicable law, the collection of data necessary to fully understand the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on students and educators, including data on the status of in-person learning. These data shall be disaggregated by student demographics, including race, ethnicity, disability, English-language-learner status, and free or reduced lunch status or other appropriate indicators of family income.”


With the participation of educators and school leaders across the country, NCES will be able to report a wealth of information that meets the needs of the Executive Order, as well as other stakeholders, in an online dashboard.

A.2.1 Research Issues Addressed in the School Pulse Panel

Content Domains and Research Questions:

The School Pulse Panel will be a dynamic monthly survey and content will change based on what we learn over time from your school and district. The monthly survey will encompass broad content domains, each with a series of measurement items addressing a specific research question. Each content domain is briefly stated below in terms of the issues in need of measurement, as well as the research questions we are seeking to answer. At the time of submission of this application, content domains have been developed but items are still being drafted and tested. Below are examples of the types of content domains and corresponding research questions:

  1. Instruction mode offered and enrollment counts for subgroups receiving each type of instruction mode for SY2021-22:

    1. For the 2021-22 school year, which instruction mode (in-person, hybrid, virtual) is being offered to students?

    2. How many students in various subgroups are receiving each type of instruction?

    3. How many days a week does the school offer in-person instruction for hybrid students?

    4. What is the average daily attendance rate for students receiving in-person instruction? Virtual instruction?

  2. Instructional program offerings to address pandemic-related learning needs

    1. What types of school offerings did your school offer during the summer of 2021 to help with pandemic-related learning needs?

    2. During the 2021-22 school year, will the school day be extended? Number of school days increased? Additional before-school or after-school programs?

  3. Mitigation strategies used to reduce risk of spread of COVID-19

    1. Does your school require daily symptom screening for students or staff?

    2. Are personal protective equipment for students, teachers, and staff required?

    3. Is your school requiring the social distancing of students?

    4. Has your school reduced the number of students in classrooms?

  4. Use of technology, computer devices, and internet access

    1. Are laptops or tablets offered and available to all students in the school to assist with virtual learning?

    2. Was internet access provided to students?

    3. Has your school provided IT or technical support?

    4. Was professional development on digital learning provided to educators?

  5. Mental health services provided

    1. Has your school hired new staff to focus on social/emotional/mental wellbeing?

    2. Has your school offered professional development to train teachers on helping students with their social/emotional/mental wellbeing?

    3. Have there been change in counts of school psychologists, counselors, and nurses over the course of the pandemic?

  6. Vaccinations

    1. Does your school or district require staff to be vaccinated unless they have a medical waiver?

    2. What percentage of school staff has received a vaccination?

  7. Staffing

    1. As of the start of the 2021-22 school year, do you have any administrative staff, teacher, or support staff vacancies?

    2. How difficult was it to fill staff vacancies?

    3. Staff job satisfaction during a pandemic; educator burnout


  1. Staff perceptions of established mandates

    1. Vaccines?

    2. Masks?

  2. Tracking of enrollment over time to look for fluctuations in counts

    1. Did overall enrollment drop during the pandemic?

  3. Decisions behind instructional mode offerings for students

    1. Known barriers?

  4. Impact of pandemic on school lunch programs



A.3 Appropriate Use of Information Technology

Communications with sampled schools and district staff will be completed through email and phone.


The self-administered, online instrument was developed in Qualtrics so that respondents would provide requested information online.


A.4 Efforts to Identify Duplication

NCES coordinated with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to reduce overlap in sampled schools, to the extent possible. Additionally, several stakeholders requested the tracking of federal relief funds as a high content priority therefore these items were included in the initial draft versions of the instrument. However, cognitive interviews with principals informed us that these items are just not suitable for school-level staff to respond to. Further, we learned of another U.S. Department of Education data collection effort focused on federal relief funds that is a mandatory, universe collection (the Education Stabilization Fund-Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief Fund (ESSER I/ESSER II/ARP ESSER Fund) Recipient Data Collection Form (Agency/Docket number: ED-2021-SCC-0096) and opted to remove this section from the School Pulse Panel instrument to reduce duplication of content.

A.5 Method Used to Minimize Burden on Small Businesses

The school sample will contain small-, medium-, and large-size public schools. Schools are included in the sample proportional to their representation in the population, or as necessary to meet reporting goals. For the School Pulse Panel, it is necessary to include small schools so that such schools are represented in the data collection and in the reports.


A.6 Frequency of Data Collection

NCES plans for the School Pulse Panel to be a monthly collection beginning in September and continue through the 2021-22 school year and following summer months.

A.7 Special Circumstances of Data Collection

The January 21, 2021 Executive Order on Supporting the Reopening and Continuing Operation of Schools and Early Childhood Education Providers states that the Department of Education must “coordinate with the Director of the Institute of Education Sciences to facilitate, consistent with applicable law, the collection of data necessary to fully understand the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on students and educators, including data on the status of in-person learning.”

Because this data collection is extremely high priority and time sensitive, it will undergo Emergency Clearance and will simultaneously go through 60-day and 30-day public comment periods.

A.8 Consultants outside the Agency

NCES has an interagency agreement with the U.S. Census Bureau to collect the School Pulse Panel data on behalf of NCES. Additionally, NCES has been working closely with IES, other program offices within the U.S. Department of Education, White House staffers, and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to help provide input on the content to be collected as part of the School Pulse Panel.

NCES is also utilizing contract support to assist with reviewing data collection-related specifications, reviewing and providing recommended changes to the questionnaire, assisting with quality assurance testing of the online instrument, and disseminating the data and findings on an online dashboard.

A.9 Provision of Payments or Gifts to Respondents

The sampled school will be offered up to a total reimbursement of $5,000 for their participation in the study over the course of 12 months (including September 2021 through August 2022). The reimbursement will be paid out quarterly in the form of a debit card and will be prorated to include the dollar amount that reflects the number of months of participation for that quarter. If a school district does not permit its schools to receive any form of payment, the reimbursement will be sent to a point of contact in the district or the reimbursement will be withheld.

A.10 Assurance of Confidentiality

Data security and confidentiality protection procedures have been put in place to ensure that all contractors and agents working on the study comply with all privacy requirements including, as applicable:

  1. The Inter-agency agreement with NCES for this study and the statement of work of the contract;

  2. Privacy Act of 1974 (5 U.S.C. §552a);

  3. Privacy Act Regulations (34 CFR Part 5b);

  4. Computer Security Act of 1987;

  5. U.S.A. Patriot Act of 2001 (P.L. 107-56);

  6. Education Sciences Reform Act of 2002 (ESRA 2002, 20 U.S.C. §9573);

  7. Cybersecurity Enhancement Act of 2015 (6 U.S.C. §151);

  8. Foundations of Evidence-Based Policymaking Act of 2018, Title III, Part B, Confidential Information Protection

  9. The U.S. Department of Education General Handbook for Information Technology Security General Support Systems and Major Applications Inventory Procedures (March 2005);

  10. The U.S. Department of Education Incident Handling Procedures (February 2009);

  11. The U.S. Department of Education, ACS Directive OM: 5-101, Contractor Employee Personnel Security Screenings;

  12. NCES Statistical Standards; and

  13. All new legislation that impacts the data collected through the inter-agency agreement and contract for this study. The U.S. Census Bureau will collect data under an interagency agreement with NCES, and maintain the individually identifiable questionnaires per the agreement, including:


The U.S. Census Bureau will collect data under an interagency agreement with NCES, and maintain the individually identifiable questionnaires per the agreement, including:

  1. Provisions for data collection in the field;

  2. Provisions to protect the data-coding phase required before machine processing;

  3. Provisions to safeguard completed survey documents;

  4. Authorization procedures to access or obtain files containing identifying information; and

  5. Provisions to remove printouts and other outputs that contain identification information from normal operation (such materials will be maintained in secured storage areas and will be securely destroyed as soon as practical).

U.S. Census Bureau and contractors working on the School Pulse Panel will comply with the Department of Education’s IT security policy requirements as set forth in the Handbook for Information Assurance Security Policy and related procedures and guidance, as well as IT security requirements in the Federal Information Security Management Act (FISMA), Federal Information Processing Standards (FIPS) publications, Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Circulars, and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) standards and guidance. All data products and publications will also adhere to: the revised NCES Statistical Standards, as described at the website: http://nces.ed.gov/statprog/2012/.

By law (20 U.S.C. §9573), a violation of the confidentiality restrictions is a felony, punishable by imprisonment of up to 5 years and/or a fine of up to $250,000. All government or contracted staff working on the study and having access to the data, including field staff, are required to sign an NCES Affidavit of Nondisclosure and have received public-trust security clearance. These requirements include the successful certification and accreditation of the system before it can be implemented. Appropriate memoranda of understanding and interconnection security agreements will be documented as part of the certification and accreditation process.

From the initial contact with the participants in this survey through all of the follow-up efforts, potential survey respondents will be informed that (a) the U.S. Census Bureau administers the study on behalf of NCES; (b) NCES is authorized to conduct the study by the Education Sciences Reform Act of 2002 (ESRA 2002, 20 U.S.C. §9543); (c) all of the information they provide may only be used for statistical purposes and may not be disclosed, or used, in identifiable form for any other purpose except as required by law (20 U.S.C. §9573 and 6 U.S.C. §151); and (d) that their participation is voluntary.

The following language will be included in respondent contact materials and on data collection instruments:

The National Center for Education Statistics (NCES), within the U.S. Department of Education, conducts the School Pulse Panel as authorized by the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021 (ARP 2021; Sec. 2010) and the Education Sciences Reform Act of 2002 (ESRA 2002, 20 U.S.C. §9543).

All of the information you provide may be used only for statistical purposes and may not be disclosed, or used, in identifiable form for any other purpose except as required by law (20 U.S.C. §9573 and 6 U.S.C. §151).

The following language will be included on data collection instruments:

According to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, no persons are required to respond to a collection of information unless it displays a valid OMB control number. The valid OMB control number for this voluntary information collection is 1850-NEW. The time required to complete this information collection is estimated to average 180 minutes per response, including the time to review instructions, search existing data resources, gather the data needed, and complete and review the information collection. If you have any comments concerning the accuracy of the time estimate, suggestions for improving this collection, or comments or concerns about the contents or the status of your individual submission of this questionnaire, please e-mail: [email protected].

A.11 Sensitive Questions

The instrument includes items about staff and student vaccinations. Although these questions are likely to be sensitive, they provide information that is unavailable elsewhere and that will help leaders and policymakers better understand the state of American schools.

A.12 Estimated Response Burden

This request is to collect information from a national representative sample of public elementary, middle, and high schools.

The total response burden estimate for this collection is based on a total of 180 minutes to complete the survey per month. It is planned for there to be a total of 12 months (August 2021 through September 2022). Based on the estimated hourly rates for principals/administrators of $49.521, and based on 26,352 total burden hours for 12 months of School Pulse Panel collections, the total estimated burden time cost to respondents is $1,305,951.



Table 1. Estimates of respondent burden for field activities

Activity

Sample Size

Estimated Response Rate

Estimated Number of Respondents

Estimated Number of Responses

Average Burden Time per Respondent (Minutes)

Total Burden Hours

Preliminary Activities

District IRB Staff Review

300

80%

240

240

360

1,440

District IRB Panel Review

300*6

80%

1,440

1,440

60

1,440

Notification email –

District respondent

900

80%

720

720

3

36

8 item questionnaire –

District respondent

900

80%

720ª

720

10

120

Notification letter –

Schools respondent

2,400

30%

720

720

3

36

Total Preliminary Activities

--

--

3,120

3,940

--

3,072

Monthly Data Collections

Advance email

2,400

30%

720

720

3

36

Monthly Survey Response

2,400

30%

720

720

180

2,160

Total Monthly Data Collections –

one month

-

-

720

1,440

-

2,196

Total Data Collection –

full year

-

-

720

17,280

-

26,352

Total Estimated Burden Requested
In This Submission

-

-

720

17,280

-

26,352

Greyed out rows represent burden approved in previous packages and are provided for context only.


A.13 Estimates of Cost to Respondents

There are no costs to respondents beyond their time to participate. No equipment, printing, or postage charges will be incurred by the participants.

A.14 Cost to the Federal Government

The estimated cost to the federal government for the School Pulse Panel is $12,014,100 million. This includes the estimated cost for the development of the survey instrument, data collections (12 collections), data processing, data file development, dissemination, overall project management, and contract support.

Table 2. Estimates of Costs to the Federal Government

Activity

Estimated Costs

Project Management

$7,302,600

Sample Design and Maintenance

$350,400

Survey Development and Data Collection

$884,000

Data Product Development and Review

$742,100

Data Processing and Dissemination

$887,700

Contract Support

$1,847,300

TOTAL

$12,014,100


A.15 Reasons for Changes in Response Burden and Costs

This is a new emergency data collection request.

A.16 Publication Plans and Time Schedule

This data collection is scheduled to take place monthly from September 2021 through August 2022. The release of the first collection in September may take longer than expected, therefore it is expected for that release to be up to 4-6 weeks after the end of the data collection. It is intended for findings of subsequent collections to be released 2-3 weeks after the end of data collection.

Data Collection Month

Monthly Report Published

September 2021

November 2021

October 2021

December 2021

November 2021

January 2021

December 2021

January 2021

January 2022

February 2022

February 2022

March 2022

March 2022

April 2022

April 2022

May 2022

May 2022

June 2022

June 2022

July 2022

July 2022

August 2022

August 2022

September 2022


A.17 Approval for Not Displaying the Expiration Date for OMB Approval

No exemption from the requirement to display the expiration date for OMB approval of the information collection is being requested for this study.

A.18 Exceptions to the Certification Statement

No exceptions to the certification statement apply to the School Pulse Panel.



1 The average hourly earnings of principals/education administrators in the May 2020 National Occupational and Employment Wage Estimates sponsored by the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) is $49.52. Source: BLS Occupation Employment Statistics, http://data.bls.gov/oes/ Occupation code: Education Administrators, Elementary and Secondary Schools (11-9032); Annual Mean Wage $103,010/2080 hours. Accessed on May 17, 2021.

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