WWC review of this study

Thinking, Fast and Slow? Some Field Experiments to Reduce Crime and Dropout in Chicago. NBER Working Paper 21178

Heller, Sara B.; Shah, Anuj K.; Guryan, Jonathan; Ludwig, Jens; Mullainathan, Sendhil; Pollack, Harold A. (2015). National Bureau of Economic Research. Retrieved from: https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED577230

  • Randomized Controlled Trial
     examining 
    2,064
     Students
    , grades
    9-10

Reviewed: September 2017

No statistically significant positive
findings
Meets WWC standards without reservations
Staying in School outcomes—Indeterminate effect found for the domain
Outcome
measure
Comparison Period Sample Intervention
mean
Comparison
mean
Significant? Improvement
    index
Evidence
tier

Enrollment status (CACE)

Dropout Prevention vs. Business as usual

2 Years

Full sample (Study 2, End of Year 2);
2,064 students

56.03

51.50

No

--
Show Supplemental Findings

Enrollment status (CACE)

Dropout Prevention vs. Business as usual

1 Year

Full sample (Study 2, End of Year 1);
2,064 students

65.72

63.30

No

--

Enrollment status (ITT)

Dropout Prevention vs. Business as usual

2 Years

Full sample (Study 2, End of Year 2);
2,064 students

53.78

51.50

No

--

Enrollment status (ITT)

Dropout Prevention vs. Business as usual

1 Year

Full sample (Study 2, End of Year 1);
2,064 students

64.52

63.30

No

--


Evidence Tier rating based solely on this study. This intervention may achieve a higher tier when combined with the full body of evidence.

Characteristics of study sample as reported by study author.


  • Male: 100%
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    Illinois

Setting

The study took place in 9 Chicago Public Schools (CPS) high schools in disadvantaged neighborhoods on the south and west sides of Chicago.

Study sample

The study participants were all male. The average age of students in both intervention and comparison groups was 14 years old. 35 percent of students in both groups were old for their grade, and 23 percent of students in both groups had a previous arrest. In the intervention group, 70 percent of students were Black and 28 percent were Hispanic, while in the comparison group, 68 percent were Black and 30 percent were Hispanic. 17 percent of students in the intervention group and 16 percent in the comparison group had a learning disability.

Intervention Group

Students participated in the Becoming a Man (BAM) program, which consisted of weekly 1-hour group sessions for 2 years. The sessions were led by “counselors,” college-educated men hired and trained to deliver the established curriculum. The sessions used cognitive behavioral therapy and included reflection, role-playing, skill-building, and stories and discussion. Over the 2-year program, students voluntarily participated in up to 45 sessions. The sessions took place during the school day, and the students missed class to attend the program. In addition, after-school sports programming was offered in five of the nine schools during the first year only.

Comparison Group

Students participated in regular classes and school activities.

Support for implementation

Not reported.

 

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