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Comparing Impact Findings from Design-Based and Model-Based Methods: An Empirical Investigation

NCEE
Author(s):
Tim Kautz, Peter Z. Schochet, and Charles Tilley: Mathematica Policy Research
Publication date:
July 2017
Publication number:
NCEE 20174026

Summary

This report compares empirical results from different approaches to analyzing data from randomized controlled trials (RCTs). It focuses on how impact estimates compare between recently-developed design-based methods and traditional model-based methods. Design-based methods use the potential outcomes framework and known features of study designs to connect statistical methods to the building blocks of causal inference. They differ from model-based methods that have commonly been used in education research, including hierarchical linear model (HLM) methods and robust cluster standard error (RCSE) methods for clustered designs. This study re-analyzes nine past RCTs in the education area using both design- and model-based methods. The study finds that model-based and design-based methods yield very similar impact estimates and levels of statistical significance, especially when the underlying analytic assumptions (e.g., weights used to aggregate clusters and blocks) are aligned.

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Research Report
NCEE

Comparing Impact Findings from Design-Based and Model-Based Methods: An Empirical Investigation

By: Tim Kautz, Peter Z. Schochet, and Charles Tilley: Mathematica Policy Research
Download and view this document

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