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Report Technical Methods Report

The Late Pretest Problem in Randomized Control Trials of Education Interventions

NCEE
Author(s):
Peter Schochet
Publication date:
December 2008
Publication number:
NCEE 20094033

Summary

The Late Pretest Problem in Randomized Control Trials of Education Interventions, by Peter Schochet, addresses pretest-posttest experimental designs that are often used in randomized control trials (RCTs) in the education field to improve the precision of the estimated treatment effects. For logistic reasons, however, pretest data are often collected after random assignment, so that including them in the analysis could bias the posttest impact estimates. Thus, the issue of whether to collect and use late pretest data in RCTs involves a variance-bias tradeoff. This paper addresses this issue both theoretically and empirically for several commonly-used impact estimators using a loss function approach that is grounded in the causal inference literature. The key finding is that for RCTs of interventions that aim to improve student test scores, estimators that include late pretests will typically be preferred to estimators that exclude them or that instead include uncontaminated baseline test score data from other sources. This result holds as long as the growth in test score impacts do not grow very quickly early in the school year.

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Technical Methods Report
NCEE

The Late Pretest Problem in Randomized Control Trials of Education Interventions

By: Peter Schochet
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