Intervention (Hidden)
1. Pre-informing parents of an upcoming Maths test
Schools frequently report grades to parents via report cards. However, these grades are often reported weeks after the test, and without any reference to the date of the next test. This leaves parents with little opportunity to influence the amount of effort a child puts in when it actually matters.
In this experiment, students were assigned to either treatment or control groups. Parents of pupils assigned to the treatment group were informed of an upcoming Maths test 5 days, 3 days and 1 day in advance.
5 days and 3 days before the test date, parents were texted:
"[Parent Name], [Student Name] has a Maths test on [Test Day]. Please remind them to study and help them to prepare in any other way you can. Thanks, [School Name]."
The night before the test, parents were texted:
"[Parent Name], [Student Name] has a Maths test tomorrow. Please remind them to study and help them to prepare in any other way you can. Thanks, [School Name]."
Students in the control group sat tests as normal and parents were not texted in advance. Students in the control and treatment groups were informed of the test at the same time, and before any texts were sent to parents.
The experiment was run in 5 schools for one test in the second half of the Spring Term (February 24th to April 4th), see the Design section for more details.
2. Prompting home conversations about Science class
Parents may get discouraged from asking their child what they learned at school because previous attempts have not yielded much of a discussion (perhaps because the child is tired, has forgotten, or is not feeling particularly talkative). Alternatively, the parents themselves might not have enjoyed school and are either uninterested or not confident in discussing what was taught.
In this experiment, students were assigned to either a treatment or control group. Parents of treatment group pupils were texted a conversational prompt (written by teachers) related to the day’s Science class. The prompts followed a simple two-sentence formula – a succinct, non-technical summary of the lesson followed by a related question designed to spark curiosity in the parent.
Some examples include:
“Today [Name] revised forces and The Solar System. Ask [Name] to explain why we have seasons.”
“Today in Science [name] revised static electricity and forces. Ask [name] how a balloon gets charged when you rub it on your clothes.”
Texts were scheduled to be sent after every lesson, unless the student had more than one Science lesson per day. Parents were sent a maximum of one text per day. Control group parents did not receive any texts, schooling continued as normal.
The experiment was run in 5 schools for the second half of the Spring Term (February 24th to April 4th). More details can be found in the Design section
3. Using Social Norms to increase attendance
Communicating social norms has been found to change behavior in numerous domains. For example, people who don’t pay their taxes have been found to be more likely to pay if told that the vast majority of their neighbours have paid. Likewise, telling people that they are using far more energy than everyone else on their street has been found to reduce subsequent energy consumption. Informing someone that they are in the minority often causes them to change their behavior to conform with the majority.
Surveys indicated that parents of students with poor attendance records may be unaware of how high their absence rate is compared to classmates. These findings are consistent with biases found elsewhere; numerous psychological studies have found that the majority of people think they are in the top half of their peer group for attractiveness, intelligence and driving (among others). Combined with the social norms experiments described above, it seems plausible that informing parents of low attenders that their child’s classmates miss far fewer days of school will lead to those parents conforming to the norm and improving the attendance of their child.
In this experiment, students that have missed 4 days or more than the modal number of days in their year were assigned to one of three groups: Control, Treatment A and Treatment B. Parents of Treatment A students were texted an attendance report for the school year so far (the Winter and Spring Terms):
“Up to 4th April, [Student Name] missed [Days Missed] school days. Please help your child attend, [School Name]”
Where the number of days missed exceeded 20, the text simply said ‘more than 20’. This is because the number of days missed was estimated from the attendance record held by the school (which is recorded as a percentage) and the number of school days (which might vary from year to year).
Parents of Treatment B parents were texted an attendance report for the year so far, plus a comparison to the rest of the student’s year group:
“Up to 4th April, [Student Name] missed [Days Missed] school days - the typical Year [XX] missed [Year XX Mode]. Please help your child attend as much as others, [School Name]”
The modal number of days in that year group was used as the number of days missed by the ‘typical’ student. Again, values over 20 days were simply referred to as ‘over 20’, and when the typical student had missed 0 days, the text referred to ‘fewer than 1’ days being missed. This is because all the data for days were rounded to the nearest day, and so many modes were rounded to 0 (but were actually probably between 0 and 0.5). More details can be found in the design section.
Attendance in the first and second halves of the Summer Term will be analysed separately. We hypothesize that there will be a treatment effect in the period between the texts are sent and half-term, but that in the second half of the summer term, the treatment effect will either be greatly reduced or disappear entirely.