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Incomplete Information, Costly Adolescent-Elder Interactions, and Miscoordination in Agricultural Households: Evidence from School-based Agricultural Extension in Liberia

Last registered on June 23, 2021

Pre-Trial

Trial Information

General Information

Title
Conventions, Information Asymmetry, and Aspirations for New Social Roles: Field Experiment in an Agricultural Education Program in Liberia
RCT ID
AEARCTR-0007841
Initial registration date
June 22, 2021

Initial registration date is when the trial was registered.

It corresponds to when the registration was submitted to the Registry to be reviewed for publication.

First published
June 23, 2021, 8:34 AM EDT

First published corresponds to when the trial was first made public on the Registry after being reviewed.

Locations

Primary Investigator

Affiliation
Northwestern University

Other Primary Investigator(s)

Additional Trial Information

Status
In development
Start date
2021-06-21
End date
2022-12-31
Secondary IDs
Abstract
Learning to take on new social roles often depends upon the support of others. This project frames the process of learning and communication with socially important others in an information asymmetry: while I aspire to take on new social roles, others cannot foresee changes in my attributes -- this I know. Analogous to the analysis of markets in Akerlof (1970), I provide a heuristic framework of strategic behavior under social conventions.

The framework helps understand the behavior of youth in an agricultural education program in Liberia, which aims to empower students as agents of diffusion while they learn low-cost, easy-to-use agricultural innovations in schools. According to our pilot survey and focus groups, students hesitate in reaching out to their elders in households because they anticipate elders would not believe in their changes in farming skills and attitudes; elders (typically parents) are not sure if students have paid attention to training in the program.

I design a 2 x 2 randomized experiment among 1000 households with students in 50 schools that join the program in 2021. Our interventions encourage students and their elders to imagine, at the beginning of the program, the consequences of students' active participation in the program. In the first randomization, representative elders in half of the households are invited to either treatment or placebo video sessions that summarize program impact on students’ farming skills, attitudes, and livelihoods from past participants. In the second randomization, we reveal positive expectations of household heads about students’ growth in skills and attitudes in 1 year to half of the students.

Coupled with a general randomized evaluation of the program (AEARCTR-0006671), a baseline survey is scheduled in June - August 2021 to capture baseline characteristics of students and elders, their 1st and 2nd order beliefs about students' farming skills and attitudes, as well as short-term program impacts. Video sessions for elders and follow-up surveys (which include the revelation treatment) of students take place within 1 day after the baseline survey. We capture impacts on our subjects' forward-looking expectations and real-stake decisions immediately after the interventions. We plan to track, in a post-rainy-season survey and quarterly program monitoring data, students' level of participation in the program, acquisition of new farming practices, communication efforts with their elders, and initiatives in starting their farms outside schools. We will also track auxiliary outcomes in agricultural extension, youth empowerment, and education.
External Link(s)

Registration Citation

Citation
Lee, Jimmy. 2021. "Conventions, Information Asymmetry, and Aspirations for New Social Roles: Field Experiment in an Agricultural Education Program in Liberia." AEA RCT Registry. June 23. https://doi.org/10.1257/rct.7841-1.0
Experimental Details

Interventions

Intervention(s)
I design a 2 x 2 randomized experiment among 1000 households with students in 50 schools that join the school-based agricultural program (4-H Liberia) in 2021. Our household-level interventions encourage students and their elders to imagine, at the beginning of the program (and of the first rainy season), the consequences of students' active participation in the program.

The first randomization aims to encourage elders (in students' households) to learn about and support their students' potential growth in farming skills, attitudes, and commitments. Half of the households receive an invitation to treatment video sessions; the other half receive an invitation to placebo video sessions. For every household, the representative elder who attends the session must be a farmer growing crops in the promoted categories (root crops or vegetables). Each video session has 5 elders and lasts around 1.5 hours: baseline questions; video display on a laptop under palava huts; and follow-up questions. Treatment video sessions display a 14-minute video that (i) provides an overview of the program and (ii) summarizes program impact on students’ farming skills, attitudes, and livelihoods from past participants (in communities that are not included in the sample). Placebo video sessions display a 4-minute video that ONLY provides an overview of the program. Both videos are taken from footage shot during late 2020 - early 2021 by a third-party media production company in Liberia. The treatment video is a long version that encompasses everything in the placebo video. We also independently randomize who in the households attend the video sessions (both treatment and placebo): for half of the households, a male is invited to the sessions; for the other half of the households, a female is invited.

The second randomization aims to overcome potential coordination difficulties between students and their elders by encouraging students to reach out to their elders (to introduce the program, what they have learnt, suggest new farming ideas, and propose to manage farms, etc).
During the video sessions, we collect (before showing videos) elders' beliefs about students' current farming skills, attitudes, and commitments; and (after showing video) elders' forward-looking expectations about the same attributes of students in 1 year. We ask if elders would give their consent for IPA to reveal their positive expectations to students. We then manipulate students' information about their elders' expectations in a follow-up survey. In half of the households, we deliver (i) revelation messages that reveal expectations from elders to students and (ii) encouragement messages that ask students to take on the role as an agent of diffusion of new practices. In the other half of the households, we deliver ONLY encouragement messages.
Intervention Start Date
2021-06-21
Intervention End Date
2021-07-31

Primary Outcomes

Primary Outcomes (end points)
Our primary outcomes are in 7 categories: (i) students' participation in the program; (ii) students' major rainy season farming activities outside schools; (iii) students' minor rainy season farming activities outside schools; (iv) students' knowledge, skills, and aspirations; (v) students' usage of new agricultural practices outside schools; (vi) elders' knowledge and skills; (vii) elders' usage of new agricultural practices outside schools. Multiple inference corrections will be implemented across outcomes within the same category.

(i) In the category of students' participation in the program, we have the following outcomes:
(1) a binary indicator of whether students work in the school garden (self-reported in the post-rainy-season survey);
(2) a binary indicator of whether students enroll in 4-H Clubs (self-reported in the post-rainy-season survey and monitored by program);
(3) a binary indicator of whether students have started home entrepreneurship projects (self-reported in the post-rainy-season survey and monitored by program);
(4) a binary indicator of whether students are in the leadership of development clubs (including presidents, vice-presidents, secretaries, treasuries, and chaplains; self-reported in the post-rainy-season survey and monitored by program);
(5) a binary indicator of whether students have participated in national networking events (including 4-H leadership camps and 4-H agriculture fairs; self-reported in the post-rainy-season survey and monitored by program).

(ii) In the category of students' major rainy season farming activities outside schools, we have the following outcomes:
(1) a binary indicator of whether students managed at least one independent farm plot during the major rainy season (self-reported, verified by reports of elders and enumerators in the post-rainy-season survey);
(2) binary indicators of whether students chose planting method in at least one farm plot during the major rainy season (aggregated into an index of multiple planting methods promoted by the program; self-reported and verified by reports of elders in the post-rainy-season survey);
(3) a binary indicator of whether students chose which crops to plant in at least one farm plot during the major rainy season (self-reported and verified by reports of elders in the post-rainy-season survey);
(4) a binary indicator of whether students chose whether to sell their crops in at least one farm plot during the major rainy season (self-reported and verified by reports of elders in the post-rainy-season survey);
(5) total area of students' farm plots during the major rainy season (self-reported, verified by enumerators in the post-rainy-season survey);
(6) binary indicators of whether students use hired labor / family labor / communal (kuu) labor during the major rainy season (aggregated into an index; self-reported, verified by reports of elders and enumerators in the post-rainy-season survey);
(7) binary indicators of whether students used fertilizer / irrigation / pesticide during the major rainy season (aggregated into an index; self-reported, verified by reports of elders and enumerators in the post-rainy-season survey).

(iii) In the category of students' minor rainy season farming activities outside schools, we have the following outcomes:
(1) a binary indicator of whether students managed at least one independent farm plot during the minor rainy season (self-reported, verified by reports of elders and enumerators in the post-rainy-season survey);
(2) binary indicators of whether students chose planting method in at least one farm plot during the minor rainy season (aggregated into an index of multiple planting methods promoted by the program; self-reported and verified by reports of elders in the post-rainy-season survey);
(3) a binary indicator of whether students chose which crops to plant in at least one farm plot during the minor rainy season (self-reported and verified by reports of elders in the post-rainy-season survey);
(4) a binary indicator of whether students chose whether to sell their crops in at least one farm plot during the minor rainy season (self-reported and verified by reports of elders in the post-rainy-season survey);
(5) total area of students' farm plots during the minor rainy season (self-reported, verified by enumerators in the post-rainy-season survey);
(6) binary indicators of whether students use hired labor / family labor / communal (kuu) labor during the minor rainy season (aggregated into an index; self-reported, verified by reports of elders and enumerators in the post-rainy-season survey);
(7) binary indicators of whether students used fertilizer / irrigation / pesticide during the minor rainy season (aggregated into an index; self-reported, verified by reports of elders and enumerators in the post-rainy-season survey).

(iv) In the category of students' knowledge, skills, and aspirations, we have the following outcomes:
(1) a standardized measure of students' knowledge of promoted farm management practices and agricultural innovations (measured in a 20-question test during the post-rainy-season survey);
(2) a standardized measure of students' knowledge of promoted entrepreneurial skills and financial literacy (measured in a 20-question test during endline survey in 2022);
(3) binary indicators of whether students can correctly use specific promoted practices (aggregated into an index; tested by enumerators during the post-rainy-season survey);
(4) binary indicator of whether students want to be a farmer, a scientist, or an agriculturalist after finishing school (self-reported without giving choices during the post-rainy-season survey).

(v) In the category of students' usage of new agricultural practices outside schools, we have the following outcomes:
(1) binary indicators of whether students have applied promoted practices outside schools in their farms (aggregated into an index; self-reported and verified by enumerators during the post-rainy-season survey);
(2) fraction of farms where at least one farming practice has been applied (verified by enumerators during the post-rainy-season survey).

(vi) In the category of elders' knowledge and skills, we have the following outcomes:
(1) a standardized measure of elders' knowledge of promoted farm management practices and agricultural innovations (measured in a 20-question test during the post-rainy-season survey);
(2) a standardized measure of elders' knowledge of promoted entrepreneurial skills and financial literacy (measured in a 20-question test during endline survey in 2022);
(3) binary indicators of whether elders can correctly use specific promoted practices (aggregated into an index; tested by enumerators during the post-rainy-season survey).

(vii) In the category of elders' usage of new agricultural practices outside schools, we have the following outcomes:
(1) binary indicators of whether elders have applied promoted practices outside schools in their farms (aggregated into an index; self-reported and verified by enumerators during the post-rainy-season survey);
(2) fraction of farms where at least one farming practice has been applied (verified by enumerators during the post-rainy-season survey).
Primary Outcomes (explanation)

Secondary Outcomes

Secondary Outcomes (end points)
There are two classes of secondary outcomes:
Secondary Outcomes (explanation)

Experimental Design

Experimental Design
I test the significance of my hypothesized mechanism - information asymmetry in changes of students' farming skills, attitudes, and commitments - in a 2 x 2 experiment among 1000 households with students in 50 schools that join the school-based agricultural program (4-H Liberia) in 2021.

We identify our effects as follows. I test the first hypothesis - that there is room to encourage elders in students' households to learn about the positive impacts of the program (on students' farming attributes) - using the first randomization. Households that are invited to treatment video sessions will be compared to households that are invited to placebo video sessions.

I test the second hypothesis - that even when elders in students' households have positive expectations about students' growth in farming attributes, there are difficulties for elders to reveal these expectations to students (e.g. because farming ideas and knowledge about the program belong to students) - using the second randomization. Households that receive the "revelation + encouragement" treatment will be compared to households that receive the "encouragement" treatment.

The selection of our household sample is done in schools. Students are randomly drawn from Grades 4, 5, 7, and 8 (stratified by school and gender). Informed by pilot survey data, we implement a series of screening criteria in selecting 20 students per school who are likely to participate in the program. Selected students must be aged 12-20; must have at least one elder in the household who is planting root crops or vegetables; and must be from separate households. We prioritize students who had farming experience or joined cooperative labor groups (kuu) before 2021. We also prioritize students who have both male and female elders in the household who are planting root crops or vegetables.

All baseline surveys and household-level interventions (same or next day after baseline surveys) will be conducted in June - August 2021. A follow-up survey after the major rainy season (typically April - October) will take place in November 2021 - January 2022. Two further follow-up surveys might take place in April - June 2022 and September - November 2022 to track long-run outcomes. Students' participation in program activities will be monitored by our partners 4-H Liberia and AgriCorps; these data will be linked to our baseline surveys.
Experimental Design Details
Randomization Method
Randomization done in IPA office by a computer, using student ID (which is sorted according to schools, grades, and gender of students). Randomization was done before students are recruited into the sample, and was stratified based on schools and gender of students.
Randomization Unit
For video treatment: household
For revelation treatment: household
Was the treatment clustered?
No

Experiment Characteristics

Sample size: planned number of clusters
1000 households in total.
Sample size: planned number of observations
1000 students (500 male, 500 female) and 1000 elder farmers (500 male, 500 female).
Sample size (or number of clusters) by treatment arms
250 households receiving treatment video and "revelation + encouragement" treatment;
250 households receiving placebo video and "revelation + encouragement" treatment;
250 households receiving treatment video and "encouragement" treatment;
250 households receiving placebo video and "encouragement" treatment.
Minimum detectable effect size for main outcomes (accounting for sample design and clustering)
IRB

Institutional Review Boards (IRBs)

IRB Name
Northwestern University IRB
IRB Approval Date
2019-12-20
IRB Approval Number
STU00211435
IRB Name
Innovations for Poverty Action IRB
IRB Approval Date
2019-12-03
IRB Approval Number
15307
IRB Name
University of Liberia IRB
IRB Approval Date
2021-02-05
IRB Approval Number
18-11-185

Post-Trial

Post Trial Information

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Intervention

Is the intervention completed?
No
Data Collection Complete
Data Publication

Data Publication

Is public data available?
No

Program Files

Program Files
Reports, Papers & Other Materials

Relevant Paper(s)

Reports & Other Materials