Examining the Internal Validity and Statistical Precision of the Comparative Interrupted Time Series Design by Comparison With a Randomized Experiment

被引:70
作者
St Clair, Travis [1 ]
Cook, Thomas D. [2 ,3 ]
Hallberg, Kelly [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Maryland, College Pk, MD 20742 USA
[2] Northwestern Univ, Evanston, IL USA
[3] Math Policy Res, Washington, DC USA
[4] Amer Inst Res, Chicago, IL USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
interrupted time series; educational evaluation; within-study comparison; randomized clinical trial; SELECTION BIAS; ESTIMATOR; IMPACT;
D O I
10.1177/1098214014527337
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
Although evaluators often use an interrupted time series (ITS) design to test hypotheses about program effects, there are few empirical tests of the design's validity. We take a randomized experiment on an educational topic and compare its effects to those from a comparative ITS (CITS) design that uses the same treatment group as the experiment but a nonequivalent comparison group that is assessed at six time points before treatment. We estimate program effects with and without matching of the comparison schools, and we also systematically vary the number of pretest time points in the analysis. CITS designs produce impact estimates that are extremely close to the experimental benchmarks and, as implemented here, do so equally well with and without matching. Adding time points provides an advantage so long as the pretest trend differences in the treatment and comparison groups are correctly modeled. Otherwise, more time points can increase bias.
引用
收藏
页码:311 / 327
页数:17
相关论文
共 26 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], 1979, Quasi-experimentation: Design analysis issues for field settings
[2]   Impact of legislation requiring moped and motorbike riders to wear helmets [J].
Ballart, X ;
Riba, C .
EVALUATION AND PROGRAM PLANNING, 1995, 18 (04) :311-320
[3]  
Campbell D.T., 1970, The Disadvantaged Child, P185
[4]   CONNECTICUT CRACKDOWN ON SPEEDING - TIME-SERIES DATA IN QUASI-EXPERIMENTAL ANALYSIS [J].
CAMPBELL, DT ;
ROSS, HL .
LAW & SOCIETY REVIEW, 1968, 3 (01) :33-53
[5]   Three conditions under which experiments and observational studies produce comparable causal estimates: New findings from within-study comparisons [J].
Cook, Thomas D. ;
Shadish, William R. ;
Wong, Vivian C. .
JOURNAL OF POLICY ANALYSIS AND MANAGEMENT, 2008, 27 (04) :724-750
[6]   Case Matching and the Reduction of Selection Bias in Quasi-Experiments: The Relative Importance of Pretest Measures of Outcome, of Unreliable Measurement, and of Mode of Data Analysis [J].
Cook, Thomas D. ;
Steiner, Peter M. .
PSYCHOLOGICAL METHODS, 2010, 15 (01) :56-68
[7]   An assessment of propensity score matching as a nonexperimental impact estimator - Evidence from Mexico's PROGRESA program [J].
Diaz, JJ ;
Handa, S .
JOURNAL OF HUMAN RESOURCES, 2006, 41 (02) :319-345
[8]   Interrupted time-series analysis yielded an effect estimate concordant with the cluster-randomized controlled trial result [J].
Fretheim, Atle ;
Soumerai, Stephen B. ;
Zhang, Fang ;
Oxman, Andrew D. ;
Ross-Degnan, Dennis .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2013, 66 (08) :883-887
[9]   Characterizing selection bias using experimental data [J].
Heckman, J ;
Ichimura, H ;
Smith, J ;
Todd, P .
ECONOMETRICA, 1998, 66 (05) :1017-1098
[10]   Matching as an econometric evaluation estimator [J].
Heckman, JJ ;
Ichimura, H ;
Todd, P .
REVIEW OF ECONOMIC STUDIES, 1998, 65 (02) :261-294