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November 2011

Trade Adjustment Assistance Community College and Career Training (TAACCCT) Grant Program Performance Reporting Module 2: Participant and Comparison Cohorts. November 2011. 1. Presenters. Sharon Leu , Workforce Analyst, Division of Strategic Investments- National Office

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November 2011

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  1. Trade Adjustment Assistance Community College and Career Training (TAACCCT)Grant ProgramPerformance ReportingModule 2: Participant and Comparison Cohorts November 2011 1

  2. Presenters Sharon Leu, Workforce Analyst, Division of Strategic Investments- National Office Hannah Sin, Federal Project Officer, Regional Office- San Francisco Kristen Milstead, Workforce Analyst, Division of Strategic Investments- National Office 2

  3. Quick Links • The main TAACCCT grant program page is available at www.doleta.gov/taaccct • One-Pagers • SGA and Amendments

  4. Grantees and FPOs will be provided a series of performance trainings consisting of two modules: Module 1: General Reporting Requirements & Quarterly Progress Report Module 2 : Participant and Comparison Cohorts Upcoming performance training for 2012: Annual Performance Reporting Performance Training Overview

  5. Reporting instructions and forms are still under review by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) To preview the materials, you can send a request to the TAACCCT mailbox at taaccct@dol.gov requesting the materials. Don’t forget to copy your FPO! OMB Reporting Package

  6. Contents of This Module Introduction to the Participant and Comparison Cohorts Building Your Participant Cohorts Selecting Your Comparison Cohorts The Comparison Cohort Pilot Study

  7. Participant and Comparison Cohorts OVERVIEW

  8. What You Will Learn in This Chapter The overall purpose of a comparison cohort and why DOL is requiring participant and comparison cohorts Why some comparison cohorts are better than others Features of an ideal comparison cohort Potential problems with creating the ideal comparison cohort

  9. Who are in the cohorts? NON-TAACCCT-FUNDED UNIVERSE PARTICIPANT UNIVERSE: Tracked in Table 1 of APR Participant Cohort : Tracked in Table 2 of APR Comparison Cohort : Tracked in Table 2 of APR Matched

  10. Purpose of Comparison Cohorts • Allows for an analysis between the group that received something extra and the group that did not • Did the “something extra” make a difference? • Improves “internal validity” • How valid an inference is about what caused something to happen • Without a comparison group, it is easy to make reasoning errors about what “caused” something to happen.

  11. Why is DOL Requiring Participant and Comparison Cohorts? • Meets the goal of “continuous improvement” • Encourage and enable a grantee self-evaluation • DOL hopes to learn from the cohort information: • Did the TAACCCT program design/ updates/changes that were proposed and implemented have a positive effect on students who went through the new/updated/revised program, as compared with students who did not? • Education retention and completion • Job placement, retention and earnings

  12. Where Cohort Information is Reported 12 Cohort data and information will be reported in Annual Performance Report (APR) Table 2 (DRAFT)

  13. Why a High-Quality Comparison Cohort Matters • The more attention that is paid to the comparison cohort selection, the greater the ability to rule out the possibility that things other than TAACCCT program are causing whatever outcome effects are observed. • Poor selection of your cohorts can lead to inaccurate conclusions when: • “Apples to oranges” comparisons are made. • Crossover of students between the two groups occurs.

  14. Features of a High-Quality Comparison Cohort (where matching is required) • Matching: when random-assignment into both groups is not possible, the comparison cohort is matched on key attributes to make it as similar to the participant cohort as possible • Important requirements: • Match on the characteristics or attributes that are most likely to affect the outcomes. • program of study, length of program, demographics • Cohort groups should have a sufficient number of students in each. • Students in both groups should have the same length of time to achieve outcomes.

  15. Potential Problems With Selecting a High-Quality Comparison Cohort Inability to match students in the two groups on a key difference or requirement Low numbers of students in your cohorts No matching program of study not funded with grant funds Using a recent cohort or participant and comparison cohorts that start at different times The rest of this module is designed to help you think through your cohort selections and how to correct for or avoid these potential problems.

  16. Summary The purpose of a comparison cohort is to determine whether something has an effect on the people who experienced it. DOL wishes to learn whether there are outcomes differences among students enrolled in TAACCCT-funded programs as compared with students who are not enrolled in these programs. Cohort data will be reported annually in Table 2 of the APR. Careful cohort selection is crucial to arriving at valid conclusions about the effect of TAACCCT. Students in the two cohorts must be matched on key characteristics, contain a sufficient number of students, and have the same length of time to achieve the outcomes.

  17. Building Your Participant Cohorts

  18. What You Will Learn in This Chapter How “program of study” affects the number of participant cohorts How and why to combine programs of study to create one cohort Requirements for combining programs of study Issues to consider in building your participant cohort

  19. Participant Cohorts: The Basics • Each program of study that is funded by the grant should have its own participant cohort on which data are reported in Table 2. • The purpose of the participant cohorts are to track what happens to one group of students in a particular field of study throughout the remaining grant period of performance, as compared with a comparison cohort in the same field that is not affected by grant funds.

  20. Reporting for One Program of Study PARTICIPANT UNIVERSE: Tracked in Table 1 of APR NON-TAACCCT-FUNDED UNIVERSE Participant Cohort : Tracked in Table 2 of APR Comparison Cohort : Tracked in Table 2 of APR MATCHED

  21. Reporting for Two Programs of Study NON-TAACCCT-FUNDED UNIVERSE PARTICIPANT UNIVERSE: Tracked in Table 1 of APR Program of Study 1: Comparison Cohort (Tracked in Table 2 in its own section) Program of Study 1: Participant Cohort (Tracked in Table 2 in its own section) MATCHED Program of Study 2: Comparison Cohort (Tracked in Table 2 in its own section) Program of Study 2: Participant Cohort (Tracked in Table 2 in its own section) MATCHED

  22. Program of Study • A program of study is broadly defined as an educational program in which a degree or certificate is granted. • Grouping of some programs with similar educational material or occupational outlook may be allowed. • Example: Grantee B is planning to build or expand a program in Solar Photovoltaic Installation and a program in Wind Turbine Service Technician Training. Under some conditions, participants from each could be combined into one “renewable energy” program of study participant cohort.

  23. Combining Programs of Study • Why It Might Be Beneficial to Combine Programs • One or more individual programs of study do not have its (their) own valid comparison cohort, but you have a useable comparison cohort for the broader category under which they can be combined. • Enrollments in one or more individual programs are very small.

  24. Requirements for Combining Programs Must be grant-funded Must have similar educational material or occupational outlook. Must begin training at the same time and the participants for the cohort must be drawn from each at the same time. Must have a legitimate reason for combining based on the development of a valid comparison cohort or on the number of students enrolled in a program.

  25. Acceptable Programs of Study: Guidelines

  26. Selecting Participant Cohorts • A participant cohort is a group of students who start the program of study at the same time. • A participant cohort will likely be a subset of everyone who enrolls in a program of study • The participant cohort is selected once and students remain in the cohort (even if they are no longer in a course or program of study) once they have been selected. • Each participant in the cohort will be tracked for reporting purposes through the end of the grant period. • For best results in terms of reporting, select a participant cohort with a start date as early in the grant as possible, but after capacity building is completed in Year 1 (e.g., the end of Year 1 or start of Year 2).

  27. Summary Each program of study should have its own participant cohort. Programs of study may be combined (resulting in only one participant cohort) if occupational outlook and/or educational requirements are similar. Combining programs may be a way to meet the matching requirements for a comparison cohort or avoid some of the problems with having an invalid comparison cohort. All participants in a program may not be in your participant cohort, but all of them must start training at the same time and should start training as soon as possible in the grant period.

  28. Selecting Your Comparison Cohorts

  29. What You Will Learn in This Chapter The requirements for selecting your comparison cohort The features for selection that are not required, but are strongly encouraged Potential issues with selecting a “recent cohort” as your comparison cohort Creative suggestions for meeting the requirement to have a comparison cohort.

  30. Comparison Cohorts: The Basics • The purpose of the comparison cohort(s) is to provide the data used to measure the effectiveness of TAACCCT grant awards on the participant cohort(s). • Thus, individuals in the comparison cohort(s) must be enrolled in a program that is not funded by TAACCCT. • The number of participant cohorts and the number of comparison cohorts should be the same. • As with the participants in the participant cohort, each participant in the comparison cohort will be tracked throughout the period of performance or the equivalent.

  31. Reporting for One Program of Study PARTICIPANT UNIVERSE: Tracked in Table 1 of APR NON-TAACCCT-FUNDED UNIVERSE Participant Cohort : Tracked in Table 2 of APR Comparison Cohort : Tracked in Table 2 of APR MATCHED

  32. Reporting for Two Programs of Study NON-TAACCCT-FUNDED UNIVERSE PARTICIPANT UNIVERSE: Tracked in Table 1 of APR Program of Study 1: Participant Cohort (Tracked in Table 2 in its own section) Program of Study 1: Comparison Cohort (Tracked in Table 2 in its own section) MATCHED Program of Study 2: Comparison Cohort (Tracked in Table 2 in its own section) Program of Study 2: Participant Cohort (Tracked in Table 2 in its own section) MATCHED

  33. Selecting Comparison Cohorts: Requirements • Requirements for all comparison cohorts: • The number of students in the comparison cohort must be the same as the number of students in the participant cohort. • The comparison cohort students must be matched to the participant cohort students on the basis of the program of study (or combined program of study, as previously described). • The comparison students must be similar to the participants with respect to age and gender at a minimum. • The length of the training program must be the same for all students in both the comparison and the participant cohorts. • Once a student is selected for the comparison cohort and has started courses, that student is always in the comparison cohort.

  34. Age & Gender Matching Requirement • A program’s comparison cohort will be deemed acceptable only if the average age and percent male matches that of the participant cohort to which it is compared. • Where exact matches are not possible (given actual enrollments), the margin of discrepancy between the participant and comparison cohorts should be as small as possible. • Significant differences between the cohorts may require further inquiry by the FPO or possible cohort rejection if a stronger comparison cohort can be selected. • The matching similarity in your cohorts will be a required area for narrative explanation in the Annual Performance Report (APR).

  35. Selecting Comparison Cohorts: Not Required, But Encouraged • Other demographics: • If possible, the comparison cohort should be matched to the participant cohort on other demographics, such as race, ethnicity, incumbent worker status, veteran status, etc. • Timing: • It is recommended that the comparison cohort start education or training at or around the same as the participant cohort to avoid a time-lag in reporting outcomes between the two cohorts.

  36. Using Recent Students for Your Comparison Cohort • There are two main requirements in order to use comparison cohorts with earlier start dates than your participant cohorts. • Requirement #1: The duration of time in which outcomes can be considered achieved should be the same duration as that between the start date of the participant cohort and the period of performance end date • Example: • Grantee C wishes to use a comparison cohort of students who enrolled in the semester just prior to that in which TAACCCT students were enrolled (or two reporting quarters). The TAACCCT students in the participant cohort started on August 26, 2012. There are 765 days between August 26, 2012 and the end date of the grant on September 30, 2014, occurring over nine reporting quarters. Therefore, even though the comparison cohort students began their education earlier, their outcomes should only be reported for the nine quarters.

  37. Sample duration timeline for cohorts with the same start date

  38. Sample duration timeline for cohorts with different start dates

  39. Sample duration timeline for cohorts with a comparison cohort start date that is prior to the grant start date

  40. Using Recent Students as Your Comparison Cohort – Other Requirements • Requirement #2: • You must have available a level of detail for the recent students sufficient to report on all fields in the Annual Performance Report, Table 2 (Sections B and C, and A if applicable). • This information must not only be cumulative through the grant period of performance, but also be reportable on a reporting year-by-year basis. In other words, the information must have been captured in a way that will allow for reporting snapshots of the comparison cohort after each reporting year.

  41. APR Table 2 Field Overview The specific definitions for each of these fields are important to determining if historical information is sufficient. Here is a brief overview of the fields. Definitions of each field are forthcoming in Module 3 in 2012. You should E-mail the TAACCCT mailbox at taaccct@dol.gov for a copy of the OMB reporting package currently under review. Enrollments Completion Retained in Program Retained in Other Program Credit Hours Completed Earned Credentials Further Education After Graduation Employment After Graduation Employment Retention Earnings Demographics

  42. Sample reporting intervals for cohorts with the same start dates

  43. Sample reporting intervals for cohorts with different start dates

  44. Sample reporting intervals for cohorts with comparison cohort start and end dates that occurred prior to the grant start date

  45. Suggestions for Selecting a Comparison Cohort To Meet the Program of Study Match • Partner with another college to use a cohort of students in the same program of study at that college as the comparison group for the participants in your grant-funded program of study. • Remember: The students in the comparison cohort must not be enrolled in grant-funded courses! • This strategy works for either a current or recent comparison cohort (recent cohorts can only be used if the following conditions previously described are met).

  46. Suggestions for Selecting a Comparison Cohort To Meet the Program of Study Match • Start tracking the comparison cohort immediately while you develop your program (only if your grant-funded program of study will not be brand new to your college). • Remember: The timeline for your comparison cohort must be equivalent to the timeline for your participant cohort and must include the same durations between reporting periods with reportable information at each period end date!

  47. Where to Get Additional Help Your FPO Evaluation experts you plan to work with to perform an individual program evaluation. Additional technical assistance materials will be provided in the form of FAQs and fact sheets as needed.

  48. Summary Every participant cohort should have its own comparison cohort of students that are not grant-funded and will be tracked for the same period of time. Comparison cohorts should be matched to participant cohorts based on program of study, length of the training program, number of students, age and gender. In addition, comparison cohorts should ideally match on other demographic characteristics and start training at or around the same time as the participant cohort. If using a recent cohort, the length of time to achieve outcomes must be the same as the length of time the participant cohort will have to achieve them, all outcomes in the APR must have been collected, and the durations between reporting years should be the same.

  49. Comparison Cohort Pilot Study

  50. What You Will Learn in This Chapter The requirements and parameters for the comparison cohort pilot study How to use current students in your comparison cohort pilot How and where to report comparison cohort pilot data

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