Explain why having a nonequivalent control group whose absences remain consistently high is crucial for demonstrating that the attendance intervention, rather than some other factor, caused the reduction in absences.
Case context: A researcher tracks student absences over a semester in two sections of a research methods course. In the first section (the treatment group), the researcher introduces daily attendance-taking halfway through the semester. In the second section (the nonequivalent control group), attendance is not taken at all. At the end of the term, the researcher observes that the treatment group's absences were consistently high before the policy change and dropped sustainably afterward, while the control group's absences remained consistently high all term.
Question: Explain why having a nonequivalent control group whose absences remain consistently high is crucial for demonstrating that the attendance intervention, rather than some other factor, caused the reduction in absences.
Sample answer: Having a control group whose absences remain consistently high shows that absences do not naturally decline during the course of the semester due to other factors, such as students becoming more motivated as final exams approach. If such external factors were responsible, both groups would show a drop. The stable high absences in the control group help isolate the attendance-taking policy as the cause of the decrease in the treatment group.
Key points:
- The control group helps rule out external variables or natural changes over the course of the semester.
- If external factors caused the drop, both the treatment and control groups would show a decrease.
- Consistent high absences in the control group suggest the policy was the specific cause of the reduction in the treatment group.
Rubric: The response must explain that the control group serves to rule out alternative explanations or external factors (like semester progression or motivation changes) that could affect all students. It must connect the stable high absences in the control group to isolating the attendance intervention as the cause of the decrease in the treatment group.
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