Short Answer

Using the student absences example, how would you configure the study's groups and timing to implement an interrupted time-series design with nonequivalent groups to evaluate a new daily attendance policy?

Question: Using the student absences example, how would you configure the study's groups and timing to implement an interrupted time-series design with nonequivalent groups to evaluate a new daily attendance policy?

Sample answer: I would select two course sections, tracking absences in both simultaneously. In one section (the treatment group), I would introduce the daily attendance policy mid-semester after establishing a baseline of absences. In the other section (the nonequivalent control group), I would not take attendance, tracking absences across the entire term to serve as a comparison.

Key points:

  • Select two course sections to serve as the treatment and nonequivalent control groups.
  • Track absences in both sections simultaneously over the semester.
  • Introduce the attendance policy mid-semester in the treatment group while keeping the control group untreated.

Rubric: The answer should describe selecting two sections, tracking them simultaneously, introducing the policy in one section (treatment group) after a baseline period (mid-semester), and keeping the other section as a nonequivalent control group (no attendance taken) for the duration of the term.

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Updated 2026-05-27

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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