Abstract

We partnered with the School District of Philadelphia (SDP) to run a randomized experiment testing interventions to increase teacher participation in an annual feedback survey, an uncompensated task that requires a teacher's time but helps the educational system overall. Our experiment varied the nature of the incentive scheme used, and the associated messaging. In the experiment, all 8,062 active teachers in the SDP were randomly assigned to receive one of four emails using a 2x2 experimental design; specifically, teachers received a lottery-based financial incentive to complete the survey that was either "personal" (a chance to win one of fifteen $100 gift cards for themselves) or "social" (a chance to win one of fifteen $100 gift cards for supplies for their students), and also received email messaging that either did or did not make salient their identity as an educator. Despite abundant statistical power, we find no discernible differences across our conditions on survey completion rates. One implication of these null results is that from a public administration perspective, social rewards may be preferable since funds used for this purpose by school districts go directly to students (through increased expenditure on student supplies), and do not seem less efficacious than personal financial incentives for teachers.

Highlights

  • We partnered with the School District of Philadelphia (SDP) to run a randomized experiment testing interventions to increase teacher participation in an annual feedback survey, an uncompensated task that requires a teacher’s time but helps the educational system overall

  • The point estimate is positive, and very small, suggesting that our identity manipulation did not trigger a meaningful “consistency” motivation (Gneezy et al, 2012, Freedman & Fraser, 1966, Mullen & Monin, 2016) for teachers who completed the survey last year. These results suggest that the identity manipulation we designed may not be of practical use outside of higher quality schools, but that social rewards may be preferable to personal rewards as a tool to motivate teachers

  • Notes: This table shows the results from linear probability models evaluating the interactions between the pooled treatments and two baseline characteristics: 1) specifications 1-2 interact each of the manipulations with a 2015-2016 metric for high teacher quality at the school level; and 2) specification 3 interacts the identity manipulation with whether or not a teacher completed the survey in the previous year, 2016, to test for the presence of "consistency" as a motivation

Read more

Summary

Introduction

We partnered with the School District of Philadelphia (SDP) to run a randomized experiment testing interventions to increase teacher participation in an annual feedback survey, an uncompensated task that requires a teacher’s time but helps the educational system overall. We describe an intervention involving an email campaign designed to test the impact of social versus personal rewards and an identity salience manipulation on prosocial behavior change amongst school teachers—namely, encouraging teachers to complete a 30-minute annual survey that benefits the school district by providing information that helps improve the educational system.

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call