In July 2022, the study team conducted a pre-test of the English version of the home-based child care (HBCC) provider questionnaire in the Home-Based Child Care Toolkit for Nurturing School-Age Children (HBCC-NSAC Toolkit) as part of the Home-Based Child Care Supply and Quality (HBCCSQ) project. The goals of this pre-test were to: 1) ensure providers with different characteristics interpret items in the provider questionnaire in the same way, 2) test how long it took providers to complete the provider questionnaire, and 3) collect information about provider specific practices that could be used as examples in the provider questionnaire items.
This appendix describes the respondents and procedures for conducting the pre-test and summarizes recommendations for refining specific items and subsequent updates.
The study team worked with staff from five community organizations to identify and recruit nine HBCC providers to participate in the pre-test. These organizations shared contact information for potential participants with recruiters who contacted them using a recruitment script. The study team attempted to recruit HBCC providers who were a mix of: licensed and license-exempt, in both urban and rural areas, from different racial and ethnic backgrounds, and Spanish-English bilingual. The study team aimed to have three providers with a given characteristic.
The study team encountered a few challenges recruiting providers across all of the target characteristics. Exhibit 1 describes each challenge and lessons learned that the study team will apply to the pilot study recruitment approach. Exhibit 1 references relevant attachments from the request for Office of Management and Budget approval under the umbrella generic, Pre-testing of Evaluation Data Collection Activities.
Exhibit 1. Pre-test recruitment challenges and lessons learned for the pilot study
Pre-test recruitment challenge |
Lessons learned for pilot study recruitment |
Most community organizations said it would likely be too difficult or time consuming for their Spanish-speaking providers to fill out the English version of the provider questionnaire. We ultimately recruited one Hispanic or Latino provider who is Spanish-English bilingual and one Black provider who is Spanish-English bilingual. |
The study team will return to these community organizations during the pilot study to recruit primarily Spanish-speaking providers to complete the Spanish instruments. Recruiters will be trained to understand that bilingual providers may be comfortable reading and answering questions in one language more than the other and to confirm providers’ preferred language for data collection during the recruitment calls (Instruments 1 and 2). |
Since the initial four community organizations did not recommend any rural providers, the study team added a fifth organization to specifically recruit providers who live in rural communities. We ultimately recruited three rural providers. |
During site selection, the study team will consider the types of providers community organizations primarily work with including the geographic areas they serve in order to purposively include one or more with rural providers. During the initial calls with community organizations (Appendix A), the study team will ask about the characteristics of providers they work with, including whether they work with providers in urban or rural areas. |
None of the community organizations were able to recommend providers who are Asian or Pacific Islander for the pre-test. |
During site selection, the study team will consider the types of providers community organizations primarily work with including racial or ethnic groups in order to purposively include one or more with Asian or Pacific Islander providers. During the initial calls with community organizations (Appendix A), the study team will ask about the characteristics of providers they work with, including whether they work with any particular racial or ethnic groups. |
Exhibit 2 shows the pre-test respondents by these characteristics.
Exhibit 2. July 2022 English version pre-test respondent characteristics
Data collection |
Urban |
Rural |
||
English-speaking providers |
Spanish-English bilingual providers |
English-speaking providers |
Spanish-English bilingual providers |
|
Black, non-Hispanic |
3a |
1 |
0 |
0 |
Hispanic or Latino |
0 |
1 |
0 |
0 |
White, non-Hispanic |
1 |
0 |
3 |
0 |
Asian or Pacific Islander, non-Hispanic |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
a Two of the four respondents in this category were Family, Friend, and Neighbor (FFN) providers. All other providers were Family Child Care (FCC) providers.
Respondents had the option to receive an electronic, Word version of the provider questionnaire via email, or paper copies through the mail. Respondents were asked to complete the English version of the provider questionnaire, track how long it took them, and return it to the study team a few days before a cognitive interview.
Two study team members, with one serving as lead interviewer and the second as note taker, conducted 30-minute cognitive interviews via a virtual meeting platform with each pre-test respondent. The purpose of the cognitive interviews was to identify questions that were confusing or difficult for respondents to answer and get respondents’ recommendations for changes. With respondents’ consent, the study team recorded the interviews. The team members used concurrent probing techniques to assess item-specific issues and then used a retrospective approach for more general discussion (for example, asking if there were any questions that were difficult to respond to). During the interview, respondents were asked to have a copy of the provider questionnaire in front of them to refer to specific items and interviewers read items aloud as needed.
Based on issues identified in the pre-test, the study team made some item-level changes to the provider questionnaire. Exhibit 3 describes overall changes made to the provider questionnaire instructions, format, or scales. Exhibit 4 describes item-level changes made to the provider questionnaire items, organized by domain.
Exhibit 3. Overall feedback and subsequent changes
Topic |
Feedback |
Changes made |
Instructions |
One respondent said that she did not think the HBCC-NSAC Toolkit was for FFN respondents, as it seemed more geared toward center-based care. |
Added more inclusive language to the instructions specifying who the HBCC-NSAC Toolkit is for. |
Instructions |
One respondent explained that she was not sure how to answer some of the statements because there were things she might do a lot with some kids, but not as much with others. |
Added specific language to instructions for how to handle this. |
Format |
At least two respondents explicitly stated that they would like to see a section for next steps and resources to make the HBCC-NSAC Toolkit actionable and to warrant taking the time to fill it out. Similarly, another respondent said she had to shift her mindset as she was completing the provider questionnaire. In the past, when she has seen a rating scale, there is a tendency to want to rate yourself high, but she realized that in order to truly use this as a “tool”, she needed to be reflective and answer honestly. |
Added a “What Do I Do Now?” section to the end with more specific instructions for next steps. This section also includes recommended reflection questions to guide the provider in creating a professional development plan based on their responses. The reflection questions will prompt providers to think about this as a tool for self-reflection rather than a rating scale or monitoring tool. |
Scale |
The consensus among FCC respondents was that: “a lot” = multiple times/day, “rarely” = I have done it before but not often, and “sometimes” = somewhere in between. However, one FFN respondent commented that she resorted to the “not sure how to answer” option because she wasn’t sure how to define “a lot.” She wasn’t sure whether to quantify it as “every day” versus “every time it comes up” (which might not necessarily be every day). |
Added more in-depth explanations of the response scales to the instructions. |
Exhibit 4. Item-level reflection statement feedback and subsequent changes, by domain
The referenced collection of information is voluntary. Information
will be kept private. An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a
person is not required to respond to, a collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid OMB control number. The OMB
control number for this collection is 0970-0355 and the expiration
date is 8/31/2024.
The referenced collection of information is voluntary. Information
will be kept private. An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a
person is not required to respond to, a collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid OMB control number. The OMB
control number for this collection is 0970-0355 and the expiration
date is 8/31/2024.
File Type | application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document |
File Title | Mathematica Memo |
Subject | memo |
Author | Ann Li |
File Modified | 0000-00-00 |
File Created | 2024-07-25 |