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What is it used to measure? Impact evaluations, including those with experimental designs, measure the impact of government programs and policies or other "treatments" on, for example, people, families, neighborhoods, or firms. In most contexts, experimental designs provide the most reliable impact evaluations (though other approaches are available when experiments are not feasible, including quasi-experimental methods). Experimental findings tell us how (or if) an intervention affects the treated group. The effect’s magnitude then defines how worthwhile an intervention is and, ultimately, whether its benefits justify its cost. How does it work? Measuring an intervention’s impact poses difficult challenges for evaluators. Not only must one collect data on outcomes from the intervention, one must measure what the outcomes would have been without the intervention. Experimental designs do this by dividing subjects at random into two groups—one that participates and one that does not. The second group illustrates outcomes absent the program. This is the ideal comparison group, since it differs from the participant sample only by chance. The keys to successfully evaluating social policies using random assignment are
Research example "Case-Managed Reentry and Employment: Lessons from the Opportunity to Succeed Program" |