I had a useful conversation with project managers about the call scheduling experiment for a face-to-face survey. My proposal for an experiment had been to randomize at the line level. That way, interviewers would have both experimental and control cases in their sample. The project managers felt that this might lead to inefficient trips. In other words, interviewers might follow the recommendation and then ignore cases without a recommendation or go to cases that are very far apart in distance while not visiting cases that are closer but do not have a recommendation.
The experiment is certainly more clean if the randomization occurs at the line level and not the interviewer level, but I certainly wouldn't want to create inefficiencies. One goal is to improve efficiency (another goal is to increase our ability to target cases). I thought training interviewers to use the recommendation as one piece of information while planning their trips. But maybe that wouldn't work. I'll keep thinking about this one...
The experiment is certainly more clean if the randomization occurs at the line level and not the interviewer level, but I certainly wouldn't want to create inefficiencies. One goal is to improve efficiency (another goal is to increase our ability to target cases). I thought training interviewers to use the recommendation as one piece of information while planning their trips. But maybe that wouldn't work. I'll keep thinking about this one...
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