Page Title:
Keywords:
Description:
Skip to main content

NAEP Technical DocumentationPrivate School 2009 Science HOT and ICT Assessments

      

Target Population

Sampling Frame

Stratification of Schools

Sampling of Schools

Substitute Schools

Ineligible Schools

Student Sample Selection

 

The NAEP 2009 science  hands-on tasks (HOT) and interactive computer tests (ICT) sample design yielded nationally representative samples of private school students in grades 4, 8, and 12 through a three-stage approach: selection of primary sampling units (PSUs), selection of schools within strata, and selection of students within schools. The sample of schools was selected with probability proportional to a measure of size based on the estimated grade enrollment in the schools.

The 2009 national science HOT and ICT sampling plan was part of a somewhat larger design, with an overall goal of assessing 1,450 fourth-graders, 1,400 eighth-graders and 700 twelfth-graders. These students were allocated among several tests. Science probes were administered for HOT and ICT in all three grades. Pilot tests in mathematics and reading (grades 4 and 8), and civics, U.S. history, and geography (grades 4, 8, and 12) were also administered. Target sample sizes were adjusted to reflect expected private school and student response and eligibility.

Schools on the sampling frame were explicitly stratified prior to sampling by private school affiliation (Catholic, non-Catholic private, and unaffiliated). Within affiliation type, schools were implicitly stratified by PSU type (certainty/noncertainty). In certainty PSUs further stratification was by census region, urban-centric locale and estimated grade enrollment. In noncertainty PSUs additional stratification was by PSU stratum, urban-centric locale, and estimated grade enrollment.

From the stratified frame of private schools, systematic random samples of fourth-, eighth-, and twelfth-grade schools were drawn with probability proportional to a measure of size based on the estimated grade enrollment of the school in the relevant grade.  

Each selected school in the private school sample provided a list of eligible enrolled students from which a systematic, equal probability sample of students was drawn.


Last updated 31 March 2010 (JL)