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Threshold BRIGHT I 2007-2008

Burkina Faso, 2007 - 2008
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Reference ID
BFA_2007_MCC-TB_v01_M
Producer(s)
Mathematica Policy Research
Metadata
DDI/XML JSON
Created on
Oct 13, 2011
Last modified
Mar 29, 2019
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  • Identification

    Survey ID number

    BFA_2007_MCC-TB_v01_M

    Title

    Threshold BRIGHT I 2007-2008

    Country
    Name Country code
    Burkina Faso BFA
    Study type

    Impact Evaluation Survey

    Abstract

    The Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) funded a two-year Threshold Country Program (TCP) to increase girls' educational attainment in Burkina Faso through the construction of schools and complementary interventions. The program, locally known as BRIGHT, was implemented in 132 rural villages throughout the 10 provinces of Burkina Faso in which girls' enrollment rates were lowest. The BRIGHT program consisted of constructing primary schools with three classrooms and implementing a set of interventions that included inputs such as separate latrines for boys and girls; canteens; take-home rations and textbooks; and ?soft? components, such as a mobilization campaign, literacy training, and capacity building among local partners. The program was implemented during 2005 to 2008.

    Mathematica Policy Research was contracted to conduct a rigorous impact evaluation of the program. The evaluation assessed whether and the extent to which the program affected the school enrollment and performance of children in the 132 villages where BRIGHT was implemented. 2 As part of the Burkina Faso Girls' Education Impact Evaluation, Mathematica oversaw data collection from rural households and schools in that country.

    Overview of the Evaluation

    The impact evaluation sought to answer three key questions:

    (1) What was the impact of the program on school enrollment?

    (2) What was the impact of the program on test scores?

    (3) Were the impacts different for girls than for boys?

    Summary of Results

    In general, the main conclusions are that BRIGHT had about a 20 percentage point positive impact on girls’ primary school enrollment, and had positive impacts on Math and French test scores for both girls and boys. The evaluator was unable to separately estimate the impact of each component of the intervention (schools, textbooks, etc.)

    Kind of Data

    Sample survey data [ssd]

    Unit of Analysis

    Individuals, Households, School.

    Version

    Version Description

    Anonymized dataset for public distribution

    Scope

    Notes

    Household questionnaire:

    • Household characteristics: religion, ethnicity, and education of head; GPS coordinates, construction materials of dwelling, and water source; intervention-specific information (preschool, literacy training).
    • Household listing: relationship to the head of household, sex, age, school attendance.
    • Education: access to textbooks; information about the school attended, including specific interventions such as separate latrines, participation in feeding programs, and attendance; and reasons the parents sent the child to school.
    • Child labor: whether the children were engaged in work for persons outside the household (for pay or in-kind) and whether they performed various chores.
    • Mathematics assessment
    • French assessment.

    School questionnaire:

    • School information: name, province, department, and type of respondent.
    • School characteristics: enrollment, type of school (public or private), textbook availability, and whether the school offered health and feeding programs.
    • School personnel characteristics: number and gender of teachers, teacher training levels, and whether teachers had participated in gender sensitivity training.
    • School physical structure: school's physical structure, such as number of classrooms, availability of desks and chairs, school construction materials, water supply, separate latrines, and the presence of a preschool (Bisongo).
    • Student attendance roster
    • GPS coordinates, number of days the school was open during the four previous months, student absenteism
    Topics
    Topic Vocabulary
    Education MCC Sector
    Keywords
    Education Primary school Literacy Girls' enrollment Latrine Water pump Rations Textbooks

    Producers and sponsors

    Primary investigators
    Name Affiliation
    Mathematica Policy Research Millennium Challenge Corporation
    Funding Agency/Sponsor
    Name
    Millennium Challenge Corporation

    Sampling

    Sampling Procedure

    The sample frame comprised all households within the 293 villages that applied to the program, including all of the villages in the study's participant and comparison groups. Data collectors, however, were unable to locate two villages, probably because the spelling of the village names on the application did not match village names found by the data collectors-perhaps due to dialect differences or misspellings. As a result, the survey included 291 villages, of which 132 were participant villages and 159 were comparison villages. [Note: The analysis file excludes four additional villages. Two were excluded because they were the only villages that applied for the program from their department and thus were not eligible for the analysis used. The other two villages were excluded because no data were reported for them. Therefore the dataset includes data on 287 villages.]

    HOUSEHOLD SAMPLING

    In each village located, interviewers conducted a census of households to develop a village-level sampling frame. Households in the study are defined as groups of people living together (in a common physical space), working together under the authority of a person called head of household, and taking their meals together or from the same supply of food. The members of a household must have lived together in this fashion during at least 9 of the previous 12 months. During the census, interviewers identified households with school-age girls (5- to 12-years old) and collected information about the household's access to beasts of burden.

    Following the census, the households with school-age girls became the sample frame, and 30 of these households were randomly selected to be surveyed in each village. The sampling frame at the village level was stratified by access to beasts of burden, a proxy for wealth. Three strata were identified: households that owned at least one beast of burden, households that did not own a beast of burden but had access to one, and households that neither owned nor had access to a beast of burden. Under the hypothesis that means of production are positively correlated with income, the University of Ouagadougou suggested the above stratification method to ensure a representative household sample. From each stratum, interviewers selected 10 households to be surveyed. For each stratum, interviewers wrote the name of each head of an eligible household on a piece of paper, placed the pieces of paper in a hat, and then drew 10 names. The process was conducted publicly in each village.

    SCHOOL SAMPLING

    School data was collected using different sampling techniques for Wave 1 and Wave 2. For Wave 1, interviewers asked village elders to name all the schools, if any, that children from that village attended regularly. Interviewers then selected the up to three schools closest to the village center, within 10 kilometers, as the schools to be surveyed for that village. [Note: This strategy could have introduced sampling bias if villages had children attending more than three schools, and different types of schools were systematically located closer to village centers; however, in 98.7% of villages with any children attending school, only one or two schools were named. ]Data were collected from more than 300 schools.

    For Wave 2, interviewers used the household data as the starting point. From the 8,491 completed household surveys, children were identified as currently attending 367 schools. Of those, 316 were attended by three or more children in the sample. Of those, schools that were within 10 kilometers of the children's village were targeted for interview. Data from more than 280 schools were obtained, and matched with 7,316 of the children in the sample.

    Wave 1 school data were also matched with children in the household sample. Data from 270 schools were matched with more than 7,400 children in the sample. Only data from the matched schools are found in the dataset.

    Deviations from the Sample Design

    As described above, we were unable to survey four of the 293 applicant villages in our household survey. In addition, two villages were the only villages in their department, making it impossible to create the relative score variable needed for the RD design. As a result, we dropped these six villages from consideration in our analysis and focused on the 287 villages for which we had meaningful applicant and household survey data.

    Response Rate

    The response rate for the household survey was 97.3 percent. This was calculated by dividing the total number of households who responded (8,491) by the number of households sampled for the located villages (8,730). Two unlocated villages were not included in this calculation.

    The response rate for the school survey is 99.2 percent. This was calculated by dividing the total number of schools who responded (367) by the total number of schools identified in the household survey as having children enrolled (370).

    Weighting

    Eligibility weights applied to application forms submitted by each of the 293 villages:

    QUESTION SCORING
    N°1 ................................................. 1 point per girl
    N°2 ................................................. 1 point per girl
    N°3 ................................................. 1 point per girl
    N°4 ................................................. +1 point if between 0 and 5 km and- 1 point for 6 km or more
    N°5 ................................................. 1 point per student
    N°6 ................................................. +1 if there are no rooms and -1 if there are
    N°7 ................................................. +1 for each village between 0 and 5 km and -1 for each village of 6km or more
    N°8 ................................................. -1 for each existing school and +1 if there are none
    N°9 ................................................. +1 if between 0 and 5 km -1 if 6 km or more
    N°10 ............................................... 1 point per girl
    N°11 ............................................... +1 if between 0 and 20 km and -1 if 21 km or more
    N°12 ............................................... + 1 per student
    N°13 ............................................... Not included in scoring

    Survey instrument

    Questionnaires

    Mathematica developed two questionnaires: a household questionnaire and a school questionnaire. The household questionnaire asked about household demographics, children's educational outcomes (enrollment and attendance), and parents' perceptions of education. The school survey asked about schools' characteristics and children's attendance and enrollment.

    The household questionnaire drew heavily from several existing questionnaires used widely in developing countries, including the Demographic and Health Survey (USAID), the Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (UNICEF), and the Living Standards Measurement Study (World Bank). Reliance on these questionnaires provided two important benefits. First, given their wide and successful use in developing countries, including Burkina Faso, they enhanced our confidence in the validity and reliability of the questions in the household questionnaire. Second, reliance on the existing questionnaires allows researchers to compare our results with results from the earlier surveys in both Burkina Faso and other countries. Where necessary, we adapted or added survey questions to yield detailed information to answer the research questions. The household survey included the following modules:

    • Household characteristics. This module asked for information about the head of household, such as religion, ethnicity, and education; information about the household itself, including GPS coordinates, construction materials, and water source; and intervention-specific information, such as whether any children were attending preschool (Bisongo) or whether any women were participating in literacy training.

    • Household listing form. This module asked the respondent to provide a complete list of all children between 5- and 12-years-old residing in the household. Basic information collected on these children included relationship to the head of household, sex, age, and whether the child had attended school at any time during the 2007-2008 school year.

    • Education. This module was administered for all children 5- to 12-years-old who attended school at any time during the 2007-2008 school year. Questions addressed access to textbooks; information about the school attended, including specific interventions such as separate latrines, participation in feeding programs, and attendance; and reasons the parents sent the child to school.

    • Child labor. This module was administered for all children 5- to 12-years-old, and asked whether the children were engaged in work for persons outside the household (for pay or in-kind) and whether they performed various chores.

    • Mathematics assessment. This module was administered to all children 5- to 12-years-old. Children were shown pre-printed cards and asked to identify numbers, count items, indicate which number was the greater of a pair of numbers, and perform simple addition and subtraction.

    • French assessment. This module was administered to all children 5- to 12-years-old. Children were shown pre-printed cards and asked to identify letters, read one- and two-syllable words, and identify the correct noun and verb from a list to fill in a blank in a simple sentence. Examples came from grade 1 and 2 Burkina Faso primary education reading texts.

    The school questionnaire was based largely on the World Bank's Living Standards Measurement Study School Questionnaire, modified to address Burkina Faso's educational context and answer the evaluation's research questions. The school survey was administered in two waves. The first wave collected information on school characteristics. The second wave, conducted about five months later along with the household survey, collected attendance and enrollment data for children interviewed in the household survey. Accordingly, Mathematica created two school questionnaire forms. The first included detailed characteristics about the school and a roster to collect overall attendance data. The second included only an attendance roster for students enrolled in the study. Together, the school surveys included the following modules:

    • School information. This module included general information about the school, such as name, province, department, and type of respondent.
    • School characteristics. This module asked the respondent to provide detailed information about the school, including enrollment, type of school (public or private), textbook availability, and whether the school offered health and feeding programs.
    • School personnel characteristics. This module asked respondents to provide information about teachers at the school, including number and gender of teachers, teacher training levels, and whether teachers had participated in gender sensitivity training.
    • School physical structure. This module asked about the school's physical structure, such as number of classrooms, availability of desks and chairs, school construction materials, water supply, separate latrines, and the presence of a preschool (Bisongo).
    • Student attendance roster. This module was split into two versions. The first was administered during the first visit to the school in conjunction with the modules above. The second was administered by itself during the second visit to the school. The first roster collected information about all students enrolled in the school and whether they were in attendance on that day, were in attendance for the previous three days, and were generally in attendance. The second roster collected information only about those students identified in the household survey as enrolled in school. In addition to the information collected on the first roster, the second roster collected - GPS coordinates, the number of days the school was open during the four previous months, and the number of days the student was absent during the same four months.

    Both the household and school questionnaires were first written in English and then translated into French. Mathematica and the University of Ouagadougou collaborated on the translations, ensuring that idiomatic expressions or language usage particular to Burkina Faso was appropriately incorporated. However, in reality French is rarely spoken in rural villages. There are currently 68 languages spoken in Burkina Faso, of which several are unwritten or inconsistently written (Gordon 2005). Faced with the prospect of surveying people in many languages, Mathematica decided that the best approach was to hire interviewers fluent in both French and local languages and train them to translate the instrument as they conducted the interview. In Table C.1, we present the native language of respondents to the household survey.

    Household Questionnaire Respondent Native Language / Frequency / Percent
    French / 178 / 2.1
    Mooré / 3,145 / 37.1
    Dioula / 33 / 0.4
    Fulfudé / 1,782 / 21.1
    Gulmachéma / 2,345 / 27.7
    Bwamu / 140 / 1.7
    Other Language / 844 / 10.0
    Total / 8,467 / 100.1

    Once the questionnaires were developed, they were tested in a pilot data collection for which we randomly selected 10 villages-5 treatment and 5 comparison-to be surveyed in May and June 2007. Our aim was to survey households and schools in these villages in order to identify potential problems. The pilot called for interviewer training; conduct of a census and random selection in each village; the identification of schools; conduct of the household and school surveys; and data entry, cleaning, and delivery. A Mathematica team traveled with interviewers and observed them in several villages, talked with village residents, and held a debriefing session with interviewers.

    The pilot test identified two key problems. First, the household interview was much too long, averaging more than 90 minutes. To reduce respondent burden, we decreased the number of questions to limit the interview to less than one hour. Second, we determined that several questions were difficult for respondents to answer, particularly those about distances, time, and space. For example, respondents struggled to answer questions about distance from the household to the school or the number of hectares farmed. For questions that we thought important for the analysis, we asked the interviewer for an estimate or sought other measures.[Note: Because both the household and school surveys were substantially modified following the pilot data collection, we did not use the pilot data for analysis. During subsequent data collection, however, all 10 villages included in the pilot data collection were revisited and included in the household and school survey.]

    For the school survey, we concluded that it was nearly impossible during analysis to link the students on the school roster with children reported by the household survey as enrolled in school. The reason was the lack of a unique identifier such as a government-issued identification number and the fact that many children shared both the same first and last name. The matching procedure was important in that key measures for the evaluation were school enrollment and attendance. Accordingly, we grew concerned that using the household survey alone to measure school enrollment and attendance might lead to misleading results due to social desirability or other biases. As a result, we developed a procedure whereby matching took place while interviewers were in each village. For this procedure, interviewers first completed the household surveys and then populated the school attendance roster with the names of all children identified in the household surveys as enrolled in a local school. They included the child's household ID and household listing number on the roster. We later used these identifiers to link school data to household data. Once in the school, interviewers used the roster to collect attendance and enrollment information only for children on the roster.

    Data collection

    Dates of Data Collection
    Start End Cycle
    2007-02 2007-04 Pilot household survey in 10 villages
    2007-10 2008-04 School surveys in 293 communities
    2008-01 2008-04 Household survey in 293 villages
    Data Collectors
    Name Affiliation
    Jean Pierre Sawadogo, Robert Ouedraogo, and Pam Zahonogo. University of Ouagadougou
    Data Collection Notes

    To carry out the data collection activities, Mathematica drafted and released an RFP to solicit proposals from local data collection firms. We received seven proposals; Mathematica interviewed representatives of three firms and ultimately selected a team of researchers from the University of Ouagadougou, led by Jean Pierre Sawadogo, Robert Ouedraogo, and Pam Zahonogo. The data collection firm was responsible for the following:

    1. Translating and pretesting the questionnaires
    2. Writing Terms of Reference and contracts for the field enumerators and controllers
    3. Hiring and training field enumerators and controllers
    4. Ensuring proper dispatch of the field enumerators and controllers to the survey sites
    5. Undertaking field supervision during the data collection to identify and correct problems
    6. Maintaining constant communication with the Mathematica team by sending biweekly reports on response rates and rapidly communicating any problems encountered

    Before the start of each data collection, the university team conducted interviewer training that covered identifying schools, conducting a village census and selecting eligible households at random, basic interviewing procedures, and a review of each question to ensure that interviewers understood its intent. Interviewers then were organized by linguistic group and worked together to determine how best to translate questions into the local languages. Mathematica participated in the interviewer training.

    The data collection consisted of the first school survey conducted in fall 2007 and the follow-up school survey conducted in spring 2008. The follow-up school survey was coupled with the household survey. The pilot test, described above, was conducted in late spring 2007. All versions of the interview were conducted with paper questionnaires.

    The school survey was conducted with the school director, when possible. The interviewer also was asked to gather attendance information, particularly on the day of the visit. For that module, the interviewer called the roll and personally noted absences. As noted, 360 schools were surveyed.

    The household survey was conducted with the head of household or another member of the household knowledgeable about household children. The interviewee most often was the male head of household. Ninety-eight percent of the interviews were conducted with men and 80 percent with the head of the household.

    The university team hired 56 interviewers to collect household and school data. For the full household data collection, the interviewers were organized into 18 teams by linguistic group. Each team consisted of three to four interviewers and was led by an experienced field supervisor. The teams were then assigned to a cluster of villages. The teams simultaneously surveyed the selected villages throughout the country.

    Data processing

    Data Editing

    Following data collection, the data were entered and edited by the University of Ouagadougou team using SPSS statistical analysis software. Preliminary data sets were provided to MPR for extensive data checking. The MPR team reviewed the data for completeness, internal consistency, and to determine if the match between household and school data was done correctly. In particular, because of its importance to the central research question, we focused on reconciling data for children identified as being enrolled in school during the household interview but not found on the school attendance roster, and children found on the school attendance roster but not on any household survey. These errors occurred for a variety of reasons, including interviewers not following the procedure and illegible writing.

    Data Access

    Access authority
    Name Affiliation Email
    Monitoring & Evaluation Division Millennium Challenge Corporation impact-eval@mcc.gov
    Citation requirements

    Levy, Dan, Matt Sloan, Leigh Linden, and Harounan Kazianga. 2009. Impact Evaluation of Burkina Faso's BRIGHT Program. Washington, D.C.; Mathematica Policy Research, Inc.

    Disclaimer and copyrights

    Disclaimer

    The user of the data acknowledges that the original collector of the data, the authorized distributor of the data, and the relevant funding agency bear no responsibility for use of the data or for interpretations or inferences based upon such uses.

    Contacts

    Contacts
    Name Affiliation Email
    Monitoring & Evaluation Division Millennium Challenge Corporation impact-eval@mcc.gov

    Metadata production

    DDI Document ID

    DDI_BFA_2007_MCC-TB_v01_M

    Producers
    Name Role
    Millennium Challenge Corporation Metadata Producer
    Date of Metadata Production

    2011-03-15

    Metadata version

    DDI Document version

    Version 1.1 (March 2011).
    Version 2.0 (May 2015). Edited version based on Version 01 (DDI-MCC-BFA-MPR-BRIGHT-2009-v1.1) that was done by Millennium Challenge Corporation.

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