364-1169-00L  Evaluating Social Impact with Field Experiments

SemesterFrühjahrssemester 2023
DozierendeA. Beerli
Periodizitätjährlich wiederkehrende Veranstaltung
LehrspracheEnglisch


KurzbeschreibungHow can we evaluate whether a new policy, program, or service changes individuals’ behavior and makes a difference in their lives? How can we measure its social, economic, etc. impact? This course introduces the fundamentals of field experimental methods for social scientists. We will cover all important ingredients to design, conduct, and learn from randomized controlled field experiments.
LernzielThe main objective of the course is to empower students to run their own experiments in the field.

After the course students will
1. be able to identify opportunities to run experiments, assess their feasibility, and learn which questions need to be sorted out with field partners right at the beginning
2. understand different experimental designs and their strengths and weaknesses
3. understand the ethical challenges inherent to field experiments and whether and how they can be addressed
4. know how to combine register data and surveys to measure outcomes
5. know how to prevent or handle key implementation issues, such as non-compliance, spillovers between treatment and control group, attrition or non-response
InhaltThis course is designed for PhD students in social sciences (such as economics, political science, psychology, etc.) or other fields working with human subjects who would like to run their own experiments in the field. A background in basic econometrics and probability theory is required, knowledge in causal inference is helpful.

In contrast to working with observational data and quasi-experimental methods, running field experiments allows researchers to have larger control over the data generating process. This requires, however, to think about ways to address the most important challenges before the experiment is conducted. Knowing these key aspects of designing field experiments, measuring outcomes and collecting data, and potential implementation issues that could arise, will allow students to assess quickly whether an experiment is feasible or not and how challenges to the validity of the experiment can be addressed in collaboration with field partners.

In the course we will cover all important aspects to successfully design and conduct randomized controlled experiments (or randomized controlled trials, RCTs) in the field. The first part of the course focuses on the set up of field experiments: different designs and sample size, ethics considerations, transparency and open science best practices, survey design and organizing data collection. The second part covers implementation issues: one-sided and two-sided non-compliance, attrition or non-response, and spillovers between treatment and control group.

The course grade is based on a written research proposal of an original idea for a field experiment.
KompetenzenKompetenzen
Fachspezifische KompetenzenKonzepte und Theoriengeprüft
Verfahren und Technologiengeprüft
Methodenspezifische KompetenzenAnalytische Kompetenzengeprüft
Entscheidungsfindunggeprüft
Problemlösunggeprüft
Projektmanagementgefördert
Soziale KompetenzenKommunikationgeprüft
Kooperation und Teamarbeitgefördert
Verhandlunggefördert
Persönliche KompetenzenAnpassung und Flexibilitätgefördert
Kreatives Denkengefördert
Kritisches Denkengefördert
Integrität und Arbeitsethikgefördert
Selbststeuerung und Selbstmanagement gefördert