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Using behavioral insights to increase attendance at subsidized preschool programs: The Show Up to Grow Up intervention

•We implemented a field experiment called Show Up to Grow Up designed to increase attendance and diminish chronic absences at subsidized preschool programs in Chicago.•We sent personalized text messages to parents targeting malleable factors that potentially drive absences from preschool.•The interv...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Organizational behavior and human decision processes 2021-03, Vol.163, p.65-79
Main Authors: Kalil, Ariel, Mayer, Susan E., Gallegos, Sebastian
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•We implemented a field experiment called Show Up to Grow Up designed to increase attendance and diminish chronic absences at subsidized preschool programs in Chicago.•We sent personalized text messages to parents targeting malleable factors that potentially drive absences from preschool.•The intervention increased attended days by 2.5 (0.15 standard deviations) and decreased chronic absenteeism by 9.3 percentage points (20%) over an 18-week period.•The treatment impact is stronger among those in the bottom quantiles of the attendance distribution.•The intervention appears to have made the importance of preschool more salient to parents with less strong beliefs about the importance of attendance. We implemented a field experiment called Show Up to Grow Up designed to increase attendance and diminish chronic absences at subsidized preschool programs in Chicago. We sent personalized text messages to parents targeting malleable factors that potentially drive absences from preschool. Using administrative records from preschools, we find that the intervention increased attended days by 2.5 (0.15 standard deviations) and decreased chronic absenteeism by 9.3 percentage points (20%) over an 18-week period. Our results suggest that the treatment impact is stronger among those in the bottom quantiles of the attendance distribution. Survey data collected at baseline suggest that our intervention made the importance of preschool more salient to parents who initially reported lower expectations for attendance and weaker beliefs about the importance of attendance to their children’s development. Preschool centers may save resources by implementing low-cost light-touch interventions to meet attendance requirements.
ISSN:0749-5978
1095-9920
DOI:10.1016/j.obhdp.2019.11.002