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A Factorial Survey Analysis of Parent Preferences, Fair Market Value and Willingness to Pay

A Factorial Survey Analysis of Parent Preferences, Fair Market Value and Willingness to Pay. Anne Shlay Marsha Weinraub Henry Tran Michelle Harmon. Three Goals for Today’s Presentation. Present an overview of the study questions and design Findings Implications. Study Questions.

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A Factorial Survey Analysis of Parent Preferences, Fair Market Value and Willingness to Pay

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  1. A Factorial Survey Analysis of Parent Preferences, Fair Market Value and Willingness to Pay Anne Shlay Marsha Weinraub Henry Tran Michelle Harmon

  2. Three Goals for Today’s Presentation • Present an overview of the study questions and design • Findings • Implications

  3. Study Questions • What characteristics of child care have the most influence on how parents rate child care situations? • Why is this important? • Want to know what characteristics matter to parents • How should we model this evaluation process? • Why is this important? • Want to use a method that captures how parents evaluate child care situations

  4. What do Parents Want in a Child Care Program? • Frequent and warm child-caregiver interactions • Warm and involved caregivers • Caregivers w/ experience • Educational/developmental features may have some importance • Characteristics we know little about: religion, subsidy acceptance, type of care, characteristics of other children

  5. Modeling How Parents Evaluate Child Care Situations • Analyzing child care characteristics independently • Child care characteristics in context

  6. A Model of Parental Evaluation • Parents evaluate the worth or desirability of an arrangement by assessing the merit or desirability of characteristics that make up the arrangement relative to one another

  7. Modeling Parental Evaluation: The Factorial Survey Method • The factorial survey approach permits: • an assessment of how people evaluate multi-dimensional phenomena • Combines the advantages of: • factor orthogonality of the experimental design • with the complexity/realism of the survey approach

  8. Factorial Survey Method (cont’d) • Basic unit of analysis: The vignette • Can be thought of as a complete description of some complex phenomenon (e.g., child care) • It is described in terms of a single level for every dimension • Dimension – a discrete variable that defines a characteristic • Level – specifies how the dimensions vary • Levels are randomly assigned ensuring independence • Multivariate techniques are used to separate out the individual effects that each level has on the individual ratings

  9. Unique to the Factorial Survey Design • Sample size = number of respondents ´ number of vignettes per respondent

  10. Uses of the Factorial Survey • How nurses recognize and report child abuse (O’Toole et al., 1993) • How students define sexual harassment (Hunter & McClelland, 1991) • Gender differences in perception of neighborhood desirability (Shlay & DiGregorio, 1985) • Public attitudes toward appropriate punishment for crime (Durham, 1986) • In the current study, we use the method to show how low-income parents evaluate different child care arrangements

  11. Designing the Factorial Surveys • Dimensions were identified through a lit. review on c.c. preferences and 4 focus grps. (white & AfAm working parents) • Dimensions: • Extrinsic – characteristics of c.c. that do not directly affect the child (e.g., location of c.c.) • Intrinsic – characteristics of c.c. that affect the child’s experience • Structural – characteristics that experts believe are correlated with process characteristics (can be viewed as a proxy for quality) • Process – processes between child and caregiver

  12. Vignettes • [sample hand-out] • Model structure was used to define the placement of dimensions and fixed text • Structure was used to also define restrictions (e.g., neighbor care could not be accredited) • Levels were randomly selected

  13. Factorial Survey Questions • (1) Perception of “goodness” – “How much would you like this child care for you and your family?” • (2) Fair weekly price – “In your view, what would be a fair weekly price for this child care. Please disregard whether or not you could afford the fair price.” • (3) Willingness to pay – “How much would you be willing to pay per week for this child care?”

  14. Participants • Selected from SUS • Zip codes classified as low-income were identified • Contacted by the Temple University ISR • Eligility criteria: • (1) have a child under 4 years of age; • (2) be over 18 years of age; and • (3) be employed • CCPS eligibility criteria: • Agreed to participate in a future study • Income £ 80% of the MSA median for the Philadelphia area • N = 141 respondents; Total N = 141 ´ 30 = 4,230

  15. Participants’ Demographics • 99% were mothers • Mean age: 31 years old • Mean age of youngest child: 3 • Marital status: 18% married and living w/ spouse; 72% single, never been married • Highest grade/year completed: 14% < than high school diploma/GED; 32% high school diploma/GED; 31% 1-2 years of college; 9% Bachelor’s degree or higher • 80% were currently employed averaging 38 hrs./wk.

  16. Participants’ Demographics (cont’d) • Current care type: 53% center/preschool care; 24% relative care; 16% non-relative care; 7% maternal care • Children were in care for an avg. of 38 hrs./wk. over 5 days • Parents paid an avg. of $78/week for c.c. • Help paying for c.c.: 23% subsidy; 7% welfare; 14% tax credit; 14% help from relatives or friends • 99% of respondents reported being the primary decision-maker • 94% were very satisfied or somewhat satisfied w/ current c.c. arrangement

  17. Procedures • All participants took the survey in the P&SR Lab • Each respondent completed 30 vignettes • About 45 minutes to complete

  18. Analyses, Coding, and Statistical Measures • Statistical analyses: Multiple Regression • Regression of ratings on the set of dimensions and levels • Each level is dummy coded (1 if present and 0 if absent) • One level is omitted for each dimension to avoid linear dependency

  19. Analyses, Coding, and Statistical Measures (cont’d) • The unstandardized regression coefficients represent the difference in rating between the vignettes containing the given level and vignettes containing the omitted level • Sample interpretation: for “Accepts subsidized children”, b = .159; indicates that when this level is present in the vignette, it raises the rating by .159 relative to the omitted category (a blank text in this case)

  20. Additional Analysis • “Coding proportional to effect”

  21. Distribution of Ratings • Mean goodness: 3.4 (56% of the arrangements were rated as 1, 2, or 3) • Mean fair price: $61-$80 weekly • Mean willingness to pay: $41-$60 weekly

  22. Characteristics w/ Most Impact on Ratings • Frequent child-caregiver interactions (b = .45, .36, .35) • Planned activities for learning and playing (b = .19, .23, .21) • Safe and clean caregiving environment (b = .70, .62, .66) • Caregivers w/ a lot and some experience taking care of children (b = .41, .37, .33) • Caregivers w/ some experience taking care of children (b = .23, .23, .25) • Caregivers trained in child development and education (b = .32, .34, .29) • Caregivers w/ some training in child care (b = .14, .16, .14) • Caregivers who are warm (b = .33, .19, .27)

  23. Characteristics w/ Moderate Impact • Licensed arrangements (b = .12, .12, .12) • Accredited arrangements (b = .10, .09, .11) • Arrangements w/ all AfAm children (b = .26, .08, .14) • Arrangements w/ racially mixed group of children (b = .27, .14, .18) • Arrangements w/ mix of low and high incomes (b = .11, .12, .16)

  24. Characteristics w/ Small Impact • Commute times of 15 and 30 minutes from home to child care • Commute times of 15 and 30 minutes from child care to work • Arrangements that permit the use of a child care subsidy • Arrangements that are available during the evenings and weekends

  25. Dimensions w/ Most Impact • Safety and sanitation practices of caregivers (b = .29, .27, .28) • Frequency of child-caregiver interactions (b = .23, .18, .18) • Caregivers’ experience (b = .17, .15, .15) • Caregivers’ training (b = .13, .14, .12) • Warmth of caregivers (b = .15, .08, .12) • License status of arrangements (b = .12, .13, .12)

  26. Subgroup Analyses • Mothers with more education preferred arrangements that emphasized academic activities than mothers with less education (z = 1.55, 1.68*, 1.73*) • Mothers with less education may be particularly concerned with caregiver experience (z = -.79, -.16, -.88) • Full-time working mothers were more concerned with long commute times from home to child care than were part-time working mothers (z = 1.99*, 1.55, 1.66*) • Parents of older children (age 3 and older) desired arrangements with an academic curriculum more than parents of younger children (age 2 and younger) (z = -3.37*, -1.01, -.84)

  27. Summary / Take-Home Messages • Evaluation of arrangement “packages” • What characteristics have the most impact on parents’ ratings of child care situations? • Short answer: Intrinsic over Extrinsic • Frequent child-caregiver interactions • Safe and sanitized caregiving environments • Caregivers w/ a lot of caregiving experience • Caregivers w/ training in child care • Warm caregivers • Inclusion of learning and playing activities

  28. Summary / Thoughts (cont’d) • Parents were consistent in their rating behavior across the three measures • Parents value the characteristics that developmental psychologists have deemed as being related to quality • Possible differences in child care preferences between subgroups

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