2019
DOI: 10.3386/w26158
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Nudging at Scale: Experimental Evidence from FAFSA Completion Campaigns

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Cited by 49 publications
(64 citation statements)
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References 23 publications
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“…Interestingly, such interventions have been tested in very different contexts and consistently brought little improvement in widening access to higher education for disadvantaged students. In the U.S., providing information on aid eligibility and application in tax preparation offices (Bettinger, Long, Oreopoulos, & Sanbonmatsu, 2012) or sending high school seniors text messages on the financial benefits of financial aid (Bird, Castleman, Goodman, & Lamberton, 2017) did not increase enrollment of disadvantaged students. In Finland, an information session on returns to higher education did not have any impact on transition rates of disadvantaged students (Kerr, Pekkarinen, Sarvimäki, & Uusitalo, 2014) similarly to what was found in Colombia (Bonilla, Bottan, & Ham, 2017).…”
Section: Figure 2: Selected Estimates For the Impact Of Outreach On Amentioning
confidence: 91%
“…Interestingly, such interventions have been tested in very different contexts and consistently brought little improvement in widening access to higher education for disadvantaged students. In the U.S., providing information on aid eligibility and application in tax preparation offices (Bettinger, Long, Oreopoulos, & Sanbonmatsu, 2012) or sending high school seniors text messages on the financial benefits of financial aid (Bird, Castleman, Goodman, & Lamberton, 2017) did not increase enrollment of disadvantaged students. In Finland, an information session on returns to higher education did not have any impact on transition rates of disadvantaged students (Kerr, Pekkarinen, Sarvimäki, & Uusitalo, 2014) similarly to what was found in Colombia (Bonilla, Bottan, & Ham, 2017).…”
Section: Figure 2: Selected Estimates For the Impact Of Outreach On Amentioning
confidence: 91%
“…However, it is worth noting that a large number of BPA interventions have failed to change behavior in significant ways—the academically dreaded but often quite important “null result.” For example, recent evidence suggests that promising nudges to increase FAFSA completion for U.S. high schoolers did not replicate when tested at scale (Bird et al ). Fortunately, BPA has, like some of its social science cousins, shown an increasing openness to the publication of meaningful and informative null results (examples include Bhanot et al (), Leight and Safran (), and the recent commitment of the OES to publish all studies, irrespective of the results).…”
Section: Behavioral Public Administration: Then and Nowmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A second related literature, consistent with our argument that siblings can provide important information too costly or impossible to obtain otherwise, argues that "low-touch" interventions substantially underperform "high-touch" ones with respect to college choice. Multiple recent papers using nudge-style informational interventions at state or national scale fail to meaning-5 fully impact college enrollment choices (Gurantz et al, 2019;Bird et al, 2019;Hyman, 2019). Researchers testing multiple treatments often find that information only interventions have little impact on students (Bettinger et al, 2012;Carrell and Sacerdote, 2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%