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- [Instructor] The path from cause
to effect is dark and dangerous.
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But the weapons
of Econometrics are strong.
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[Attack] with fierce
and flexible instrumental variables
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when nature blesses you
with fortuitous random assignment.
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[gong rings]
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Randomized trials are the surest
path to ceteris parabus comparisons.
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Alas, this powerful tool
is often unavailable.
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But sometimes, randomization
happens by accident.
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That's when we turn
to instrumental variables,
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IV for short.
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- [Voice whispers] Instrumental
variables.
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- [Instructor] Today's lesson
is the first of two on IV.
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Our first IV lesson begins
with a story of schools.
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- [Josh] Charter schools
are public schools
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freed from daily district oversight
and teacher union contracts.
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The question of whether charters
boost achievement
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is one of the most important
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in the history
of American education reform.
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- The most popular charter schools
have more applicants
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so the luck of the lottery draw
decides who's offered a seat.
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A lot is at stake for the students
vying for their chance.
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Waiting for the lottery results
brings up lots of emotions
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as was captured
in the award-winning documentary
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"Waiting For Superman."
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- [Mother] Don't cry.
You're gonna make Mommy cry.
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Okay?
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- Do charters really provide
a better education?
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Critics most definitely say no,
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arguing that charters enroll
better students to begin with,
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smarter or more motivated
so differences in later outcomes
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reflects selection bias.
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- [Kamal] Wait, this one seems easy.
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In a lottery, winners
are chosen randomly,
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so just compare winners and losers.
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- [Student] Obviously.
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- On the right track, Kamal,
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but charter lotteries
don't force kids into
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or out of a particular school.
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They randomize offers
of a charter seat.
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Some kids get lucky.
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Some kids don't.
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If we just wanted to know
the effect of charter school offers,
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we could treat this
as a randomized trial.
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But we we're interested
in the effects
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of charter school attendance,
not offers.
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And not everyone
who is offered, accepts.
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IV turns the effect of being offered
a charter seat into the effect
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of actually attending
a charter school.
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- [Student] Cool.
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- Oh nice.
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- Let's look at an example,
a charter school from
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the Knowledge Is Power
Program, or KIPP for short.
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This KIPP school is in Lynn,
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a faded industrial town
on the coast of Massachusetts.
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The school has
more applicants than seats
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and therefore picks its students
using a lottery.
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From 2005 to 2008,
371 fourth and fifth graders
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put their names
in the KIPP/Lynn lottery,
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253 students won a seat at KIPP,
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118 students lost.
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A year later, lottery winners had
much higher match scores
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than lottery losers.
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But remember,
we're not trying to figure out
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whether winning a lottery
makes you better at math.
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We want to know if attending KIPP
makes you better at math.
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Of the 253 lottery winners,
only 199 actually went to KIPP.
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The others chose
a traditional public school.
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Similarly of the 118 lottery losers,
a few actually ended up at KIPP.
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They got an offer later.
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So what was the effect of test scores
of actually attending KIPP?
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- [Student] Why can't we just
measure their math scores?
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- [Instructor] Great question.
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Who would you compare them to?
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- [Student] Those who didn't attend.
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- [Instructor] Is attendance random?
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- [Camilla] No.
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- Selection bias.
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- [Instructor] Correct.
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- [Otto] What?
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- [Instructor] The KIPP offers
are random so we can be confident
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of ceteris parabus,
but attendance is not random.
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The choice to accept the offer
might be due to characteristics
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that are related
to math performance.
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Say, for example,
that dedicated parents
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are more likely
to accept the offer.
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Their kids are also more likely
to do better in math,
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regardless of school.
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- [Student] Right.
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- [Instructor] IV converts
the offer effect
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into the effect of KIPP attendance,
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adjusting for the fact
that some winners go elsewhere
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and some losers manage
to attend KIPP anyway.
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Essentially, IV takes
an incomplete randomization
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and makes the appropriate
adjustments.
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How? IV describes a chain reaction.
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Why do offers affect achievement?
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Probably because they affect
charter attendance
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and charter attendance
improves math scores,
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the first link in the chain
called the first stage
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is the effect of the lottery
on charter attendance.
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The second stage is the length
between attending a charter
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and an outcome variable,
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in this case, math scores.
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The instrumental variable
or instrument for short
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is the variable
that initiates the chain reaction.
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The effect of the instrument
on the outcome is called
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the reduced form.
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This chain reaction can be
represented mathematically.
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We multiply the first stage,
the effect of winning
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on attendance, by the second stage,
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the affect of attendance on scores.
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And we get the reduced form,
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the effect of winning
the lottery on scores.
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Reduced form and first stage
are observable and easy to compute.
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However, the effect of attendance
on achievement
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is not directly observed.
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This is the causal effect
we're trying to determine.
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Given some important assumptions
we'll discuss shortly,
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we can find the effect
of KIPP attendance
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by dividing the reduced form
by the first stage.
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This will become more clear
as we work through an example.
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- [Student] Let's do this.
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- A quick note on measurement.
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We measure achievement
using standard deviations,
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often denoted
by the Greek letter sigma (σ).
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One σ is a huge move
from around the bottom 15%
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to the middle of most
achievement distributions.
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Even a 1/4 or 1/2 σ
difference is big.
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- [Instructor] Now we're ready
to plug some numbers
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into the equation
we introduced earlier.
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First up, what's the effect
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of winning the lottery
on math scores?
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KIPP applicant math scores
are a third of a standard deviation
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below the state average in
the year before they apply to KIPP.
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But a year later, lottery winners
score right at the state average
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while the lottery losers
are still well behind.
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With an average score
around - 0.36 σ.
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The effect of winning the lottery
on scores is the difference
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between the winners' scores
and the losers' scores.
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Take the winners'
average math scores,
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subtract the losers'
average math scores,
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and you will have 0.36 σ .
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Next stop: what's the effect
of winning the lottery on attendance?
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In other words,
if you win the lottery,
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how much more likely are you
to attend KIPP than if you lose?
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First, what percentage
of lottery winners attend KIPP?
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Divide the number of winners
who attended KIPP
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by the total number
of lottery winners -- that's 78%.
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To find the percentage
of lottery losers who attended KIPP,
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we divide the number of losers
who attended KIPP
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by the total number
of lottery losers -- that's 4%.
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Subtract 4 from 78, and we find
that winning the lottery
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makes you 74%
more likely to attend KIPP.
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Now we can find
what we're really after,
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the effect of attendance on scores,
by dividing 0.36 by 0.74.
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Attending KIPP raises math scores
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by 0.48 standard deviations
on average.
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That's an awesome achievement game,
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equal to moving
from about the bottom
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to the middle
of the achievement distribution.
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- [Student] Whoa, half a sig.
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- [Instructor] These estimates
are for kids opting in
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to the KIPP lottery,
whose enrollment status
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is changed by winning.
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That's not necessarily
a random sample
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of all children in Lynn.
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So we can't assume
we'd see the same effect
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for other types of students.
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- [Students] Huh.
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- But this effect
on keen for KIPP kids
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is likely to be a good indicator
of the consequences
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of adding additional charter seats.
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- [Student] Cool.
- [Student] Got it.
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- IV eliminates selection bias
but like all of our tools,
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the solution builds on a set
of assumptions
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not to be taken for granted.
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First, there must be
a substantial first stage --
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that is the instrumental variable,
winning or losing the lottery,
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must really change the variable
whose effect we're interested in --
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here, KIPP attendance.
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In this case, the first stage
is not really in doubt.
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Winning the lottery makes
KIPP attendance much more likely.
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Not all IV stories are like that.