@article{kizilcec_scaling_2020, title = {Scaling up behavioral science interventions in online education}, volume = {117}, issn = {0027-8424, 1091-6490}, url = {https://pnas.org/doi/full/10.1073/pnas.1921417117}, doi = {10.1073/pnas.1921417117}, abstract = {Significance Low persistence in educational programs is a major obstacle to social mobility. Scientists have proposed many scalable interventions to support students learning online. In one of the largest international field experiments in education, we iteratively tested established behavioral science interventions and found small benefits depending on individual and contextual characteristics. Forecasting intervention efficacy using state-of-the-art methods yields limited improvements. Online education provides unprecedented access to learning opportunities, as evidenced by its role during the 2020 coronavirus pandemic, but adequately supporting diverse students will require more than a light-touch intervention. Our findings encourage funding agencies and researchers conducting large-scale field trials to consider dynamic investigations to uncover and design for contextual heterogeneity to complement static investigations of overall effects. , Online education is rapidly expanding in response to rising demand for higher and continuing education, but many online students struggle to achieve their educational goals. Several behavioral science interventions have shown promise in raising student persistence and completion rates in a handful of courses, but evidence of their effectiveness across diverse educational contexts is limited. In this study, we test a set of established interventions over 2.5 y, with one-quarter million students, from nearly every country, across 247 online courses offered by Harvard, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Stanford. We hypothesized that the interventions would produce medium-to-large effects as in prior studies, but this is not supported by our results. Instead, using an iterative scientific process of cyclically preregistering new hypotheses in between waves of data collection, we identified individual, contextual, and temporal conditions under which the interventions benefit students. Self-regulation interventions raised student engagement in the first few weeks but not final completion rates. Value-relevance interventions raised completion rates in developing countries to close the global achievement gap, but only in courses with a global gap. We found minimal evidence that state-of-the-art machine learning methods can forecast the occurrence of a global gap or learn effective individualized intervention policies. Scaling behavioral science interventions across various online learning contexts can reduce their average effectiveness by an order-of-magnitude. However, iterative scientific investigations can uncover what works where for whom.}, language = {en}, number = {26}, urldate = {2023-01-15}, journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences}, author = {Kizilcec, René F. and Reich, Justin and Yeomans, Michael and Dann, Christoph and Brunskill, Emma and Lopez, Glenn and Turkay, Selen and Williams, Joseph Jay and Tingley, Dustin}, month = jun, year = {2020}, note = {KerkoCite.ItemAlsoKnownAs: 10.1073/pnas.1921417117 2129771:VYTZ8HG4 4426965:MHN92VAU}, pages = {14900--14905}, }