Glossary for Science and Success in Developing Countries Print

Science and Success in Developing Countries: Holistic Programs That Work to Prevent Teen Pregnancy, HIV & Sexually Transmitted Infections

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Participant Groups

  • Control or comparison group = young people similar to the intervention group, and who did not receive the program being evaluated.
  • Treatment or intervention group = the young people who received the program being evaluated.

Evaluation Design

  • Experimental design = an evaluation that gathers a set of individuals equally eligible and willing to participate in a program and randomly divides them into two groups: those who receive the intervention (treatment group) and those from whom the intervention is withheld (control group).
  • Non-experimental design = an evaluation design for use when it is not possible to select a control group, identify a suitable comparison group through matching methods, or use reflexive comparisons.
  • Quasi-experimental design = an evaluation that constructs a comparison group by identifying non-program participants comparable in essential characteristics to participants.

Related Terms

  • Replication = the same program, evaluated in another place with different young people.
  • Fidelity = careful replication of a program to include all its elements as included in the original evaluation. Where programs were altered, lack of fidelity should be noted.
  • For Use With = used here to denote the populations of young people with whom evaluation has shown a particular program to be most effective as well as the population for whom it was designed.
  • Significant = statistically significant, or meaningful difference, as determined by evaluation.
* World Bank. Definitions. Washington, DC: Author, http://www.worldbank.org/poverty/impact/methods/design.htm