We share experiences from a mixed methods evaluation in rural India that combines a randomized controlled trial (RCT) of 400 villages with embedded case studies in four villages. Specifcally, we present two lessons from the multi-stage sampling approach adopted to select the four case-study villages, which f rst prioritized key-informant observations regarding intervention status in order to shortlist locations and subsequently used data from the RCT's baseline survey to select the fnal sample. In doing so, we highlight how large-scale mixed methods program evaluations in education can go beyond questions of "what works" to answering those of "how," "why," and "why not."
CITATION STYLE
Ramanujan, P., Bhattacharjea, S., & Alcott, B. (2022). A Multi-Stage Approach to Qualitative Sampling within a Mixed Methods Evaluation: Some Refections on Purpose and Process. Canadian Journal of Program Evaluation, 36(3), 355–364. https://doi.org/10.3138/cjpe.71237
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