Deakin University
Browse

A comparison of methods to obtain active parental consent for an international student survey

Version 2 2025-05-20, 21:00
Version 1 2004-01-01, 00:00
journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-20, 21:00 authored by BJ McMorris, J Clements, Tracy Evans-WhippTracy Evans-Whipp, D Gangnes, L Bond, John ToumbourouJohn Toumbourou, RF Catalano
Many school-based research efforts require active parental consent for student participation. Maximizing rates of consent form return and agreement is an important issue, because sample representativeness may be compromised when these rates are low. This article compares two methods for obtaining active parental consent: return of consent forms in the mail versus return by students to their classrooms. The methods were tested in a pilot study of 46 schools (1,058 students), with half of the schools randomly allocated to each of the alternative methods. A hierarchical nonlinear model of consent form return and agreement rates suggests that the student-delivered method is more successful at producing higher rates of consent form return and agreement to participate in the study, after controlling for school-level characteristics. The authors discuss the findings and their implications for other researchers engaged in school-based research with adolescents.

History

Related Materials

Location

Thousand Oaks, CA

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2004, Sage Publications

Journal

Evaluation Review

Volume

28

Pagination

64-83

ISSN

0193-841X

eISSN

1552-3926

Issue

1

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC