It's been long enough since I last had to us stats that I've forgotten a lot.
I'm doing a project. It's supposed to be a proposal for a program evaluation at a women's shelter. One thing we want to show is which services are helping women the most. That makes my dependent variable successful completion of the shelter's program.
They offer 5 stand alone services in the program. The women can choose to participate in any combination of them. So my independent variables could look like this:
A, B, C...
A+B, A+C, and so on...
A+B+C, and so on...
A+B+C+D, and so on...
A+B+C+D+E
We're already (hypothetically) collecting the data from the agency's records, so we can see what services clients participated in and who had a successful outcome. That's going in a table which shows how many successful clients participated in X number of services, where X is 1 - 5.
I really don't want to write out a table listing every possible combination. So if I can say we're going to run *this analysis* to find the combination that works best, it will give my professor the information she's looking for. I'm just not sure what it would be. What analysis do I run to find which variables alone or in conjunction are contributing most to successful outcomes in the program?
I thought at first it should be a correlation, but I think that's what I'd run once I determine which program or combination is leading to success to prove the correlation with a successful outcome.
Now I'm looking at factor analysis or multi-level modeling. I'm pretty sure it can't be an ANOVA since the independent variables aren't in categories like gender or age.
Help?
I'm doing a project. It's supposed to be a proposal for a program evaluation at a women's shelter. One thing we want to show is which services are helping women the most. That makes my dependent variable successful completion of the shelter's program.
They offer 5 stand alone services in the program. The women can choose to participate in any combination of them. So my independent variables could look like this:
A, B, C...
A+B, A+C, and so on...
A+B+C, and so on...
A+B+C+D, and so on...
A+B+C+D+E
We're already (hypothetically) collecting the data from the agency's records, so we can see what services clients participated in and who had a successful outcome. That's going in a table which shows how many successful clients participated in X number of services, where X is 1 - 5.
I really don't want to write out a table listing every possible combination. So if I can say we're going to run *this analysis* to find the combination that works best, it will give my professor the information she's looking for. I'm just not sure what it would be. What analysis do I run to find which variables alone or in conjunction are contributing most to successful outcomes in the program?
I thought at first it should be a correlation, but I think that's what I'd run once I determine which program or combination is leading to success to prove the correlation with a successful outcome.
Now I'm looking at factor analysis or multi-level modeling. I'm pretty sure it can't be an ANOVA since the independent variables aren't in categories like gender or age.
Help?