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Haeju Lee; Kyung Yong Kim – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2025
When no prior information of differential item functioning (DIF) exists for items in a test, either the rank-based or iterative purification procedure might be preferred. The rank-based purification selects anchor items based on a preliminary DIF test. For a preliminary DIF test, likelihood ratio test (LRT) based approaches (e.g.,…
Descriptors: Test Items, Equated Scores, Test Bias, Accuracy
Alan Huebner; Gustaf B. Skar; Mengchen Huang – Practical Assessment, Research & Evaluation, 2025
Generalizability theory is a modern and powerful framework for conducting reliability analyses. It is flexible to accommodate both random and fixed facets. However, there has been a relative scarcity in the practical literature on how to handle the fixed facet case. This article aims to provide practitioners a conceptual understanding and…
Descriptors: Generalizability Theory, Multivariate Analysis, Statistical Analysis, Writing Evaluation
Tom Benton – Practical Assessment, Research & Evaluation, 2025
This paper proposes an extension of linear equating that may be useful in one of two fairly common assessment scenarios. One is where different students have taken different combinations of test forms. This might occur, for example, where students have some free choice over the exam papers they take within a particular qualification. In this…
Descriptors: Equated Scores, Test Format, Test Items, Computation
Esfandiar Maasoumi; Le Wang; Daiqiang Zhang – Sociological Methods & Research, 2025
Current research on intergenerational mobility (IGM) is informed by "statistical" approaches based on log-level regressions, whose "economic" interpretations remain largely unknown. We reveal the subjective value-judgments in them: they are represented by weighted-sums (or aggregators) over heterogeneous groups, with…
Descriptors: Regression (Statistics), Social Mobility, Statistical Analysis, Income
Paul A. Jewsbury; Yue Jia; Eugenio J. Gonzalez – Large-scale Assessments in Education, 2024
Large-scale assessments are rich sources of data that can inform a diverse range of research questions related to educational policy and practice. For this reason, datasets from large-scale assessments are available to enable secondary analysts to replicate and extend published reports of assessment results. These datasets include multiple imputed…
Descriptors: Measurement, Data Analysis, Achievement, Statistical Analysis
Ari Decter-Frain; Pratik Sachdeva; Loren Collingwood; Hikari Murayama; Juandalyn Burke; Matt Barreto; Scott Henderson; Spencer Wood; Joshua Zingher – Sociological Methods & Research, 2025
We consider the cascading effects of researcher decisions throughout the process of quantifying racially polarized voting (RPV). We contrast three methods of estimating precinct racial composition, Bayesian Improved Surname Geocoding (BISG), fully Bayesian BISG, and Citizen Voting Age Population (CVAP), and two algorithms for performing ecological…
Descriptors: Voting, Computation, Racial Composition, Bayesian Statistics
Timothy Kluthe; Hannah Stabler; Amelia McNamara; Andreas Stefik – Computer Science Education, 2025
Background and Context: Data science and statistics are used across a broad spectrum of professions, experience levels and programming languages. The popular scientific computing languages, such as Matlab, Python and R, were organized without using empirical methods to show evidence for or against their design choices, resulting in them feeling…
Descriptors: Programming Languages, Data Science, Statistical Analysis, Vocabulary
Alexandra M. Pierce; Lisa M. H. Sanetti; Melissa A. Collier-Meek; Austin H. Johnson – Grantee Submission, 2024
Visual analysis is the primary methodology used to determine treatment effects from graphed single-case design data. Previous studies have demonstrated mixed findings related to interrater agreement between both expert and novice visual analysts, which represents a critical limitation of visual analysis and supports calls for also presenting…
Descriptors: Graphs, Interrater Reliability, Statistical Analysis, Expertise
Kaitlyn G. Fitzgerald; Elizabeth Tipton – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2025
This article presents methods for using extant data to improve the properties of estimators of the standardized mean difference (SMD) effect size. Because samples recruited into education research studies are often more homogeneous than the populations of policy interest, the variation in educational outcomes can be smaller in these samples than…
Descriptors: Data Use, Computation, Effect Size, Meta Analysis
Ke-Hai Yuan; Zhiyong Zhang – Grantee Submission, 2025
Most methods for structural equation modeling (SEM) focused on the analysis of covariance matrices. However, "Historically, interesting psychological theories have been phrased in terms of correlation coefficients." This might be because data in social and behavioral sciences typically do not have predefined metrics. While proper methods…
Descriptors: Correlation, Statistical Analysis, Models, Tests
Roy Levy; Daniel McNeish – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2025
Research in education and behavioral sciences often involves the use of latent variable models that are related to indicators, as well as related to covariates or outcomes. Such models are subject to interpretational confounding, which occurs when fitting the model with covariates or outcomes alters the results for the measurement model. This has…
Descriptors: Models, Statistical Analysis, Measurement, Data Interpretation
Jianbin Fu; TsungHan Ho; Xuan Tan – Practical Assessment, Research & Evaluation, 2025
Item parameter estimation using an item response theory (IRT) model with fixed ability estimates is useful in equating with small samples on anchor items. The current study explores the impact of three ability estimation methods (weighted likelihood estimation [WLE], maximum a posteriori [MAP], and posterior ability distribution estimation [PST])…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Test Items, Computation, Equated Scores
Yan Xia; Xinchang Zhou – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2025
Parallel analysis has been considered one of the most accurate methods for determining the number of factors in factor analysis. One major advantage of parallel analysis over traditional factor retention methods (e.g., Kaiser's rule) is that it addresses the sampling variability of eigenvalues obtained from the identity matrix, representing the…
Descriptors: Factor Analysis, Statistical Analysis, Evaluation Methods, Sampling
Gabrielle Francis; Nathaniel von der Embse; David Putwain; Eunsook Kim – Journal of Psychoeducational Assessment, 2025
Standardized testing is an integral part of the English and American education systems. However, the use of high-stakes testing has unintended consequences, one of which is test anxiety. Over the last 50 years, increased attention has been directed to developing tools to identify students experiencing test anxiety. However, many test anxiety…
Descriptors: Test Anxiety, Secondary School Students, Foreign Countries, Affective Measures
Karlson, Kristian Bernt; Popham, Frank; Holm, Anders – Sociological Methods & Research, 2023
This article presents two ways of quantifying confounding using logistic response models for binary outcomes. Drawing on the distinction between marginal and conditional odds ratios in statistics, we define two corresponding measures of confounding (marginal and conditional) that can be recovered from a simple standardization approach. We…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Probability, Standards, Mediation Theory

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