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Showing 1 to 15 of 17 results Save | Export
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Francis Huang; Brian Keller – Large-scale Assessments in Education, 2025
Missing data are common with large scale assessments (LSAs). A typical approach to handling missing data with LSAs is the use of listwise deletion, despite decades of research showing that approach can be a suboptimal strategy resulting in biased estimates. In order to help researchers account for missing data, we provide a tutorial using R and…
Descriptors: Research Problems, Data Analysis, Statistical Bias, International Assessment
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Micheal Sandbank; Kristen Bottema-Beutel; Ya-Cing Syu; Nicolette Caldwell; Jacob I. Feldman; Tiffany Woynaroski – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2024
We conducted a multi-pronged investigation of different types of reporting bias in autism early childhood intervention research. First, we investigated the prevalence of reporting failures of completed trials registered on clinicaltrials.gov, and found that only 7% of registered trials were updated with results on the registration platform and…
Descriptors: Literature Reviews, Meta Analysis, Autism Spectrum Disorders, Children
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Ehri Ryu – Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness, 2024
Background/Context: Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) model is a commonly adopted framework to estimate and test a measurement model. Once a well-fitting final CFA model is selected, the selected model may be used to test structural relationships of the latent constructs with other variables, to construct a test with desired reliability and…
Descriptors: Research Problems, Factor Analysis, Scores, Computation
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Bryan J. Duarte – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2024
Critical quantitative methods provide opportunities for Queer Theory to challenge, re-define, and re-claim the historically privileged research tradition. In this paper, I begin by summarizing the various binaries that oppress research and individuality. I then engage with Queer Theory and my own intersectional positionality to propose a nonbinary…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Research Methodology, Social Justice, Homosexuality
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Sabine Doebel; Michael C. Frank – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2024
Diverse samples are valuable to the study of development, and to psychology more broadly. But convenience samples--typically recruited from local populations close to universities--are still the most widely used in developmental science, despite the fact that their use leads to a vast over-representation of Western, White, and high socio-economic…
Descriptors: Sampling, Psychology, Recruitment, Research Problems
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Schauer, Jacob M.; Lee, Jihyun; Diaz, Karina; Pigott, Therese D. – Research Synthesis Methods, 2022
Missing covariates is a common issue when fitting meta-regression models. Standard practice for handling missing covariates tends to involve one of two approaches. In a complete-case analysis, effect sizes for which relevant covariates are missing are omitted from model estimation. Alternatively, researchers have employed the so-called…
Descriptors: Statistical Bias, Meta Analysis, Regression (Statistics), Research Problems
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Adam Sales; Ethan Prihar; Johann Gagnon-Bartsch; Neil Heffernan – Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness, 2023
Background: Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) give unbiased estimates of average effects. However, positive effects for the majority of students may mask harmful effects for smaller subgroups, and RCTs often have too small a sample to estimate these subgroup effects. In many RCTs, covariate and outcome data are drawn from a larger database. For…
Descriptors: Learning Analytics, Randomized Controlled Trials, Data Use, Accuracy
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Thomas Cook; Mansi Wadhwa; Jingwen Zheng – Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness, 2023
Context: A perennial problem in applied statistics is the inability to justify strong claims about cause-and-effect relationships without full knowledge of the mechanism determining selection into treatment. Few research designs other than the well-implemented random assignment study meet this requirement. Researchers have proposed partial…
Descriptors: Observation, Research Design, Causal Models, Computation
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Sims, Sam; Anders, Jake; Inglis, Matthew; Lortie-Forgues, Hugues – Journal of Research on Educational Effectiveness, 2023
Randomized controlled trials have proliferated in education, in part because they provide an unbiased estimator for the causal impact of interventions. It is increasingly recognized that many such trials in education have low power to detect an effect if indeed there is one. However, it is less well known that low powered trials tend to…
Descriptors: Randomized Controlled Trials, Educational Research, Effect Size, Intervention
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Rodriguez, AE; Rosen, John – Research in Higher Education Journal, 2023
The various empirical models built for enrollment management, operations, and program evaluation purposes may have lost their predictive power as a result of the recent collective impact of COVID restrictions, widespread social upheaval, and the shift in educational preferences. This statistical artifact is known as model drifting, data-shift,…
Descriptors: Models, Enrollment Management, School Holding Power, Data
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Tong, Guangyu; Guo, Guang – Sociological Methods & Research, 2022
Meta-analysis is a statistical method that combines quantitative findings from previous studies. It has been increasingly used to obtain more credible results in a wide range of scientific fields. Combining the results of relevant studies allows researchers to leverage study similarities while modeling potential sources of between-study…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Social Science Research, Regression (Statistics), Statistical Bias
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Lee, Daniel Y.; Harring, Jeffrey R. – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2023
A Monte Carlo simulation was performed to compare methods for handling missing data in growth mixture models. The methods considered in the current study were (a) a fully Bayesian approach using a Gibbs sampler, (b) full information maximum likelihood using the expectation-maximization algorithm, (c) multiple imputation, (d) a two-stage multiple…
Descriptors: Monte Carlo Methods, Research Problems, Statistical Inference, Bayesian Statistics
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Leszczensky, Lars; Wolbring, Tobias – Sociological Methods & Research, 2022
Does "X" affect "Y"? Answering this question is particularly difficult if reverse causality is looming. Many social scientists turn to panel data to address such questions of causal ordering. Yet even in longitudinal analyses, reverse causality threatens causal inference based on conventional panel models. Whereas the…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Causal Models, Comparative Analysis, Statistical Bias
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Wendy Chan; Jimin Oh; Katherine Wilson – Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness, 2022
Background: Over the past decade, research on the development and assessment of tools to improve the generalizability of experimental findings has grown extensively (Tipton & Olsen, 2018). However, many experimental studies in education are based on small samples, which may include 30-70 schools while inference populations to which…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Research Problems, Sample Size, Research Methodology
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Dongho Shin – Grantee Submission, 2024
We consider Bayesian estimation of a hierarchical linear model (HLM) from small sample sizes. The continuous response Y and covariates C are partially observed and assumed missing at random. With C having linear effects, the HLM may be efficiently estimated by available methods. When C includes cluster-level covariates having interactive or other…
Descriptors: Bayesian Statistics, Computation, Hierarchical Linear Modeling, Data Analysis
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