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Laura J. Bonnett; Kerry Dwan; Susanna Dodd – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2024
We describe an activity that introduces school-aged children to clinical trials, that presents the terminology associated with randomized controlled trials, and that reveals how the findings from clinical trials are applicable to everyone everywhere.
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Secondary School Students, Children, Clinical Experience
Naureen Karachiwalla; Katrina Kosec; Saher Asad; Masooma Habib; Clare Leaver; Attique ur Rehman – Education Finance and Policy, 2025
Partnering with governments to co-design pilot interventions and embed them in local bureaucratic systems is increasingly seen as "best practice" on grounds of scalability and sustainability. This paper reports on a pilot program that was co-designed with, and embedded within, the Elementary and Secondary Education Department in…
Descriptors: Pilot Projects, Elementary Secondary Education, Partnerships in Education, Administrative Organization
Edmunds, Julie A.; Gicheva, Dora; Thrift, Beth; Hull, Marie – Journal of Mixed Methods Research, 2022
Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in education are common as the design allows for an unbiased estimate of the overall impact of a program. As more RCTs are completed, researchers are also noting that an overall average impact may mask substantial variation across sites or groups of individuals. Mixed methods can provide insight and help in…
Descriptors: Randomized Controlled Trials, Mixed Methods Research, Educational Research, Online Courses
A. Brooks Bowden – AERA Open, 2023
Although experimental evaluations have been labeled the "gold standard" of evidence for policy (U.S. Department of Education, 2003), evaluations without an analysis of costs are not sufficient for policymaking (Monk, 1995; Ross et al., 2007). Funding organizations now require cost-effectiveness data in most evaluations of effects. Yet,…
Descriptors: Cost Effectiveness, Program Evaluation, Economics, Educational Finance
Andrew P. Jaciw – American Journal of Evaluation, 2025
By design, randomized experiments (XPs) rule out bias from confounded selection of participants into conditions. Quasi-experiments (QEs) are often considered second-best because they do not share this benefit. However, when results from XPs are used to generalize causal impacts, the benefit from unconfounded selection into conditions may be offset…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Elementary School Teachers, Generalization, Test Bias
Brown, John F. – Educational Research and Evaluation, 2022
This paper discusses adapting Churches' approach to large-scale teacher/researcher conceptual replications of major "science of learning" findings, to increase teachers' engagement with empirical research on, and building research networks for, gathering data on the science of learning. The project here demonstrated the feasibility of…
Descriptors: Replication (Evaluation), Educational Research, Randomized Controlled Trials, Outcome Measures
Kelcey, Ben; Shen, Zuchao – Journal of Experimental Education, 2020
When well-implemented, mediation analyses play a critical role in probing theories of action because their results help lay the ground work for the critical development of a treatment and the iterative advancement of theories that are foundational to a discipline. Despite strong interest in designs that incorporate mediation, few studies have…
Descriptors: Research Design, Sampling, Statistical Analysis, Hierarchical Linear Modeling
Edovald, Triin; Nevill, Camilla – ECNU Review of Education, 2021
Purpose: This article gives an overview of the successes and lessons learned to date of the Education Endowment Foundation (EEF), one of the leading organizations of the What Works movement. Design/Approach/Methods: Starting with its history, this article covers salient components of the EEF's unique journey including lessons learned and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Philanthropic Foundations, Educational Research, Evidence Based Practice
Patterson, Charity G.; Leland, Natalie E.; Mormer, Elaine; Palmer, Catherine V. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2022
Purpose: Individual-randomized trials are the gold standard for testing the efficacy and effectiveness of drugs, devices, and behavioral interventions. Health care delivery, educational, and programmatic interventions are often complex, involving multiple levels of change and measurement precluding individual randomization for testing.…
Descriptors: Speech Language Pathology, Randomized Controlled Trials, Intervention, Speech Therapy
Sam Sims; Jake Anders; Matthew Inglis; Hugues Lortie-Forgues; Ben Styles; Ben Weidmann – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2023
Over the last twenty years, education researchers have increasingly conducted randomised experiments with the goal of informing the decisions of educators and policymakers. Such experiments have generally employed broad, consequential, standardised outcome measures in the hope that this would allow decisionmakers to compare effectiveness of…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Research Methodology, Randomized Controlled Trials, Program Effectiveness
What Works Clearinghouse, 2021
The What Works Clearinghouse (WWC) identifies existing research on educational interventions, assesses the quality of the research, and summarizes and disseminates the evidence from studies that meet WWC standards. The WWC aims to provide enough information so educators can use the research to make informed decisions in their settings. This…
Descriptors: Program Effectiveness, Intervention, Educational Research, Educational Quality
Meyer, Joerg M. – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2018
The contrary of stochastic independence splits up into two cases: pairs of events being favourable or being unfavourable. Examples show that both notions have quite unexpected properties, some of them being opposite to intuition. For example, transitivity does not hold. Stochastic dependence is also useful to explain cases of Simpson's paradox.
Descriptors: Intuition, Probability, Randomized Controlled Trials, Statistical Analysis
Jacob, Robin T.; Doolittle, Fred; Kemple, James; Somers, Marie-Andrée – Educational Researcher, 2019
A substantial number of randomized trials of educational interventions that have been conducted over the past two decades have produced null results, with either no impact or an unreliable estimate of impact on student achievement or other outcomes of interest. The investment of time and money spent implementing such trials warrants more useful…
Descriptors: Intervention, Randomized Controlled Trials, Educational Research, Program Effectiveness
Sales, Adam C.; Pane, John F. – Journal of Research on Educational Effectiveness, 2021
Randomized evaluations of educational technology produce log data as a bi-product: highly granular data on student and teacher usage. These datasets could shed light on causal mechanisms, effect heterogeneity, or optimal use. However, there are methodological challenges: implementation is not randomized and is only defined for the treatment group,…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Use Studies, Randomized Controlled Trials, Mathematics Curriculum
Hagopian, Louis P. – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2020
Single-case experimental designs (SCEDs) have proven invaluable in research and practice because they are optimal for asking many experimental questions relevant to the analysis of behavior. The consecutive controlled case series (CCCS) is a type of study in which a SCED is employed in a series of consecutively encountered cases that undergo a…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Data Analysis, Behavior Patterns, Clinical Diagnosis

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