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Gajendra Vishwakarma – Measurement: Interdisciplinary Research and Perspectives, 2025
In sample designs, it is commonly recognized that using auxiliary information significantly increases an estimator's precision. This manuscript introduces an weighted strategy for computing the finite population mean using auxiliary information in sample surveys. The equations for the mean squared error ("MSE") of the proposed estimator…
Descriptors: Sampling, Surveys, Computation, Efficiency
Yu Lei; Xin Fu; Jingjie Zhao; Baolin Yi – Education and Information Technologies, 2025
Grouping students according to their abilities and promoting deeper interaction and moderation are key issues in improving computational thinking in collaborative programming. However, the distribution characteristics and evolving pathways of computational thinking in different groups have not been deeply explored. During the course of a…
Descriptors: Ability Grouping, Computation, Programming, Cooperative Learning
Lourdes Anglada; María C. Cañadas; Bárbara M. Brizuela – International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education, 2025
The aim of this study was to determine how 5-year-old children identified the functional relationship of correspondence, and whether or not they generalized when working on a task that involved programmable robots. We conducted this study with 15 children (9 girls and 6 boys) in their last year of preschool education. The study was designed around…
Descriptors: Robotics, Preschool Children, Programming, Computation
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
Gabriel Felipe Arantes Bertochi; Jeffer Eidi Sasaki – Measurement in Physical Education and Exercise Science, 2025
This study compared the weekly training load (TL) variation across different measures. Fifty-two runners reported their heart rate and distance ran for each training session during four weeks of training. Heart rate measures were used to calculate the weekly TRaining IMPulse (W-TRIMP), whereas the distance ran was used to calculate the weekly…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Physical Activities, Athletics, Athletes
Beyza Aksu Dunya; Stefanie Wind – International Journal of Testing, 2025
We explored the practicality of relatively small item pools in the context of low-stakes Computer-Adaptive Testing (CAT), such as CAT procedures that might be used for quick diagnostic or screening exams. We used a basic CAT algorithm without content balancing and exposure control restrictions to reflect low stakes testing scenarios. We examined…
Descriptors: Item Banks, Adaptive Testing, Computer Assisted Testing, Achievement
Yang Haodong; Liu Jialin; Wang Gaofeng – Research in Higher Education, 2025
With the increasingly prominent characteristics of data-intensive and AI-driven scientific paradigms, computing power has become a crucial pillar of research activities. This study aims to examine the knowledge innovation effects of university supercomputing development by theoretically proposing two mechanisms: the efficiency effect (including…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Universities, Computers, Innovation
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
J. S. Allison; L. Santana; I. J. H. Visagie – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2025
Given sample data, how do you calculate the value of a parameter? While this question is impossible to answer, it is frequently encountered in statistics classes when students are introduced to the distinction between a sample and a population (or between a statistic and a parameter). It is not uncommon for teachers of statistics to also confuse…
Descriptors: Statistics Education, Teaching Methods, Computation, Sampling
Wei Zhang; Xinyao Zeng; Lingling Song – Education and Information Technologies, 2025
Computational thinking (CT) assessment is crucial for testing the effectiveness of CT skills development. However, the exploration of CT assessment in the context of text-based programming is in its initial stages. The intrinsic relationship between the core skills of text-based programming and the core elements of CT isn't analyzed in depth in…
Descriptors: Mental Computation, Programming, College Students, Evaluation
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
Pu Wang; Yifeng Lin; Tiesong Zhao – Education and Information Technologies, 2025
With the emergence of Artificial Intelligence (AI), smart education has become an attractive topic. In a smart education system, automated classrooms and examination rooms could help reduce the economic cost of teaching, and thus improve teaching efficiency. However, existing AI algorithms suffer from low surveillance accuracies and high…
Descriptors: Supervision, Artificial Intelligence, Technology Uses in Education, Automation
Jess Sullivan; Joseph Alvarez; Sophie Cramer-Benjamin; Sadie Holcomb; Melissa Nolan; Alex Morabito; David Barner – Journal of Numerical Cognition, 2025
When children first learn to count, what do they understand about the structure of the count system? The present study investigated English-speaking children's ability to generalize the rules that structure their count list to novel contexts. A total of N = 86 children (3;0-6;11) completed a battery of tasks aimed at measuring their understanding…
Descriptors: Computation, Young Children, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), English
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
Alexander Robitzsch; Oliver Lüdtke – Structural Equation Modeling: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2025
The random intercept cross-lagged panel model (RICLPM) decomposes longitudinal associations between two processes X and Y into stable between-person associations and temporal within-person changes. In a recent study, Bailey et al. demonstrated through a simulation study that the between-person variance components in the RICLPM can occur only due…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Correlation, Time, Simulation