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Furgol, Katherine E.; Ho, Andrew D.; Zimmerman, Dale L. – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2010
Under the No Child Left Behind Act, large-scale test score trend analyses are widespread. These analyses often gloss over interesting changes in test score distributions and involve unrealistic assumptions. Further complications arise from analyses of unanchored, censored assessment data, or proportions of students lying within performance levels…
Descriptors: Trend Analysis, Sample Size, Federal Legislation, Simulation
Paek, Insu – ETS Research Report Series, 2009
Three statistical testing procedures well-known in the maximum likelihood approach are the Wald, likelihood ratio (LR), and score tests. Although well-known, the application of these three testing procedures in the logistic regression method to investigate differential item function (DIF) has not been rigorously made yet. Employing a variety of…
Descriptors: Test Bias, Statistical Analysis, Regression (Statistics), Maximum Likelihood Statistics
Finkelman, Matthew David – Applied Psychological Measurement, 2010
In sequential mastery testing (SMT), assessment via computer is used to classify examinees into one of two mutually exclusive categories. Unlike paper-and-pencil tests, SMT has the capability to use variable-length stopping rules. One approach to shortening variable-length tests is stochastic curtailment, which halts examination if the probability…
Descriptors: Mastery Tests, Computer Assisted Testing, Adaptive Testing, Test Length
Goldhaber, Dan; Theobald, Roddy – National Center for Analysis of Longitudinal Data in Education Research, 2010
Over 2000 teachers in the state of Washington received reduction-in-force (RIF) notices in the past two years. The authors link data on these RIF notices to a unique dataset that includes student, teacher, school, and district variables to determine the factors that predict the likelihood of a teacher receiving a RIF notice. They find a teacher's…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Job Layoff, Teacher Competencies, Predictor Variables
Meyer, J. Patrick; Setzer, J. Carl – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2009
Recent changes to federal guidelines for the collection of data on race and ethnicity allow respondents to select multiple race categories. Redefining race subgroups in this manner poses problems for research spanning both sets of definitions. NAEP long-term trends have used the single-race subgroup definitions for over thirty years. Little is…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Federal Legislation, Simulation, Maximum Likelihood Statistics
Enders, Craig K. – Structural Equation Modeling: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2008
Recent missing data studies have argued in favor of an "inclusive analytic strategy" that incorporates auxiliary variables into the estimation routine, and Graham (2003) outlined methods for incorporating auxiliary variables into structural equation analyses. In practice, the auxiliary variables often have missing values, so it is reasonable to…
Descriptors: Structural Equation Models, Research Methodology, Maximum Likelihood Statistics, Simulation
Woods, Carol M. – Applied Psychological Measurement, 2009
Differential item functioning (DIF) occurs when items on a test or questionnaire have different measurement properties for one group of people versus another, irrespective of group-mean differences on the construct. Methods for testing DIF require matching members of different groups on an estimate of the construct. Preferably, the estimate is…
Descriptors: Test Results, Testing, Item Response Theory, Test Bias
Rose, Roderick A.; Fraser, Mark W. – Social Work Research, 2008
Missing data are nearly always a problem in research, and missing values represent a serious threat to the validity of inferences drawn from findings. Increasingly, social science researchers are turning to multiple imputation to handle missing data. Multiple imputation, in which missing values are replaced by values repeatedly drawn from…
Descriptors: Simulation, Research Methodology, Social Sciences, Probability
Puma, Michael J.; Olsen, Robert B.; Bell, Stephen H.; Price, Cristofer – National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance, 2009
This NCEE Technical Methods report examines how to address the problem of missing data in the analysis of data in Randomized Controlled Trials (RCTs) of educational interventions, with a particular focus on the common educational situation in which groups of students such as entire classrooms or schools are randomized. Missing outcome data are a…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Research Design, Research Methodology, Control Groups
Woods, Carol M. – Applied Psychological Measurement, 2008
In Ramsay-curve item response theory (RC-IRT), the latent variable distribution is estimated simultaneously with the item parameters of a unidimensional item response model using marginal maximum likelihood estimation. This study evaluates RC-IRT for the three-parameter logistic (3PL) model with comparisons to the normal model and to the empirical…
Descriptors: Test Length, Computation, Item Response Theory, Maximum Likelihood Statistics
Ryden, Jesper – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2008
Extreme-value statistics is often used to estimate so-called return values (actually related to quantiles) for environmental quantities like wind speed or wave height. A basic method for estimation is the method of block maxima which consists in partitioning observations in blocks, where maxima from each block could be considered independent.…
Descriptors: Simulation, Probability, Computation, Nonparametric Statistics
Peer reviewedSong, Xin-Yuan; Lee, Sik-Yum – Multivariate Behavioral Research, 2003
Developed a full maximum likelihood method for obtaining joint estimates of variances and correlations among continuous and polytomous variables with incomplete data that are missing at random with an ignorable missing mechanism. Simulation results and an empirical example illustrate the approach. (SLD)
Descriptors: Estimation (Mathematics), Maximum Likelihood Statistics, Simulation
Peer reviewedFormann, Anton K.; Ponocny, Ivo – Psychometrika, 2002
Developed a method, based on the conditional maximum likelihood principle, for establishing latent change classes in dichotomous data. Simulation studies and a real data set from an earlier study illustrate the method of parameter estimation. (SLD)
Descriptors: Equations (Mathematics), Maximum Likelihood Statistics, Simulation
Peer reviewedOlsson, Ulf – Psychometrika, 1979
The polychoric correlation is discussed as a generalization of the tetrachoric correlation coefficient to more than two classes. Two estimation methods are discussed: maximum likelihood estimation, and what may be called "two-step maximum likelihood" estimation. For the latter method, the thresholds are estimated in the first step.…
Descriptors: Correlation, Maximum Likelihood Statistics, Simulation, Statistical Bias
Peer reviewedHamaker, Ellen L.; Dolan, Conor V.; Molenaar, Peter C. M. – Structural Equation Modeling, 2003
Demonstrated, through simulation, that stationary autoregressive moving average (ARMA) models may be fitted readily when T>N, using normal theory raw maximum likelihood structural equation modeling. Also provides some illustrations based on real data. (SLD)
Descriptors: Maximum Likelihood Statistics, Simulation, Structural Equation Models

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