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Brazier, Richard; Boman, Eugene – AMATYC Review, 2007
For various reasons there has been a recent trend in college and high school calculus courses to de-emphasize teaching the Partial Fraction Decomposition (PFD) as an integration technique. This is regrettable because the Partial Fraction Decomposition is considerably more than an integration technique. It is, in fact, a general purpose tool which…
Descriptors: Computers, Calculus, Teaching Methods, Mathematics Instruction
Monroe, Charles W.; Newman, John – Chemical Engineering Education, 2007
The Onsager reciprocal relations are essential to multicomponent transport theory. A discussion of the principles that should be used to derive flux laws for coupled diffusion is presented here. Fluctuation theory is employed to determine the reciprocal relation for transport coefficients that characterize coupled mass and heat transfer in binary…
Descriptors: Heat, Graduate Students, Chemical Engineering, Computation
Metzger, Matthew J.; Glasser, Benjamin J.; Glasser, David; Hausberger, Brendon; Hildebrandt, Diane – Chemical Engineering Education, 2007
Ask a graduating chemical engineering student the following question: What makes one reactor different from the next? The answers received will often be unsatisfactory and will vary widely in scope. Some may cite the difference between the basic design equations, others may point out a PFR is "longer," and still others may state that it…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Chemical Engineering, Equations (Mathematics), Teaching Methods
Leite, Walter L. – Structural Equation Modeling: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2007
Univariate latent growth modeling (LGM) of composites of multiple items (e.g., item means or sums) has been frequently used to analyze the growth of latent constructs. This study evaluated whether LGM of composites yields unbiased parameter estimates, standard errors, chi-square statistics, and adequate fit indexes. Furthermore, LGM was compared…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Computation, Structural Equation Models, Goodness of Fit
Hedges, Larry V. – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2007
Multisite research designs involving cluster randomization are becoming increasingly important in educational and behavioral research. Researchers would like to compute effect size indexes based on the standardized mean difference to compare the results of cluster-randomized studies (and corresponding quasi-experiments) with other studies and to…
Descriptors: Journal Articles, Effect Size, Computation, Research Design
Shieh, Gwowen – Psychometrika, 2007
The underlying statistical models for multiple regression analysis are typically attributed to two types of modeling: fixed and random. The procedures for calculating power and sample size under the fixed regression models are well known. However, the literature on random regression models is limited and has been confined to the case of all…
Descriptors: Sample Size, Monte Carlo Methods, Multiple Regression Analysis, Statistical Analysis
Hoshino, Takahiro – Psychometrika, 2007
Due to the difficulty in achieving a random assignment, a quasi-experimental or observational study design is frequently used in the behavioral and social sciences. If a nonrandom assignment depends on the covariates, multiple group structural equation modeling, that includes the regression function of the dependent variables on the covariates…
Descriptors: Structural Equation Models, Simulation, Observation, Behavioral Science Research
Blankmeyer, Eric – Online Submission, 2006
Researchers in education and the social sciences make extensive use of linear regression models in which the dependent variable is continuous-valued while the explanatory variables are a combination of continuous-valued regressors and dummy variables. The dummies partition the sample into groups, some of which may contain only a few observations.…
Descriptors: Social Sciences, Regression (Statistics), Computation, Models
Rips, Lance J.; Asmuth, Jennifer; Bloomfield, Amber – Cognition, 2006
According to one theory about how children learn the concept of natural numbers, they first determine that "one", "two", and "three" denote the size of sets containing the relevant number of items. They then make the following inductive inference (the Bootstrap): The next number word in the counting series denotes the size of the sets you get by…
Descriptors: Numbers, Number Concepts, Inferences, Computation
Murphy, Kristina; McKone, Elinor; Slee, Judith – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2006
It is often of theoretical interest to know if implicit memory (repetition priming) develops across childhood under a given circumstance. Methodologically, however, it is difficult to determine whether development is present when baseline performance for unstudied items improves with age. Calculation of priming in absolute…
Descriptors: Priming, Measurement, Computation, Children
Gupta, Prahlad – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2006
The proposals that (a) nonword repetition and word learning both rely on phonological storage and (b) both are multiply determined are two of the major foci of Gathercole's (2006) Keynote Article, which marshals considerable evidence in support of each. In my view, the importance of these proposals cannot be overstated: these two notions go to the…
Descriptors: Repetition, Vocabulary Development, Phonology, Language Processing
Psycharakis, Stelios G.; Miller, Stuart – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2006
Force platforms (FPs) are regularly used in the biomechanical analysis of sport and exercise techniques, often in combination with image-based motion analysis. Force time data, particularly when combined with joint positions and segmental inertia parameters, can be used to evaluate the effectiveness of a wide range of movement patterns in sport…
Descriptors: Motion, Biomechanics, Computation, Error of Measurement
Boyd, J. N.; Raychowdhury, P. N. – Mathematics and Computer Education, 2006
In this note, we recall the convex (or barycentric) coordinates of the points of a closed triangular region. We relate the convex and trilinear coordinates of the interior points of the triangular region. We use the relationship between convex and trilinear coordinates to calculate the convex coordinates of the symmedian point of the triangular…
Descriptors: Geometric Concepts, Geometry, Mathematics Education, Equations (Mathematics)
Ortiz, Enrique – Teaching Children Mathematics, 2006
The game presented in this article provides for students' development of the use of models, benchmarks, and equivalent forms to judge the size of fractions in a motivational and flexible way.
Descriptors: Arithmetic, Teaching Methods, Mathematics Instruction, Models
Sein, Lawrence T., Jr. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2006
The isotopic distribution in mass spectroscopy is described for identifying pure compounds, being able to distinguish molecular fragments by masses. Punnett squares are familiar, easy to compute, and often graphical which makes helpful to students and the relative distribution of isotopic combination is easily generated for even isotopic…
Descriptors: Spectroscopy, Molecular Structure, Genetics, Computation

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