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Jorunn Spord Borgen; Gunn Engelsrud – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2024
In this article, the authors address some of the scientific challenges associated with using observation as a research method. The authors ask how researchers contextualise and understand observation in terms of its theoretical underpinnings and how it is conducted. Using a vignette in the kindergarten context, the authors explore how observation…
Descriptors: Observation, Research Problems, Kindergarten, Young Children
Stephanie Wermelinger; Marco Bleiker; Moritz M. Daum – Infant and Child Development, 2025
Children's fuzziness leads to increased variance in the data, data loss, and high dropout rates in developmental studies. This study investigated the importance of 20 factors on the person (child, caregiver, experimenter) and situation (task, method, time, and date) level for the data quality as indicated via the number of valid trials in 11…
Descriptors: Infants, Young Children, Research Problems, Factor Analysis
Megan Lee; Danielle Augustine; Melinda Moore – Field Methods, 2025
Narratives that dominant the discourse of the experiences of people of color, specifically in education settings, are incomplete. Therefore, identifying methodological approaches that emphasize the perspectives of minoritized groups is essential. Counternarratives have been applied to help (re)tell stories of the oppressed to challenge dominant…
Descriptors: Minority Groups, Critical Race Theory, Perspective Taking, Ethnicity
G. E. Derrick – Research Evaluation, 2025
In the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, many research funding organizations were faced with the choice of suspending their peer review panels, or else continuing their decision-making processes virtually. Although seen part of a longer drive to make peer review more cost and time efficient as well as to combat climate and sustainability…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Peer Evaluation, Computer Mediated Communication, Decision Making
J. Matt Jameson; Joanna Ryan; Laura Rogers; Shamby Polychronis; Mary Woodruff – Rural Special Education Quarterly, 2025
Conducting survey research in rural educational contexts presents unique challenges and requires specific methodological considerations. This article provides an overview of potential adaptations that may help support effective, valid, and impactful rural survey research and a brief review of survey research published in "Rural Special…
Descriptors: Special Education, Rural Education, Educational Research, Rural Schools
Ethan Fosse; Fabian T. Pfeffer – Sociological Methods & Research, 2025
Over the past decade there has been a striking increase in the number of quantitative studies examining the effects of social mobility, with almost all based on the diagonal reference model (DRM). We make four main contributions to this rapidly expanding literature. First, we show that under plausible values of mobility effects, the DRM will, in…
Descriptors: Social Mobility, Models, Birth Rate, Statistical Analysis
Thomas S. Dee – Evaluation Review, 2025
The recognition that researcher discretion coupled with unconscious biases and motivated reasoning sometimes leads to false findings ("p-hacking") led to the broad embrace of study preregistration and other open-science practices in experimental research. Paradoxically, the preregistration of quasi-experimental studies remains uncommon…
Descriptors: Quasiexperimental Design, Program Evaluation, Policy Analysis, Research Problems
Michiel van Oudheusden; Tessa Roedema; Willemine Willems – Ethnography and Education, 2025
In this article, we reflect on our experiences with teaching ethnographic skills and sensibilities to MSc students at a Dutch university. Using methods such as (self)observation, journaling and reflection, we highlight dilemmas (conceptual, practical, ethical) faced by students when doing ethnographic fieldwork and dilemmas that emerged in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Ethnography, Research Methodology
Liping Guo; Sarah Miller; Wenjie Zhou; Zhipeng Wei; Junjie Ren; Xinyu Huang; Xin Xing; Howard White; Kehu Yang – Campbell Systematic Reviews, 2025
Background: A systematic review is a type of literature review that uses rigorous methods to synthesize evidence from multiple studies on a specific topic. It is widely used in academia, including medical and social science research. Social science is an academic discipline that focuses on human behaviour and society. However, consensus regarding…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Literature Reviews, Social Science Research, Meta Analysis
Daniel Poole; Audrey Linden; Felicity Sedgewick; Oliver Allchin; Hannah Hobson – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2025
Pre-registration refers to the practice of researchers preparing a time-stamped document describing the plans for a study. This open research tool is used to improve transparency, so that readers can evaluate the extent to which the researcher adhered to their original plans and tested their theory appropriately. In the current study, we conducted…
Descriptors: Autism Spectrum Disorders, Research, Periodicals, Disclosure
Austin C. Kozlowski; James Evans – Sociological Methods & Research, 2025
Large language models (LLMs), through their exposure to massive collections of online text, learn to reproduce the perspectives and linguistic styles of diverse social and cultural groups. This capability suggests a powerful social scientific application--the simulation of empirically realistic, culturally situated human subjects. Synthesizing…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Social Science Research, Computer Simulation, Research Methodology
Xi Song; Xiang Zhou – Sociological Methods & Research, 2025
Social mobility scholars have long been interested in estimating the effect of intergenerational mobility, typically measured by differences in the socioeconomic status between parents and offspring, on later-life outcomes of offspring. In a 2022 article "Heterogeneous Effects of Intergenerational Social Mobility: An Improved Method and New…
Descriptors: Social Mobility, Socioeconomic Status, Differences, Models
Tobias Gummer; Tanja Kunz – Field Methods, 2025
Political knowledge questions often are used in social sciences web surveys to study political literacy, identify knowledge gaps and misinformation, examine political polarization, and predict political behavior. However, knowledge questions are subject to bias when respondents look up the correct answers online. Lookup behavior can confound…
Descriptors: Online Surveys, Multiple Literacies, Knowledge Level, Information Seeking
Gamon Savatsomboon; Phamornpun Yurayat; Ong-art Chanprasitchai; Warawut Narkbunnum; Jibon Kumar Sharma; Surapol Svetsomboon – Journal of Practical Studies in Education, 2024
The paper has three major objectives. The first objective of the paper is to synthesize and define common categories of meta-analysis. The second objective is to propose a way to comprehend these common categories of meta-analysis through learning from their respective generic conceptual frameworks. The third objective is to point out which R…
Descriptors: Classification, Meta Analysis, Computer Software, Educational Research
John Mart V. DelosReyes; Miguel A. Padilla – Journal of Experimental Education, 2024
Estimating confidence intervals (CIs) for the correlation has been a challenge because the correlation sampling distribution changes depending on the correlation magnitude. The Fisher z-transformation was one of the first attempts at estimating correlation CIs but has historically shown to not have acceptable coverage probability if data were…
Descriptors: Research Problems, Correlation, Intervals, Computation

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