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Jordan, Meagan M. – Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 2003
Punctuated equilibrium theory (PET) is an agenda-based theory that offers a theoretical foundation for large budget shifts. PET emphasizes that the static, incremental nature of agendas is occasionally interrupted by punctuations. These punctuations indicate shifts in priority among the agenda items, and with those agenda shifts come trade-offs.…
Descriptors: Probability, Expenditures, Local Government, Agenda Setting
Johnson, Roger W. – Teaching Mathematics and Its Applications: An International Journal of the IMA, 2006
Instructors may use the gambling game of craps to illustrate the use of a number of fundamental probability identities. For the "pass-line" bet we focus on the chance of winning and the expected game length. To compute these, probabilities of unions of disjoint events, probabilities of intersections of independent events, conditional probabilities…
Descriptors: Probability, Games, Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods
Lowenkron, Barry – Analysis of Verbal Behavior, 2006
This research examined the role the two constituents of joint control, the tact and the echoic, play in producing accurate selections of novel stimuli in response to their spoken descriptions. Experiment 1 examined the role of tacts. In response to unfamiliar spoken descriptions, children learned to select from among six successively presented…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Probability, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Selection
Monsell, Stephen; Mizon, Guy A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
In 6 task-cuing experiments, with 2 cues per task, the authors varied cue-stimulus interval to investigate G. D. Logan and C. Bundesen's (2003) claim that when cue repetition is controlled for, task-switch cost and its reduction with preparation are largely eliminated and hence cannot index an endogenous control process. Experiment 1 replicates…
Descriptors: Experimental Psychology, Models, Cues, Intervals
Pfeiffer, Steven; Petscher, Yaacov; Kumtepe, Alper – Roeper Review, 2008
This study examined the internal consistency and validity of a new rating scale to identify gifted students, the Gifted Rating Scales-School Form (GRS-S). The study explored the effect of gender, race/ethnicity, age, and rater familiarity on GRS-S ratings. One hundred twenty-two students in first to eighth grade from elementary and middle schools…
Descriptors: Ethnicity, Middle Schools, Academically Gifted, Talent
Espin, Christine; Wallace, Teri; Campbell, Heather; Lembke, Erica S.; Long, Jeffrey D.; Ticha, Renata – Exceptional Children, 2008
We examined the technical adequacy of writing progress measures as indicators of success on state standards tests. Tenth-grade students wrote for 10 min, marking their samples at 3, 5, and 7 min. Samples were scored for words written, words spelled correctly, and correct and correct minus incorrect word sequences. The number of correct minus…
Descriptors: Curriculum Based Assessment, State Standards, Second Language Learning, Writing (Composition)
Leininger, Lindsey Jeanne; Kalil, Ariel – Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 2008
Using data on approximately 2,000 low-income welfare recipients in a three-site random-assignment intervention conducted in the early 1990s (the NEWWS), we examine the role of cognitive and non-cognitive factors in moderating experimental impacts of an adult education training program for women who lacked a high school degree or GED at the time of…
Descriptors: Locus of Control, Females, Adult Education, Probability
Gundersen, Craig; Kreider, Brent – Journal of Human Resources, 2008
Policymakers have been puzzled to observe that food stamp households appear more likely to be food insecure than observationally similar eligible nonparticipating households. We reexamine this issue allowing for nonclassical reporting errors in food stamp participation and food insecurity. Extending the literature on partially identified…
Descriptors: Security (Psychology), Poverty, Family (Sociological Unit), Measurement Techniques
Fendler, Lynn; Muzaffar, Irfan – Educational Theory, 2008
Bell-curve thinking, as a model of distribution of success and failure in society, enjoys a perennial (ahistorical, objective, and law-like) status in education. As such it provides a rationale for sorting (tracking or streaming) practices in education, which has led many educators to criticize both bell-curve thinking and associated sorting…
Descriptors: Probability, Role of Education, Educational Philosophy, Educational History
Boudarbat, Brahim – Economics of Education Review, 2008
Community college education is a key component of Canadian postsecondary education, with 21% of the population aged 25-64 having college credentials. In order to understand educational decisions at this level, we estimate a model of choice of field of study and analyze, among other things, the effect of earnings on this choice. In this way, we…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Foreign Countries, Graduate Surveys, Work Experience
Learner Performance in Multimedia Learning Arrangements: An Analysis across Instructional Approaches
Eysink, Tessa H. S.; de Jong, Ton; Berthold, Kirsten; Kolloffel, Bas; Opfermann, Maria; Wouters, Pieter – American Educational Research Journal, 2009
In this study, the authors compared four multimedia learning arrangements differing in instructional approach on effectiveness and efficiency for learning: (a) hypermedia learning, (b) observational learning, (c) self-explanation-based learning, and (d) inquiry learning. The approaches all advocate learners' active attitude toward the learning…
Descriptors: Instructional Design, Observational Learning, Learning Processes, Teaching Methods
Johnson, Matthew C.; Kercher, Glen A. – Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 2009
Victims of stalking often experience a number of negative psychological problems including such things as fear, symptoms of depression, and anger. However, research on factors that lead to these outcomes is limited. The goal of this study was to first identify distinct subgroups of stalking victims based on measures of psychological problems…
Descriptors: Probability, Depression (Psychology), Victims of Crime, Predictor Variables
Nasim, Bilal – Centre for the Economics of Education (NJ1), 2010
The Centre for the Economics of Education was asked to bring together a wide range of academic evidence (primarily England-based) to investigate the extent to which academic and non-academic childhood outcomes are complementary to each other, or are in some way traded-off against each other. The report also investigates the drivers of both…
Descriptors: Bullying, Disadvantaged Youth, Parent Child Relationship, Foreign Countries
Vaughn, Brandon K. – Journal on School Educational Technology, 2008
This study considers the importance of contextual effects on the quality of assessments on item bias and differential item functioning (DIF) in measurement. Often, in educational studies, students are clustered in teachers or schools, and the clusters could impact psychometric issues yet are largely ignored by traditional item analyses. A…
Descriptors: Test Bias, Educational Assessment, Educational Quality, Context Effect
Thelk, Amy – Research & Practice in Assessment, 2008
Differential Item Functioning (DIF) occurs when there is a greater probability of solving an item based on group membership after controlling for ability. Following administration of a 50-item scientific and quantitative reasoning exam to 286 two-year and 1174 four-year students, items were evaluated for DIF. Two-year students performed…
Descriptors: Test Bias, Probability, Test Items, Student Evaluation

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