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Newman, Isadore; McNeil, Keith; Fraas, John W. – 2003
Over the last few years, there has been evolution, although not a linear one, that has progressed from an emphasis on statistical significance to an emphasis on effect size to an emphasis on both of these concepts to what is believed to be a pragmatic emphasis on replicability. This paper presented two methods of estimating a study's replicability…
Descriptors: Effect Size, Research Methodology, Statistical Significance
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Newman, Isadore; McNeil, Keith; Fraas, John – Mid-Western Educational Researcher, 2004
This article presents two methods of estimating a study's replicability that researchers should consider reporting along with their statistical significant and effect size findings. One method of estimating the replicability of the findings deals with replication in the exact same system. The second method, which may contain subjective probability…
Descriptors: Replication (Evaluation), Computation, Researchers, Documentation
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McNeil, Keith; Newman, Isadore – Mid-Western Educational Researcher, 1995
Presents situations in which researchers can use the general linear model to uncover reasons for discrepant effect-size results of meta-analysis of similar studies. Situations include similarly labeled treatments or participants differing in important ways, treatment effectiveness varying by subject aptitude or situational variables, research…
Descriptors: Effect Size, Hypothesis Testing, Meta Analysis, Research Methodology
Waechter, Donna; Newman, Isadore; Rosenkoetter, Linda – 1998
The first part of this study replicates an earlier study (D. Waechter, I. Newman, and L. Rosenkoetter, 1998) that used a procedure for authentic assessment of students in a master's level research class, a class that is often feared and avoided by students, by means of a study on humor, since that content would be somewhat incompatible with…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Course Evaluation, Effect Size, Graduate Students