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Budd, John – Journal of Academic Librarianship, 1982
Discusses use of quantitative measurement in statistical studies conducted by libraries, noting unusable measurements and the importance of adapting research methodology to particular library needs. Studies involving the allocation of library funds to academic departments, measurement of library performance, and circulation statistics are noted.…
Descriptors: Academic Libraries, Higher Education, Library Research, Measurement
Shepard, Lorrie A. – New Directions for Testing and Measurement, 1981
The test-item bias literature is summarized, emphasizing the conceptual basis for bias detection methods and the technical issues involved in choosing among methods. It describes both judgmental and statistical methods for identifying biased items, and discusses the reconciliation of these two types of evidence. (Author/BW)
Descriptors: Evaluation Methods, Latent Trait Theory, Statistical Analysis, Test Bias
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Pillemer, David B.; Light, Richard J. – Harvard Educational Review, 1980
Discusses the purposes and benefits of data synthesis, explaining the major techniques of extracting information from related studies and using it to explain conflicting outcomes. Stresses the importance of the analyst's attention to detailed features of each study and describes the steps of a systematic approach to synthesis. (SK)
Descriptors: Data Analysis, Literature Reviews, Research Design, Research Methodology
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Blackburn, John D. – Computers and Education, 1980
Describes a strategy for the design of social science software, concentrating particularly on the nature of packages, languages, data structures, and characteristics of procedures. (Author)
Descriptors: Branching, Computer Programs, Data Processing, Design
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Hirsch, Paul M. – Communication Research--An International Quarterly, 1980
Examines the statistical evidence presented by George Gerbner and his colleagues to support the assertion that television viewing cultivates distorted perceptions of the world. Points out discrepancies in the items, samples, and coding categories employed and concludes that the cultivation hypothesis lacks empirical support. (JMF)
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Research Methodology, Statistical Analysis, Television
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Robinson, Robert V.; Bell, Wendell – American Sociological Review, 1979
This article is a response to an article criticizing the methods used by the researchers in their study of societal differences between the United States and England. (EB)
Descriptors: Opinions, Research Methodology, Research Problems, Research Reviews (Publications)
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Rodgers, Joseph L.; Rowe, David C. – Developmental Review, 1997
Responds to Huston, McLoyd, and Coll's critique by indicating agreement with many observations about the complexity of poverty and the need for research designs providing stronger causal inferences. Maintains that the authors underestimate contributions that behavior genetic research designs can make toward understanding poverty and that they…
Descriptors: Environment, Environmental Influences, Measurement Techniques, Nature Nurture Controversy
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Gerena, Linda M. – Learning Languages, 2002
Examined beliefs and perceptions of practicing professionals and those in leadership positions regarding developing and maintaining dual immersion programs to produce long-lasting language policy reform, language transformation, and a restructured school culture. Based on combined findings of the surveys and interviews, the factors that are most…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Beliefs, Immersion Programs, Interviews
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Beatty, Michael J. – Human Communication Research, 2002
Notes that "variance accounted for"--calculated by squaring one of the various measures of association--is the most common estimate of experimental effect or strength of association reported in communication studies. Focuses on the basic principles and arguments underlying the use of unsquared measures of association, and the…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Effect Size, Higher Education, Research Methodology
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Schuck, Peter H. – Journal of Legal Education, 1989
Empirical research--the uncovering of facts about how individuals and institutions within our legal culture actually behave--is a marginal activity in the legal academy. The neglect of empirical work is so deeply embedded in the incentive structure and professional norms of law schools that they are resistant to change. (MLW)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Law Schools, Legal Education (Professions), Professors
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Becker, William E. – Economics of Education Review, 1988
Responds to critique by Dometrius and Sigelman of Becker and Williams' model of ideal or random flow of people from preselection pool of applicants to postselection work force. Shows that critics' two claims are wrong, because they did not use relative measures of female representation in work force, and they base their modification of his model…
Descriptors: Hypothesis Testing, Models, Organizations (Groups), Research Design
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Turkheimer, Eric; And Others – Human Development, 1995
Recognizes some of the limitations of the field of behavioral genetics, but argues that the methods employed in multivariate behavior genetics and developmental behavior genetics have become the dominant paradigms in the field. (MDM)
Descriptors: Developmental Psychology, Genetics, Individual Development, Multivariate Analysis
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Burgess, Robert L.; Molenaar, Peter C. M. – Human Development, 1995
Supports Gottlieb's conclusion that developmental behavior genetics is unsuitable for analyzing developmental coactional processes because it does not concern itself with mechanisms through which genotypes are transformed into phenotypes. But maintains that modern behavior genetics provides an indispensable tool to analyze nonlinear epigenetic…
Descriptors: Chaos Theory, Developmental Psychology, Genetics, Individual Development
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Bradley, Jana; Sutton, Brett – Library Quarterly, 1993
Introduces this journal issue which is a symposium on the theory, methods, and applications of qualitative research in the field of library and information science. Highlights include a definition of qualitative research, models of qualitative research, distinguishing features of research practice, comparisons with quantitative research, and…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Information Science, Library Research, Models
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Grey, Stephanie Houston – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 1999
Examines the "sedimented" history of probability in America using Richard Herrnstein and Charles Murray's "The Bell Curve." Suggests this model reinforces ethnic hierarchy and differences by creating a "moral cartography" for the nation. Defines this spatial rhetoric with three sociographic dynamics. Concludes with…
Descriptors: Cartography, Cultural Differences, Moral Values, Probability
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