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Sireci, Stephen G.; Allalouf, Avi – Language Testing, 2003
Describes a statistical method for evaluating the translation equivalence of language test items that are scored dichotomously. Provides an illustration of the method to a portion of the verbal subtest of the Psychometric Entrance Test, which is a large-scale postsecondary admissions test used in Israel. (VWL)
Descriptors: College Entrance Examinations, Foreign Countries, Language Tests, Second Language Learning
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Sanderson, Penelope M.; Fisher, Carolanne – Human-Computer Interaction, 1994
Explains exploratory sequential data analysis (ESDA) and outlines ESDA characteristics that could help human-computer interaction investigators using sequential data make better conceptual and methodological choices. Behavioral, cognitive, and social factors are considered, and failures of expertise, time management, and databased problems are…
Descriptors: Behavioral Sciences, Cognitive Processes, Hypothesis Testing, Man Machine Systems
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Attanasio, Joseph S. – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1994
This paper argues that inferential statistical analyses as part of group research designs do not provide the kinds of data that are useful in determining the efficacy of clinical intervention with individuals having communication disorders. Replication studies are seen as providing a more fruitful approach to ascertaining the efficacy of clinical…
Descriptors: Communication Disorders, Evaluation Methods, Outcomes of Treatment, Program Effectiveness
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McClure, John; Suen, Hoi K. – Topics in Early Childhood Special Education, 1994
This article compares three models that have been the foundation for approaches to the analysis of statistical significance in early childhood research--the Fisherian and the Neyman-Pearson models (both considered "classical" approaches), and the Bayesian model. The article concludes that all three models have a place in the analysis of research…
Descriptors: Bayesian Statistics, Early Childhood Education, Educational Research, Hypothesis Testing
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Cizek, Gregory J. – Educational Researcher, 1995
Explores the ongoing debate over quantitative versus qualitative research, arguing that qualitative research has evolved from a methodological approach into a social and political ideology. The current emphasis on narrative ways of sharing knowledge raises concerns about evaluation and hypothesis testing. (SLD)
Descriptors: Evaluation Methods, Hypothesis Testing, Ideology, Mathematics Tests
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Gage, N. L. – Educational Theory, 1994
This paper examines the debate about whether psychologists' quantitative research on teaching can be considered scientific, paying particular attention to whether one branch of quantitative research on teaching, entitled process-product or process-outcome research, merits scientific status. Empirical evidence that applies to educational research…
Descriptors: Criticism, Educational Research, Educational Theories, Elementary Secondary Education
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Fang, Zhihui – Reading Psychology, 1995
Brings together viewpoints on the qualitative and quantitative research paradigms with regard to educational research in general and to literacy research in particular. Elucidates some of the persistent disputes in the research community. Discusses research traditions in literacy research. Considers the contexts in which new paradigms arise.…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Intellectual Disciplines, Literature Reviews, Qualitative Research
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Jones, Molly M.; Jackson, Kirby L. – Journal of Early Intervention, 1992
This paper encourages the use of multiple logistic analysis in early intervention research, to assess the degree of association of multiple factors (such as subject or situational characteristics) with a dichotomous outcome (such as benefitting or not benefitting from an intervention) and to estimate the probability of each outcome. (JDD)
Descriptors: Disabilities, Early Intervention, Multiple Regression Analysis, Prediction
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Moen, David H.; And Others – Journal of Education for Business, 1992
States that the usefulness of expert systems has caused them to become more popular in the work environment. Discusses how to incorporate material on expert system concepts into introductory courses in accounting and statistics at the undergraduate level and in quantitative analysis at the graduate level. (Author)
Descriptors: Accounting, Business Administration Education, Expert Systems, Graduate Study
Widaman, Keith F. – American Journal on Mental Retardation, 1991
This reaction paper criticizes the characterizations of clusters used in a study concerning a taxonomy of lifestyles of families with severely mentally retarded children, by I. T. Mink and others (EC 211 387). The criticism focuses on the use of cluster scores on criterion variables and use of cluster profiles across studies. (JDD)
Descriptors: Classification, Cluster Analysis, Family Relationship, Life Style
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McCall, Robert B.; Appelbaum, Mark I. – Developmental Psychology, 1991
Discusses procedures and considerations involved with secondary analyses of longitudinal databases. Procedures involve (1) formulating questions; (2) creating a feasibility matrix; (3) reformulating questions; (4) creating derived variables; (5) performing data reduction; (6) analyzing data; and (7) interpreting results. Problems associated with…
Descriptors: Data Analysis, Developmental Psychology, Longitudinal Studies, Predictor Variables
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Duncan, Greg J. – Developmental Psychology, 1991
Secondary data analysis and interdisciplinary collaboration have a great deal to offer developmentalists. The research traditions of economists and sociologists have produced longitudinal studies that use national samples, develop useful statistical techniques for approximating experimental conditions, and result in theoretical insights into…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cooperation, Developmental Psychology, Economics
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Dowd, James J. – Teaching Sociology, 1991
Discusses effects on graduate sociology education of trends emphasizing quantitative methods and the positivist tradition at the expense of social theory and interpretive sociology. Argues that failure to develop sociology's interpretive tradition has allowed the style and intellectual creativity of sociological work to suffer. Urges greater…
Descriptors: Creativity, Curriculum Development, Educational Philosophy, Graduate Study
Buchanan, David R. – Health Education Quarterly, 1992
In a study of the relationship between moral reasoning and teenage drug use, problems arose in an attempt to reduce qualitative data to a quantitative format: (1) making analytic sense of singular and universal responses; (2) the mistaken logical inference that each pattern of judgment should have behavioral indicators; and (3) construction and…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Data Interpretation, Illegal Drug Use, Inferences
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Walsh, Daniel J.; King, Gary – Early Childhood Research Quarterly, 1993
Agrees with many of the points expressed in Herbert Zimiles's criticism of quantitative research in this issue, but argues that the shortcomings identified by Zimiles are present in many qualitative studies as well. Both quantitative and qualitative research need to follow high standards of research design and execution. (MDM)
Descriptors: Criticism, Data, Early Childhood Education, Qualitative Research
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