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Brandie Disberger; Shannon Washburn; Gaea Hock; Jonathon Ulmer – Journal of Agricultural Education, 2023
This longitudinal qualitative phenomenological case study seeks to understand beginning agriculture teachers' experiences and how their attitudes toward teaching evolve over time. The research included visits to the teachers' facilities, monthly interviews, reflection exercises, and focus groups. Initial coding included magnitude and in vivo…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Agriculture Teachers, Teacher Attitudes, Attitude Change
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Wolfe, Katie; McCammon, Meka N. – Journal of Behavioral Education, 2022
Visual analysis is the predominant method of analysis in single-case research (SCR). However, most research suggests that agreement between visual analysts is poor, which may be due to a lack of clear guidelines and criteria for visual analysis, as well as variability in how individuals are trained. We developed a survey containing questions about…
Descriptors: Research Design, Data Analysis, Statistical Analysis, Applied Behavior Analysis
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Oleson, Jacob J.; Jones, Michelle A.; Jorgensen, Erik J.; Wu, Yu-Hsiang – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2022
Purpose: The analysis of Ecological Momentary Assessment (EMA) data can be difficult to conceptualize due to the complexity of how the data are collected. The goal of this tutorial is to provide an overview of statistical considerations for analyzing observational data arising from EMA studies. Method: EMA data are collected in a variety of ways,…
Descriptors: Experience, Surveys, Measurement Techniques, Statistical Analysis
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Schroeders, Ulrich; Schmidt, Christoph; Gnambs, Timo – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2022
Careless responding is a bias in survey responses that disregards the actual item content, constituting a threat to the factor structure, reliability, and validity of psychological measurements. Different approaches have been proposed to detect aberrant responses such as probing questions that directly assess test-taking behavior (e.g., bogus…
Descriptors: Response Style (Tests), Surveys, Artificial Intelligence, Identification
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Kaltsonoudi, Kalliope; Tsigilis, Nikolaos; Karteroliotis, Konstantinos – Measurement in Physical Education and Exercise Science, 2022
Common method variance refers to the amount of uncontrolled systematic error leading to biased estimates of scale reliability and validity and to spurious covariance shared among variables due to common method and/or common source employed in survey-based researches. As the extended use of self-report questionnaires is inevitable, numerous studies…
Descriptors: Athletics, Research, Research Methodology, Error of Measurement
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Wiens, Peter D.; Zizzi, Christine; Heatwole, Chad – Educational Practice and Theory, 2022
Two common approaches to grouping students include an approach where students are grouped based on their aptitude and a cross-sectional approach where equal groups are formed and comprised of students of varied aptitudes. Instructional Grouping Theory is the study of how selection strategies impact the learning of group members. Using a…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Student Placement, Academically Gifted, Statistical Analysis
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Byers-Heinlein, Krista; Bergmann, Christina; Savalei, Victoria – Infant and Child Development, 2022
Infant research is often underpowered, undermining the robustness and replicability of our findings. Improving the reliability of infant studies offers a solution for increasing statistical power independent of sample size. Here, we discuss two senses of the term reliability in the context of infant research: reliable (large) effects and reliable…
Descriptors: Infants, Research, Reliability, Effect Size
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Holcomb, T. Scott; Lambert, Richard; Bottoms, Bryndle L. – Journal of Educational Supervision, 2022
In this study, various statistical indexes of agreement were calculated using empirical data from a group of evaluators (n = 45) of early childhood teachers. The group of evaluators rated ten fictitious teacher profiles using the North Carolina Teacher Evaluation Process (NCTEP) rubric. The exact and adjacent agreement percentages were calculated…
Descriptors: Interrater Reliability, Teacher Evaluation, Statistical Analysis, Early Childhood Teachers
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Molenaar, Dylan; Cúri, Mariana; Bazán, Jorge L. – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2022
Bounded continuous data are encountered in many applications of item response theory, including the measurement of mood, personality, and response times and in the analyses of summed item scores. Although different item response theory models exist to analyze such bounded continuous data, most models assume the data to be in an open interval and…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Data, Responses, Intervals
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Collier, Zachary K.; Leite, Walter L. – Journal of Experimental Education, 2022
Artificial neural networks (NN) can help researchers estimate propensity scores for quasi-experimental estimation of treatment effects because they can automatically detect complex interactions involving many covariates. However, NN is difficult to implement due to the complexity of choosing an algorithm for various treatment levels and monitoring…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Mentors, Beginning Teachers, Teacher Persistence
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Edgerly, Hallie S.; Kruse, Jerrid W.; Wilcox, Jesse L. – Research in Science Education, 2022
Many nature of science (NOS) studies have demonstrated that teachers can improve their understandings of NOS with explicit and reflective instruction; however, the field has relied heavily on qualitative methods. Because qualitative studies can be difficult to compare across studies and contexts, our study sought to determine if a quantitative…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Elementary School Teachers, Teacher Attitudes, Scientific Attitudes
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Rücker, Gerta; Schwarzer, Guido – Research Synthesis Methods, 2021
In the era of the "reproducibility crisis" and the "P-value controversy" new ways of presentation and interpretation of the results of a meta-analysis are desirable. One suggestion that has been made for single studies almost six decades ago and taken up now and then is the P-value function. For a given outcome, this function…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Statistical Analysis, Computation, Replication (Evaluation)
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Xia, Yan – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2021
Despite the existence of many methods for determining the number of factors, none outperforms the others under every condition. This study compares traditional parallel analysis (TPA), revised parallel analysis (RPA), Kaiser's rule, minimum average partial, sequential X[superscript 2], and sequential root mean square error of approximation,…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Factor Analysis, Accuracy, Goodness of Fit
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Jackson, Dan; Rhodes, Kirsty; Ouwens, Mario – Research Synthesis Methods, 2021
Methods for indirect comparisons and network meta-analysis use aggregate level data from multiple studies. A very common, and closely related, scenario is where a company has individual patient data (IPD) from its own trial, but only has published aggregate data from a competitor's trial, and an indirect comparison of the treatments evaluated in…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Meta Analysis, Sample Size, Statistical Analysis
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Cassiday, Kristina R.; Cho, Youngmi; Harring, Jeffrey R. – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2021
Simulation studies involving mixture models inevitably aggregate parameter estimates and other output across numerous replications. A primary issue that arises in these methodological investigations is label switching. The current study compares several label switching corrections that are commonly used when dealing with mixture models. A growth…
Descriptors: Probability, Models, Simulation, Mathematics
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