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Showing 1 to 15 of 23 results Save | Export
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Gajendra Vishwakarma – Measurement: Interdisciplinary Research and Perspectives, 2025
In sample designs, it is commonly recognized that using auxiliary information significantly increases an estimator's precision. This manuscript introduces an weighted strategy for computing the finite population mean using auxiliary information in sample surveys. The equations for the mean squared error ("MSE") of the proposed estimator…
Descriptors: Sampling, Surveys, Computation, Efficiency
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Muhammad Aslam – Measurement: Interdisciplinary Research and Perspectives, 2025
The existing algorithm employing the log-normal distribution lacks applicability in generating imprecise data. This paper addresses this limitation by first introducing the log-normal distribution as a means to handle imprecise data. Subsequently, we leverage the neutrosophic log-normal distribution to devise an algorithm specifically tailored for…
Descriptors: Statistical Distributions, Algorithms, Sampling
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Judith Glaesser – Field Methods, 2025
In qualitative comparative analysis, as with all methods, there is a question about how many cases are needed to make an analysis robust. In deciding on the number of cases, a key consideration is the number of conditions to be analyzed. I suggest that adding cases is preferable to dropping conditions if there are too many conditions relative to…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Robustness (Statistics), Sampling, Case Studies
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Gabriela Perez-Garcia; Andrea Gomez Barillas; Renata Mendizábal-Cabrera; Danilo Alvarez; Brooke M. Ramay; Nikolina Walas; Jay P. Graham – Field Methods, 2025
In many countries, soiled toilet paper is placed in trash bins rather than flushed down the toilet. We investigated the use of soiled toilet paper in Guatemalan markets to surveil for pathogenic sequence types (STs) of "E. coli" and third generation cephalosporin-resistant "E. coli" (3GCR-EC). We collected used toilet paper…
Descriptors: Sanitation, Diseases, Pathology, Sanitary Facilities
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J. S. Allison; L. Santana; I. J. H. Visagie – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2025
Given sample data, how do you calculate the value of a parameter? While this question is impossible to answer, it is frequently encountered in statistics classes when students are introduced to the distinction between a sample and a population (or between a statistic and a parameter). It is not uncommon for teachers of statistics to also confuse…
Descriptors: Statistics Education, Teaching Methods, Computation, Sampling
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Juan F. Muñoz; Pablo J. Moya-Fernández; Encarnación Álvarez-Verdejo – Sociological Methods & Research, 2025
The Gini index is probably the most commonly used indicator to measure inequality. For continuous distributions, the Gini index can be computed using several equivalent formulations. However, this is not the case with discrete distributions, where controversy remains regarding the expression to be used to estimate the Gini index. We attempt to…
Descriptors: Bias, Educational Indicators, Equal Education, Monte Carlo Methods
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Yan Xia; Xinchang Zhou – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2025
Parallel analysis has been considered one of the most accurate methods for determining the number of factors in factor analysis. One major advantage of parallel analysis over traditional factor retention methods (e.g., Kaiser's rule) is that it addresses the sampling variability of eigenvalues obtained from the identity matrix, representing the…
Descriptors: Factor Analysis, Statistical Analysis, Evaluation Methods, Sampling
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David Grant; Anna Shapiro; Elizabeth D. Steiner; Joshua Eagan; Dorothy Seaman; Cyril Cherian; Gerald P. Hunter; Ashley Woo; Jill S. Cannon; Christopher Joseph Doss; Lynn A. Karoly – RAND Corporation, 2025
In spring 2024, the Gates Foundation sponsored the recruitment of public school pre-kindergarten (pre-K) teachers to RAND's American Teacher Panel (ATP), an online survey panel of approximately 27,000 U.S. public school teachers that had previously covered teachers in kindergarten through 12th grade. In this short report, the authors describe…
Descriptors: Public School Teachers, Preschool Teachers, Teacher Surveys, National Surveys
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Fangxing Bai; Ben Kelcey; Yanli Xie; Kyle Cox – Journal of Experimental Education, 2025
Prior research has suggested that clustered regression discontinuity designs are a formidable alternative to cluster randomized designs because they provide targeted treatment assignment while maintaining a high-quality basis for inferences on local treatment effects. However, methods for the design and analysis of clustered regression…
Descriptors: Regression (Statistics), Statistical Analysis, Research Design, Educational Research
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Beth Chance; Karen McGaughey; Sophia Chung; Alex Goodman; Soma Roy; Nathan Tintle – Journal of Statistics and Data Science Education, 2025
"Simulation-based inference" is often considered a pedagogical strategy for helping students develop inferential reasoning, for example, giving them a visual and concrete reference for deciding whether the observed statistic is unlikely to happen by chance alone when the null hypothesis is true. In this article, we highlight for teachers…
Descriptors: Simulation, Sampling, Randomized Controlled Trials, Hypothesis Testing
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Yunting Liu; Shreya Bhandari; Zachary A. Pardos – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2025
Effective educational measurement relies heavily on the curation of well-designed item pools. However, item calibration is time consuming and costly, requiring a sufficient number of respondents to estimate the psychometric properties of items. In this study, we explore the potential of six different large language models (LLMs; GPT-3.5, GPT-4,…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Test Items, Psychometrics, Educational Assessment
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Diego Cortes; Dirk Hastedt; Sabine Meinck – Large-scale Assessments in Education, 2025
This paper informs users of data collected in international large-scale assessments (ILSA), by presenting argumentsunderlining the importance of considering two design features employed in these studies. We examine a commonmisconception stating that the uncertainty arising from the assessment design is negligible compared with that arisingfrom the…
Descriptors: Sampling, Research Design, Educational Assessment, Statistical Inference
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Melissa Kay Diliberti; David Grant; AK Keskin; Claude Messan Setodji; Gerald P. Hunter; Samantha E. DiNicola; Heather L. Schwartz – RAND Corporation, 2025
The authors of this report provide technical information about the fall 2024 American School District Panel survey of district leaders. This survey was administered to a nationally representative sample of nearly 8,000 K-12 public school districts. The authors describe the survey administration and weighting processes they used to produce…
Descriptors: Administrator Surveys, School Districts, National Surveys, Sampling
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Irene Trapero-González; José-María Romero-Rodríguez; Francisco-Domingo Fernández-Martín; Santiago Alonso-García – Knowledge Management & E-Learning, 2025
Educational robotics is presented as a resource increasingly present in the early childhood education stage, allowing the development of STEM competences in a practical and motivating way. Due to the evolution of its use in the classroom, the aim of this paper was to analyse and evaluate research on robotics applied to early childhood education.…
Descriptors: Robotics, STEM Education, Early Childhood Education, Educational Research
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Marianne van Dijke-Droogers; Paul Drijvers; Arthur Bakker – Mathematics Education Research Journal, 2025
In our data-driven society, it is essential for students to become statistically literate. A core domain within Statistical Literacy is Statistical Inference, the ability to draw inferences from sample data. Acquiring and applying inferences is difficult for students and, therefore, usually not included in the pre-10th-grade curriculum. However,…
Descriptors: Statistical Inference, Learning Trajectories, Grade 9, High School Students
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