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Burcu Sari Ugurlu; Sezen Apaydin – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2024
Carefully chosen picturebooks offer a developmentally appropriate medium for helping children understand even the most complex challenges. However, it may be difficult for teachers to find high-quality children's books for explaining multifaceted topics such as climate change. This study explores the contents of a set of picturebooks about climate…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Picture Books, Childrens Literature, Climate
Steffen Zitzmann; Lisa Bardach; Kai T. Horstmann; Matthias Ziegler; Martin Hecht – Structural Equation Modeling: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2024
We investigated three different approaches for quantifying individual change and reporting it back to persons: (a) the common change score, which is obtained by first computing scale scores from two consecutive measurements and then subtract these scores from one another, (b) the ad-hoc approach, which is similar to the former approach but uses…
Descriptors: Personality Change, Personality Measures, Regression (Statistics), Evaluation Methods
Maxi Schulz; Malte Kramer; Oliver Kuss; Tim Mathes – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
In sparse data meta-analyses (with few trials or zero events), conventional methods may distort results. Although better-performing one-stage methods have become available in recent years, their implementation remains limited in practice. This study examines the impact of using conventional methods compared to one-stage models by re-analysing…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Data Analysis, Research Methodology, Research Problems
Babu Noushad; Pascal W. M. Van Gerven; Anique B. H. de Bruin – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2024
Studying texts constitutes a significant part of student learning in health professions education. Key to learning from text is the ability to effectively monitor one's own cognitive performance and take appropriate regulatory steps for improvement. Inferential cues generated during a learning experience typically guide this monitoring process. It…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Prediction, Cues, Visual Aids
Jalene D. Moreno; R. Douglas Greer; Jessica Dudek – Education and Treatment of Children, 2024
Imitation and emulation are both important response modalities when learning new tasks. The current study tested the effects of establishing generalized imitation (GI) across missing topographies (gross motor, fine motor, multiple-step motor) on number of sessions-to-criterion for four preschoolers with developmental delays who were learning novel…
Descriptors: Imitation, Topography, Accuracy, Preschool Children
Joshua T. Christensen; Zoe E. Taylor; Blake L. Jones – Journal of Early Adolescence, 2024
This study examined the relationship between the accuracy of parental reporting of children's sleep duration compared to objectively measured child sleep and tested whether any discrepancies were related to childhood obesity prevalence in a sample of Latinx families (N = 119). A paired sample t-test revealed that parents significantly…
Descriptors: Parents, Sleep, Accuracy, Reports
Louw, Marti; Sanford-Dolly, Camellia W. – Science Education, 2024
Scientific observation is a disciplinary-informed way of looking at the world that requires the coordination of domain knowledge and perceptual skills with specialized tools and techniques to systematically identify objects, organisms, specimens, or phenomena of interest. Identification is a particular form of skilled observational practice where…
Descriptors: Volunteers, Observation, Identification, Biology
Gerald Gartlehner; Leila Kahwati; Rainer Hilscher; Ian Thomas; Shannon Kugley; Karen Crotty; Meera Viswanathan; Barbara Nussbaumer-Streit; Graham Booth; Nathaniel Erskine; Amanda Konet; Robert Chew – Research Synthesis Methods, 2024
Data extraction is a crucial, yet labor-intensive and error-prone part of evidence synthesis. To date, efforts to harness machine learning for enhancing efficiency of the data extraction process have fallen short of achieving sufficient accuracy and usability. With the release of large language models (LLMs), new possibilities have emerged to…
Descriptors: Data Collection, Evidence, Synthesis, Language Processing
Smadar Sapir-Yogev; Gitit Kavé; Sarit Ashkenazi – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2024
The solution and verification of single-digit multiplication problems vary in speed and accuracy. The current study examines whether the number of different digits in a problem accounts for this variance. In Experiment 1, 41 participants solved all 2-9 multiplication problems. In Experiment 2, 43 participants verified these problems. In Experiment…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Mathematical Concepts, Multiplication
Ryan M. Cook; Stefanie A. Wind – Measurement and Evaluation in Counseling and Development, 2024
The purpose of this article is to discuss reliability and precision through the lens of a modern measurement approach, item response theory (IRT). Reliability evidence in the field of counseling is primarily generated using Classical Test Theory (CTT) approaches, although recent studies in the field of counseling have shown the benefits of using…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Measurement, Reliability, Accuracy
Joan Li; Nikhil Kumar Jangamreddy; Ryuto Hisamoto; Ruchita Bhansali; Amalie Dyda; Luke Zaphir; Mashhuda Glencross – Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, 2024
Generative artificial intelligence technologies, such as ChatGPT, bring an unprecedented change in education by leveraging the power of natural language processing and machine learning. Employing ChatGPT to assist with marking written assessment presents multiple advantages including scalability, improved consistency, eliminating biases associated…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Artificial Intelligence, Grading, Scoring Rubrics
Qi Lu; Yuan Yao; Xinhua Zhu – Asia-Pacific Education Researcher, 2024
This study investigates the effects of two aspects of writing revisions (revision amount and revision function) on writing improvement, and how students' self-rating accuracy moderates these effects. Hierarchical linear regression is employed with a sample of 114 undergraduate students. When considering the moderating role of self-rating accuracy,…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Writing (Composition), Revision (Written Composition), Writing Improvement
Matt Homer – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2024
Quantitative measures of systematic differences in OSCE scoring across examiners (often termed examiner stringency) can threaten the validity of examination outcomes. Such effects are usually conceptualised and operationalised based solely on checklist/domain scores in a station, and global grades are not often used in this type of analysis. In…
Descriptors: Examiners, Scoring, Validity, Cutting Scores
Seyma Erbay Mermer – Pegem Journal of Education and Instruction, 2024
This study aims to compare item and student parameters of dichotomously scored multidimensional constructs estimated based on unidimensional and multidimensional Item Response Theory (IRT) under different conditions of sample size, interdimensional correlation and number of dimensions. This research, conducted with simulations, is of a basic…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Correlation, Error of Measurement, Comparative Analysis
Jose M. Pavía; Rafael Romero – Sociological Methods & Research, 2024
The estimation of RxC ecological inference contingency tables from aggregate data is one of the most salient and challenging problems in the field of quantitative social sciences, with major solutions proposed from both the ecological regression and the mathematical programming frameworks. In recent decades, there has been a drive to find…
Descriptors: Elections, Voting, Social Science Research, Programming