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Showing all 12 results Save | Export
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Robert Meyer; Tracy Diel; Rinor Jahiu; Hayley Tymeson – Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness, 2023
Background: This paper considers a new policy and statistical framework for evaluating K-12 schools and policies that aligns with diversity, equity, and inclusion values. The new approach broadens the standard approach to accountability and evaluation by combining features of evaluation and multi-level growth models with approaches used in systems…
Descriptors: Accountability, Inclusion, Diversity, Equal Education
Cohen, Jonathan – Regional Educational Laboratory Mid-Atlantic, 2015
The REL Mid-Atlantic Webinar discussed the elements in a positive school climate and shared different methods for assessing school data, including the Comprehensive School Climate Inventory. The Q&A presented in this document address the questions participants had for Dr. Cohen following the webinar. The webinar recording and PowerPoint…
Descriptors: Educational Environment, School Culture, Evaluation Methods, Measurement Techniques
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Wagle, Udaya R. – Social Indicators Research, 2009
Shifting focus from income to capability signifies an important milestone toward accurately measuring poverty and deprivation. This paper operationalizes capability deprivation in the United States and compares measurement outcomes among various capability approaches and between capability and income spaces. Of the three capability approaches…
Descriptors: Poverty, Income, Profiles, Disadvantaged Environment
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Gundersen, Craig; Kreider, Brent – Journal of Human Resources, 2008
Policymakers have been puzzled to observe that food stamp households appear more likely to be food insecure than observationally similar eligible nonparticipating households. We reexamine this issue allowing for nonclassical reporting errors in food stamp participation and food insecurity. Extending the literature on partially identified…
Descriptors: Security (Psychology), Poverty, Family (Sociological Unit), Measurement Techniques
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Roosa, Mark W.; Deng, Shiying; Nair, Rajni L.; Lockhart Burrell, Ginger – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2005
Most family scholars take the concept of poverty for granted. The variety of ways people have chosen to define and measure this concept, however, often makes it difficult to interpret or compare research results. We review and critique the ways that poverty has been measured in the family and child literatures as well as the measures that have…
Descriptors: Definitions, Social Isolation, Poverty, Budgets
Gacitua-Mario, Estanislao, Ed.; Wodon, Quentin, Ed. – 2001
This report consists of a collection of case studies from Latin America combining qualitative and quantitative research methods for the analysis of poverty within a social exclusion framework. The first chapter provides an overview of the differences between quantitative and qualitative methods, and the gains from using both types of methods in…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Evaluation Methods, Foreign Countries, Measurement Techniques
Viadero, Debra – Education Week, 2006
When education researchers want to measure the collective poverty level in a school, they typically use the same yardstick: the percentage of students who qualify for free or reduced rate meals under the federal school lunch program. But dissatisfaction with that indicator is prompting some researchers to cast about for better ways to gauge the…
Descriptors: Low Income Groups, Lunch Programs, School Choice, Poverty
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Jayaraj, D.; Subramanian, S. – Social Indicators Research, 2005
In this paper we follow a lead provided by Basu and Basu ["The Greying of Populations: Concepts and Measurement," Demography India 16, pp. 79-89], in order to advance a class of "agedness" indices which, because they have been motivated by analogous considerations in the poverty measurement literature, can find application in…
Descriptors: Demography, Poverty, Social Indicators, Older Adults
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Iceland, John – Measurement: Interdisciplinary Research and Perspectives, 2005
This article presents the author's rejoinder on commentaries of his article which illustrate the variety of perspectives with which people approach poverty measurement issues. Some of the comments highlight the theoretical concerns underpinning poverty measurement efforts, whereas others focus on empirical considerations. As a social scientist,…
Descriptors: Poverty, Reader Response, Review (Reexamination), Measurement
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Schilling, Stephen G.; Carlisle, Joanne F.; Scott, Sarah E.; Zeng, Ji – Elementary School Journal, 2007
This study focused on the predictive validity of fluency measures that comprise Dynamic Indicators of Basic Early Literacy Skills (DIBELS). Data were gathered from first through third graders attending 44 schools in 9 districts or local educational agencies that made up the first Reading First cohort in Michigan. Students were administered DIBELS…
Descriptors: High Risk Students, Grade 2, Grade 3, Reading Comprehension
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Iceland, John – Measurement: Interdisciplinary Research and Perspectives, 2005
This article discusses the theoretical underpinnings of different types of income poverty measures--absolute, relative, and a National Academy of Sciences (NAS) "quasi-relative" one--and empirically assesses them by tracking their performance over time and across demographic groups. Part of the assessment involves comparing these measures to…
Descriptors: Poverty, Income, Poverty Programs, Social Indicators
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Gilbert, Neil – Society, 1994
Deliberations about social policy often center on estimates of harm or benefit generated by different interest groups. Problems in what is measured and how it is measured are illustrated by a discussion of research into sexual abuse and rape. Advocacy research is an unreliable foundation for social policy formation. (SLD)
Descriptors: Advocacy, Child Abuse, Computation, Data Collection