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Kinzie, Jillian – Journal of The First-Year Experience & Students in Transition, 2013
The essay examines the variety of research methods and measures used in the first-year experience and students-in-transition field over the past 25 years. Interrogating the extant research, Kinzie explores whether the methods and analytic processes most commonly employed are adequate to advance our understanding of complex issues in the field. The…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Scholarship, Educational Research, Mixed Methods Research

Davey, Adam; Shanahan, Michael J.; Schafer, Joseph L. – Journal of Human Resources, 2001
Principal components analysis revealed four patterns of nonresponse on children's psychosocial adjustment, lifetime poverty experiences, and family history. Results from examining latent growth curve models using listwise deletion and multiple imputation indicated that multiple imputation corrected for selective nonresponse, providing less-biased…
Descriptors: Family Characteristics, Longitudinal Studies, Research Problems, Statistical Bias

Pierret, Charles R. – Journal of Human Resources, 2001
To test the effect of less-frequent interviews on data quality in longitudinal surveys, event history data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979 regarding welfare and employment were analyzed. Due to the longer recall period, respondents failed to report short spells of welfare, employment, and unemployment. (SK)
Descriptors: Data Collection, Econometrics, Experiments, Interviews
Zemsky, Robert; Shapiro, Daniel – 1994
The methodology of five national surveys designed to estimate the scale and scope of training was analyzed to identify the reasons underlying the variability and unreliability of estimates of education and training. The five surveys were as follows: May Triennial Adult Education Supplement to the Current Population Survey, National Longitudinal…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Essays, High Schools, Job Training
Dugoni, Bernard; Lee, Lisa; Tourangeau, Roger – 1997
During round 16 of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (NLSY), 900 NLSY sample members were randomly assigned to be interviewed about the period since their round 14 interview. Their responses were compared to those of approximately 8,000 NLSY sample members who were assigned to be interviewed about the 1-year period since their round 15…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Data Collection, Employment Level, Interviews

Chase-Lansdale, P. Lindsay; And Others – Developmental Psychology, 1991
This article provides a history of the data set known as "the Children of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth (NLSY)." Promising research agendas that use the data set are described. These agendas concern maternal employment and child care, adolescent pregnancy and parenthood, divorce, poverty, and multigenerational parenting. (BC)
Descriptors: Child Development, Child Rearing, Day Care, Developmental Psychology

Harvey, Elizabeth – Developmental Psychology, 1999
Examined effects of early parental employment on children, using data from National Longitudinal Survey of Youth. Found that more work hours were associated with slightly lower cognitive development through age 9 and lower academic achievement before age 7, but not with behavior problems, compliance, or self-esteem. Early parental employment was…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Age Differences, Behavior Problems, Child Development