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Qu, Wen; Liu, Haiyan; Zhang, Zhiyong – Grantee Submission, 2020
In social and behavioral sciences, data are typically not normally distributed, which can invalidate hypothesis testing and lead to unreliable results when being analyzed by methods developed for normal data. The existing methods of generating multivariate non-normal data typically create data according to specific univariate marginal measures…
Descriptors: Social Science Research, Multivariate Analysis, Statistical Distributions, Monte Carlo Methods
Qu, Wen; Liu, Haiyan; Zhang, Zhiyong – Grantee Submission, 2020
In social and behavioral sciences, data are typically not normally distributed, which can invalidate hypothesis testing and lead to unreliable results when being analyzed by methods developed for normal data. The existing methods of generating multivariate non-normal data typically create data according to specific univariate marginal measures…
Descriptors: Social Science Research, Statistical Distributions, Multivariate Analysis, Monte Carlo Methods
McNeish, Daniel – Journal of Experimental Education, 2018
Small samples are common in growth models due to financial and logistical difficulties of following people longitudinally. For similar reasons, longitudinal studies often contain missing data. Though full information maximum likelihood (FIML) is popular to accommodate missing data, the limited number of studies in this area have found that FIML…
Descriptors: Growth Models, Sampling, Sample Size, Hierarchical Linear Modeling
Finch, William Holmes; Hernandez Finch, Maria E. – AERA Online Paper Repository, 2017
High dimensional multivariate data, where the number of variables approaches or exceeds the sample size, is an increasingly common occurrence for social scientists. Several tools exist for dealing with such data in the context of univariate regression, including regularization methods such as Lasso, Elastic net, Ridge Regression, as well as the…
Descriptors: Multivariate Analysis, Regression (Statistics), Sampling, Sample Size
Huang, Francis L. – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2018
Cluster randomized trials involving participants nested within intact treatment and control groups are commonly performed in various educational, psychological, and biomedical studies. However, recruiting and retaining intact groups present various practical, financial, and logistical challenges to evaluators and often, cluster randomized trials…
Descriptors: Multivariate Analysis, Sampling, Statistical Inference, Data Analysis
McNeish, Daniel – Review of Educational Research, 2017
In education research, small samples are common because of financial limitations, logistical challenges, or exploratory studies. With small samples, statistical principles on which researchers rely do not hold, leading to trust issues with model estimates and possible replication issues when scaling up. Researchers are generally aware of such…
Descriptors: Models, Statistical Analysis, Sampling, Sample Size
Huang, Francis L. – Practical Assessment, Research & Evaluation, 2014
Clustered data (e.g., students within schools) are often analyzed in educational research where data are naturally nested. As a consequence, multilevel modeling (MLM) has commonly been used to study the contextual or group-level (e.g., school) effects on individual outcomes. The current study investigates the use of an alternative procedure to…
Descriptors: Hierarchical Linear Modeling, Regression (Statistics), Educational Research, Sampling
Citkowicz, Martyna; Hedges, Larry V. – Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness, 2013
In some instances, intentionally or not, study designs are such that there is clustering in one group but not in the other. This paper describes methods for computing effect size estimates and their variances when there is clustering in only one group and the analysis has not taken that clustering into account. The authors provide the effect size…
Descriptors: Multivariate Analysis, Effect Size, Sampling, Sample Size
Yagiz, Oktay; Aydin, Burcu; Akdemir, Ahmet Selçuk – Journal of Language and Linguistic Studies, 2016
This study reviews a selected sample of 274 research articles on ELT, published between 2005 and 2015 in Turkish contexts. In the study, 15 journals in ULAKBIM database and articles from national and international journals accessed according to convenience sampling method were surveyed and relevant articles were obtained. A content analysis was…
Descriptors: Journal Articles, Periodicals, Content Analysis, Research Design
Konstantopoulos, Spyros – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2011
Field experiments with nested structures assign entire groups such as schools to treatment and control conditions. Key aspects of such cluster randomized experiments include knowledge of the intraclass correlation structure and the sample sizes necessary to achieve adequate power to detect the treatment effect. The units at each level of the…
Descriptors: Sampling, Multivariate Analysis, Sample Size, Statistical Analysis
Peugh, James L.; Enders, Craig K. – Structural Equation Modeling: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2010
Cluster sampling results in response variable variation both among respondents (i.e., within-cluster or Level 1) and among clusters (i.e., between-cluster or Level 2). Properly modeling within- and between-cluster variation could be of substantive interest in numerous settings, but applied researchers typically test only within-cluster (i.e.,…
Descriptors: Structural Equation Models, Monte Carlo Methods, Multivariate Analysis, Sampling

Thompson, Bruce – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 1990
A Monte Carlo study involving 1,000 random samples from each of 64 different population matrices investigated bias in both canonical correlation and redundancy coefficients. Results indicate that the Wherry correction provides a reasonable solution to this problem and that canonical results are not as biased as has been believed. (TJH)
Descriptors: Error of Measurement, Monte Carlo Methods, Multivariate Analysis, Relationship

Dent, Clyde W.; And Others – Evaluation Review, 1993
A method is presented to use school-level attributes in sample description and random assignment of schools to conditions in drug prevention programs. Utility of archival data was examined using multivariate canonical techniques, and it was found that a small set of data could predict observed variations in drug use. (SLD)
Descriptors: Archives, Correlation, Drug Use, Elementary Secondary Education
Pollicino, Elizabeth B. – 1998
This paper outlines procedures used to derive variables from data in the National Survey of Postsecondary Faculty; these variables were then used to create measures not expressly included as items in that survey. The derived variables were used to examine faculty satisfaction in two contexts: first, the complexity of satisfaction, and second, the…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Factor Analysis, Faculty College Relationship, Higher Education
Eason, Sandra H.; Daniel, Larry G. – 1989
A framework for understanding methodological practices from the perspectives of internal validity, external validity, statistical control validity, and construct validity is presented. One hundred doctoral dissertations completed between 1980 and 1988 at a single urban public university were analyzed for various methodological practices and types…
Descriptors: Analysis of Variance, Cohort Analysis, Construct Validity, Doctoral Dissertations
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