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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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Joshi, Ruchika; McManus, Jeffery; Nagpal, Karan; Fraker, Andrew – Field Methods, 2023
We examine the use of publicly available voter rolls for household survey sampling as an alternative to household listings or field-based sampling methods. Using voter rolls for sampling can save most of the cost of constructing a sampling frame relative to a household listing, but there is limited evidence about their accuracy and completeness.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Voting, Sampling, Surveys
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Geoffrey Walford – Ethnography and Education, 2024
It is now half a century since Joey explained to Paul Willis: 'Vandalising […] that's the opposite of boredom -- excitement, defying the law', one of many similar comments subsequently recorded in "Learning to Labour" (34). The book rapidly became an academic best-seller, and has since become an academic 'national treasure'. But, before…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Ethnography, Books, Educational Research
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Molina, José Luis; Lubbers, Miranda J.; Hâncean, Marian-Gabriel; Fradejas-García, Ignacio – Field Methods, 2022
Thanks to the latest developments in network-oriented sampling, it is now possible to measure "transnational social fields," or emergent social structures that connect places or regions in different countries. These structures are instrumental in explaining sociocultural phenomena like the emergence of ethnic or demographic enclaves,…
Descriptors: Social Structure, Sociocultural Patterns, Sampling, Foreign Countries
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Blasko, Alyssa M.; Morin, Kristi L.; Bauer, Kathleen; Johnson, Kelsey M.; Enriquez, Grace B.; Hunsicker, Lindsey E.; Tasik, Emily J.; Renz, Theodore E., III – Journal of Special Education, 2023
Most disability research is conducted in high-income countries, despite much of the world's population living in low- and middle-income countries. Given the flexible nature of qualitative research, studies using this methodology have the potential to provide important insights into how disability is perceived across the globe. The aim of the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Disabilities, Research, Research Methodology
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Buchanan, Ryan M.; Cook, Charlotte; Khakoo, Salim I.; Parkes, Julie – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2022
In this study, we collected mixed method social network data alongside a survey of people who inject drugs (PWID) to assess key assumptions of respondent-driven sampling (RDS). We found adherence to some assumptions and non-adherence to others. Specifically, sampling did occur through a connected network of PWID and the reported degree size of…
Descriptors: Drug Abuse, Sampling, Social Networks, Surveys
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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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Vinay Kumar Yadav; Shakti Prasad – Measurement: Interdisciplinary Research and Perspectives, 2024
In sample survey analysis, accurate population mean estimation is an important task, but traditional approaches frequently ignore the intricacies of real-world data, leading to biassed results. In order to handle uncertainties, indeterminacies, and ambiguity, this work presents an innovative approach based on neutrosophic statistics. We proposed…
Descriptors: Sampling, Statistical Bias, Predictor Variables, Predictive Measurement
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Jamelia Harris – Field Methods, 2024
Not knowing the population size is a common problem in data-limited contexts. Drawing on work in Sierra Leone, this short take outlines a four-step solution to this problem: (1) estimate the population size using expert interviews; (2) verify estimates using interviews with participants sampled; (3) triangulate using secondary data; and (4)…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Sample Size, Surveys, Computation
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Ebru Dogruöz; Hülya Kelecioglu – International Journal of Assessment Tools in Education, 2024
In this research, multistage adaptive tests (MST) were compared according to sample size, panel pattern and module length for top-down and bottom-up test assembly methods. Within the scope of the research, data from PISA 2015 were used and simulation studies were conducted according to the parameters estimated from these data. Analysis results for…
Descriptors: Adaptive Testing, Test Construction, Foreign Countries, Achievement Tests
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Dogan, Esra; Bay, Erdal; Dös, Bülent – International Education Studies, 2023
This study analyzed studies done in Turkey in the context of curriculum evaluation (CE) by asking, "How is it made? The study was carried out in two stages. In the first stage, the document analysis method used 215 theses written between 1991 and 2020 on CE were analyzed according to the "thesis review form." In the second stage,…
Descriptors: Curriculum Evaluation, Evaluation Methods, Foreign Countries, Theses
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Dunn, Peter K.; Marshman, Margaret – Australian Mathematics Education Journal, 2022
The authors discuss the use of surveys for collecting data from a population sample and emphasise the importance of being careful with the language of data collection. [For "The Data Files 5: Graphs for Exploring Relationships," see EJ1355504.]
Descriptors: Surveys, Data Collection, Statistics Education, Foreign Countries
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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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Suich, Helen; Yap, Mandy; Pham, Trang – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2022
This paper uses Individual Deprivation Measure data from Indonesia and South Africa to demonstrate the effects of coverage bias associated with mobile phone-based sampling and data collection approaches that restrict sampling frames to those who own or have access to a mobile phone -- a increasingly common method. Analysis of this data…
Descriptors: Bias, Handheld Devices, Telecommunications, Sampling
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Bott, Franziska M.; Meiser, Thorsten – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2020
Pseudocontingencies are inferences of correlations between variables, like two options and two outcomes, drawn on the basis of their skewed base rates covarying across a third variable (e.g., two contexts). Here, we investigated the effect of pseudocontingency inference on choice behavior. When choices between two options are not based on the…
Descriptors: Inferences, Selection, Sampling, Correlation
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