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Luke Keele; Matthew Lenard; Lindsay Page – Journal of Research on Educational Effectiveness, 2024
In education settings, treatments are often non-randomly assigned to clusters, such as schools or classrooms, while outcomes are measured for students. This research design is called the clustered observational study (COS). We examine the consequences of common support violations in the COS context. Common support violations occur when the…
Descriptors: Intervention, Cluster Grouping, Observation, Catholic Schools
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Robinson, Daniel H.; Wainer, Howard – Educational Psychology Review, 2023
To date, there have been four responses (Dumas & Edelsbrunner, "Educational Psychology Review," 35, 48, 2023; Grosz, "Educational Psychology Review," 35, 57, 2023; Mayer, "Educational Psychology Review," 35, 64, 2023; Zitzmann et al., "Educational Psychology Review," 35, 65, 2023) to the Brady et al.…
Descriptors: Educational Psychology, Educational Research, Intervention, Statistical Analysis
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Raykov, Tenko; Menold, Natalja; Leer, Jane – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2022
Two- and three-level designs in educational and psychological research can involve entire populations of Level-3 and possibly Level-2 units, such as schools and educational districts nested within a given state, or neighborhoods and counties in a state. Such a design is of increasing relevance in empirical research owing to the growing popularity…
Descriptors: Hierarchical Linear Modeling, Computation, Statistical Analysis, Research Design
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Becker, Kirk; Meng, Huijuan – Journal of Applied Testing Technology, 2022
The rise of online proctoring potentially provides more opportunities for item harvesting and consequent brain dumping and shared "study guides" based on stolen content. This has increased the need for rapid approaches for evaluating and acting on suspicious test responses in every delivery modality. Both hiring proxy test takers and…
Descriptors: Identification, Cheating, Computer Assisted Testing, Observation
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Bradley, Holly; Smith, Beth A.; Wilson, Rujuta B. – Infant and Child Development, 2023
Joint attention (JA) is the purposeful coordination of an individual's focus of attention with that of another and begins to develop within the first year of life. Delayed, or atypically developing, JA is an early behavioural sign of many developmental disabilities and so assessing JA in infancy can improve our understanding of trajectories of…
Descriptors: Attention, Infants, Child Development, Qualitative Research
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Jeremy L. Hsu; Sara Gartland; Joelle Prate; Charles Hohensee – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2025
Quantitative reasoning (QR) is a key skill for undergraduate biology education. Despite this, many students struggle with QR. Here, we use the theoretical framework of student noticing to investigate why some students struggle with QR in introductory biology labs. Under this framework, what students notice when given new information and data…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Numeracy, Introductory Courses, Biology
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Lyrica Lucas; Anum Khushal; Robert Mayes; Brian A. Couch; Joseph Dauer – International Journal of Science Education, 2025
Educational reform priorities such as emphasis on quantitative modelling (QM) have positioned undergraduate biology instructors as designers of QM experiences to engage students in authentic science practices that support the development of data-driven and evidence-based reasoning. Yet, little is known about how biology instructors adapt to the…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, College Science, Biology, Classroom Observation Techniques
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Commeford, Kelley; Brewe, Eric; Traxler, Adrienne – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2022
The vast majority of research involving active learning pedagogies uses passive lecture methods as a baseline. We propose to move beyond such comparisons to understand the mechanisms that make different active learning styles unique. Here, we use COPUS observations to record student and instructor activities in six known styles of active learning…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Teaching Methods, Cognitive Style, Physics
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Podschuweit, Nicole – Research Ethics, 2021
This paper aims to bring into the ethical debate on covert research two aspects that are neglected to date: the perspective of the research subjects and the special responsibility of investigators towards their observers. Both aspects are falling behind, especially in quantitative social research. From a methodological point of view, quantitative…
Descriptors: Ethics, Observation, Responsibility, Research Assistants
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Baggetta, Matthew; Bredenkamp, David M. – Sociological Methods & Research, 2021
Scholars of civil society organizations (CSOs) have long been concerned with face-to-face interactions among participants at meetings, events, and activities--what we collectively call "convenings." Small-N ethnographies have uncovered substantial differences in the dynamics of convenings within and across CSOs. Large-N quantitative…
Descriptors: Observation, Community Organizations, Interaction, Group Dynamics
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Katz-Buonincontro, Jen; Anderson, Ross C. – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2020
This paper reports on an integrative literature review of published articles that used either quantitative or qualitative observation methods to research creativity in learning contexts. Observation is an empirical research method used in quantitative and qualitative naturalistic studies focused on understanding behavior and interactions as they…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Research Methodology, Qualitative Research, Statistical Analysis
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Wang, Yan; Rodríguez de Gil, Patricia; Chen, Yi-Hsin; Kromrey, Jeffrey D.; Kim, Eun Sook; Pham, Thanh; Nguyen, Diep; Romano, Jeanine L. – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2017
Various tests to check the homogeneity of variance assumption have been proposed in the literature, yet there is no consensus as to their robustness when the assumption of normality does not hold. This simulation study evaluated the performance of 14 tests for the homogeneity of variance assumption in one-way ANOVA models in terms of Type I error…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Statistical Analysis, Robustness (Statistics), Observation
Lindsay C. Page; Matthew A. Lenard; Luke Keele – Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, 2020
Clustered observational studies (COSs) are a critical analytic tool for educational effectiveness research. We present a design framework for the development and critique of COSs. The framework is built on the counterfactual model for causal inference and promotes the concept of designing COSs that emulate the targeted randomized trial that would…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Observation, Research Design, Statistical Analysis
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Lindsay C. Page; Matthew A. Lenard; Luke Keele – AERA Open, 2020
Clustered observational studies (COSs) are a critical analytic tool for educational effectiveness research. We present a design framework for the development and critique of COSs. The framework is built on the counterfactual model for causal inference and promotes the concept of designing COSs that emulate the targeted randomized trial that would…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Observation, Research Design, Statistical Analysis
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Dart, Evan H.; Radley, Keith C.; Briesch, Amy M.; Furlow, Christopher M.; Cavell, Hannah J.; Briesch, Amy M. – Behavioral Disorders, 2016
Two studies investigated the accuracy of eight different interval-based group observation methods that are commonly used to assess the effects of classwide interventions. In Study 1, a Microsoft Visual Basic program was created to simulate a large set of observational data. Binary data were randomly generated at the student level to represent…
Descriptors: Observation, Intervention, Simulation, Statistical Analysis
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