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Peer reviewedStock, William A.; And Others – Evaluation and the Health Professions, 1996
Guidelines are offered that make it more likely that high-quality information will be extracted and coded from primary research reports in meta-analyses. It is also noted that the methodology of meta-analysis results in pressure to change the type of information that appears in primary research reports. (SLD)
Descriptors: Coding, Data Analysis, Data Collection, Information Needs
Peer reviewedAllen, Mike – Journal of the Association for Communication Administration (JACA), 1996
Examines the relationship between teaching and research. Considers whether an emphasis on one or the other better serves the interests of communications departments. Adumbrates arguments suggesting that research undermines teaching and those suggesting the converse. Shares the results of a meta-analysis of existing research on the topic. Finds a…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Faculty Development, Faculty Publishing, Higher Education
Peer reviewedBennett, David S.; Gibbons, Theresa A. – Child & Family Behavior Therapy, 2000
This meta analysis reviewed 30 studies comparing child-based cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) for antisocial behavior. Results showed that child-based CBT interventions had a small to moderate effect in decreasing antisocial behavior. Future research directions, including the integration of individual training into group therapy and the…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Antisocial Behavior, Behavior Modification, Behavior Problems
Peer reviewedMcCartney, Kathleen; Rosenthal, Robert – Child Development, 2000
Shares three ideas concerning how to evaluate the practical importance of developmental findings to make them more useful to policymakers: (1) statistical significance tests need to be accompanied by effect size estimates; (2) meta-analyses are helping in using all existing data when examining issues involved in policy debates; and (3) researchers…
Descriptors: Child Development, Data Analysis, Developmental Psychology, Effect Size
Folkestad, Goran – Music Education Research, 2005
Most research in music education has so far dealt with music training in institutional settings, such as schools, and is accordingly based, either implicitly or explicitly, on the assumption that musical learning results from a sequenced, methodical exposure to music teaching within a formal setting. However, in order to realise and understand the…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Research Methodology, Music, Meta Analysis
Tsaparlis, Georgios – Research in Science & Technological Education, 2005
This work provides a correlation study of the role of the following cognitive variables on problem solving in elementary physical chemistry: scientific reasoning (level of intellectual development/developmental level), working-memory capacity, functional mental ("M") capacity, and disembedding ability (i.e., degree of perceptual field…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Meta Analysis, Intellectual Development, Correlation
McLeod, Bryce D.; Weisz, John R. – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 2004
The major youth psychotherapy meta-analyses have relied on published studies, which may have led to biased effect size estimates. To examine this possibility, the authors compared 121 dissertations with 134 published studies and found the following: (a) few differences on individual methodological variables, but, overall, stronger methodology in…
Descriptors: Psychotherapy, Integrity, Doctoral Dissertations, Effect Size
Lackner, Jeffrey M.; Mesmer, Christina; Morley, Stephen; Dowzer, Clare; Hamilton, Simon – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 2004
This study conducted a systematic review to assess the quality of existing literature on psychological treatments for irritable bowel syndrome and to quantify the evidence for their efficacy. Three independent reviewers (2 from England, 1 from the United States) coded the quality of 32 studies, 17 of which provided data suitable for meta-analysis.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Psychology, Meta Analysis, Psychosomatic Disorders
Hedges, Larry V.; Pigott, Therese D. – Psychological Methods, 2004
Calculation of the statistical power of statistical tests is important in planning and interpreting the results of research studies, including meta-analyses. It is particularly important in moderator analyses in meta-analysis, which are often used as sensitivity analyses to rule out moderator effects but also may have low statistical power. This…
Descriptors: Goodness of Fit, Multiple Regression Analysis, Effect Size, Statistical Analysis
Rhea, Matthew R.; Alderman, Brandon L. – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2004
The purpose of this study was to quantitatively combine and examine the results of studies examining the effectiveness of periodized (PER) compared to nonperiodized (Non-PER) training programs for strength and/or power development. Two analyses were conducted to (a) examine the magnitude of treatment effect elicited by PER strength training…
Descriptors: Participant Characteristics, Physiology, Effect Size, Meta Analysis
Kurby, Christopher A.; Britt, M. Anne; Magliano, Joseph P. – Reading Psychology: An International Quarterly, 2005
This study examined the extent to which readers integrate information from related texts as a function of both top-down evaluation processes and bottom-up resonance. In Experiment 1, participants read and recalled ambiguous texts about events that were preceded by a descriptive text (primer) of the event. Participants' recall of the ambiguous…
Descriptors: Evaluation Methods, Recall (Psychology), Reading Comprehension, Reading Processes
Greenberg, David H.; Michalopoulos, Charles; Robin, Philip K. – Journal of Policy Analysis and Management, 2006
This paper uses meta-analysis to investigate whether random assignment (or experimental) evaluations of voluntary government-funded training programs for the disadvantaged have produced different conclusions than nonexperimental evaluations. Information includes several hundred estimates from 31 evaluations of 15 programs that operated between…
Descriptors: Males, Program Effectiveness, Program Evaluation, Meta Analysis
Knudson, Duane – Physical Educator, 2005
As evidence-based practice sweeps the applied health professions, it is a good time to evaluate the generation of knowledge in Kinesiology and its transmission to professionals and the public. Knowledge transmission has been debated in the past from the perspectives of the theory-to-practice gap and the discipline versus profession emphasis.…
Descriptors: Allied Health Occupations Education, Theory Practice Relationship, Meta Analysis, Physical Education Teachers
Seligman, Laura D.; Ollendick, Thomas H.; Langley, Audra K.; Baldacci, Heidi Bechtoldt – Journal of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology, 2004
We evaluated the ability of the Revised Children?s Manifest Anxiety Scale (RCMAS), the State?Trait Anxiety Inventory for Children (STAIC), and the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) to (a) discriminate between youth with an anxiety disorder and youth without a disorder, (b) discriminate between youth with an anxiety disorder and youth with either…
Descriptors: Measures (Individuals), Child Behavior, Check Lists, Emotional Problems
Blitstein, Jonathan L.; Hannan, Peter J.; Murray, David M.; Shadish, William R. – Evaluation Review, 2005
This study describes a method for incorporating external estimates of intraclass correlation to improve the precision for the analysis of an existing group-randomized trial. The authors use a random-effects meta-analytic approach to pool the information across studies, which takes into account any interstudy heterogeneity that may exist. This…
Descriptors: Freedom, Computation, Correlation, Evaluation Research

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