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Ewen, Heidi H.; Rowles, Graham D.; Watkins, John F. – Educational Gerontology, 2012
This article reports on the Gerontology Doctoral Student Assessment Model (GDSAM), a comprehensive web-based system premised on developing an evaluation mechanism attuned to the special requirements of advanced graduate education at the doctoral level. The system focuses on longitudinal tracking of selected dimensions of intellectual,…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Gerontology, Doctoral Programs, Individual Development
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Hayward, E. Louise; Hutchinson, Carolyn – Assessment in Education: Principles, Policy & Practice, 2013
Scotland, in common with many other countries internationally, has paid considerable attention to the development of assessment for learning. Currently, schools in Scotland are engaged in a major programme of curriculum and assessment reform, entitled Curriculum for Excellence. As part of the reform process, there is concern amongst practitioners,…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Foreign Countries, Curriculum Development, Educational Change
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Ding, Weili; Lehrer, Steven F. – Education Economics, 2011
Proponents of class size reductions (CSRs) draw heavily on the results from Project Student/Teacher Achievement Ratio to support their initiatives. Adding to the political appeal of these initiative are reports that minority and economically disadvantaged students received the largest benefits from smaller classes. We extend this research in two…
Descriptors: Class Size, Student Attitudes, Economically Disadvantaged, Teacher Student Relationship
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Foster, E. Michael – Developmental Psychology, 2010
The relationship between complexity and usefulness can be captured by a U-shaped curve. This comment explores that relationship. Complexity may be useful for one of the main aims of developmental psychology (causal inference) but not for another (description of developmental phenomena). Currently, developmentalists conduct complex analyses that…
Descriptors: Inferences, Developmental Psychology, Models, Methods
Grays, Makayla – ProQuest LLC, 2013
Students must be sufficiently motivated in order to achieve the intended learning outcomes of their college courses. Research in education and psychology has found motivation to be context-dependent. Therefore, students' motivation is likely to differ from one semester to the next according to which courses students are taking. However, there are…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Student Motivation, Predictor Variables, Psychometrics
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Marder, Michael – Kappa Delta Pi Record, 2012
Using computers to evaluate teachers based on student test scores is more difficult than it seems. Value-added modeling is a genuinely serious attempt to grapple with the difficulties. Value-added modeling carries the promise of measuring teacher quality automatically and objectively, and improving school systems at minimal cost. The essence of…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Evidence, Expertise, Educational Change
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Zimmer, Ron; Gill, Brian; Booker, Kevin; Lavertu, Stephane; Witte, John – Economics of Education Review, 2012
Since their inception, charter schools have been a lighting rod for controversy, with much of the debate revolving around their effectiveness in improving student achievement. Previous research has shown mixed results for student achievement; this could be the consequence of different policy environments or varying methodological approaches with…
Descriptors: Charter Schools, Academic Achievement, School Effectiveness, Educational Improvement
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Chow, Meyrick; Herold, David Kurt; Choo, Tat-Ming; Chan, Kitty – Computers & Education, 2012
Learners need to have good reasons to engage and accept e-learning. They need to understand that unless they do, the outcomes will be less favourable. The technology acceptance model (TAM) is the most widely recognized model addressing why users accept or reject technology. This study describes the development and evaluation of a virtual…
Descriptors: Self Efficacy, Nursing Students, Intention, Electronic Learning
Feller, Andrew Lee – ProQuest LLC, 2010
Rapid growth in eBusiness has made industry and commerce increasingly dependent on the hardware and software infrastructure that enables high-volume transaction processing across the Internet. Large transaction volumes at major industrial-firm data centers rely on robust transaction protocols and adequately provisioned hardware capacity to ensure…
Descriptors: Industry, Internet, Computer Uses in Education, Simulation
Tominey, Emma – Centre for the Economics of Education (NJ1), 2010
How do shocks to parental income drive adolescent human capital, such as university attendance, IQ and health? Unexpected changes to family income may have a predictable effect on child adolescent outcomes, by shifting the money parents spend on human capital investments in their children. The extent to which consumers insure themselves against…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Family Income, Change, Children
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Katsikopoulos, Konstantinos V.; Schooler, Lael J.; Hertwig, Ralph – Psychological Review, 2010
Heuristics embodying limited information search and noncompensatory processing of information can yield robust performance relative to computationally more complex models. One criticism raised against heuristics is the argument that complexity is hidden in the calculation of the cue order used to make predictions. We discuss ways to order cues…
Descriptors: Heuristics, Computer Simulation, Cues, Prediction
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Camilli, Gregory – Educational Research and Evaluation, 2013
In the attempt to identify or prevent unfair tests, both quantitative analyses and logical evaluation are often used. For the most part, fairness evaluation is a pragmatic attempt at determining whether procedural or substantive due process has been accorded to either a group of test takers or an individual. In both the individual and comparative…
Descriptors: Alternative Assessment, Test Bias, Test Content, Test Format
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Sciulli, Dario; Signorelli, Marcello – European Journal of Higher Education, 2011
The article investigates the transitions of graduates of a middle-sized Italian university into the provincial labour market. University of Perugia administrative information and data from the job centres in the province are matched to reconstruct the timing of the university-to-work transitions of graduates since January 2004 to July 2009. Cox…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Education Work Relationship, College Graduates, Labor Market
Narayanaswamy, Balakrishnan – ProQuest LLC, 2011
This thesis deals with "large-scale" detection problems that arise in many real world applications such as sensor networks, mapping with mobile robots and group testing for biological screening and drug discovery. These are problems where the values of a large number of inputs need to be inferred from noisy observations and where the…
Descriptors: Group Testing, Measurement Techniques, Program Effectiveness, Mathematics
Deng, Nina – ProQuest LLC, 2011
Three decision consistency and accuracy (DC/DA) methods, the Livingston and Lewis (LL) method, LEE method, and the Hambleton and Han (HH) method, were evaluated. The purposes of the study were: (1) to evaluate the accuracy and robustness of these methods, especially when their assumptions were not well satisfied, (2) to investigate the "true"…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Test Theory, Computation, Classification
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