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Cherasaro, Trudy L.; Brodersen, R. Marc; Reale, Marianne L.; Yanoski, David C. – Regional Educational Laboratory Central, 2016
The importance of teacher effectiveness is well supported by studies that document variation in teachers' abilities to contribute to student achievement gains. All else being equal, students taught by some teachers experience greater achievement gains than do students taught by other teachers. In response to initiatives to increase educator…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Teacher Evaluation, Feedback (Response), Teacher Effectiveness
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Stuit, David; Lindsay, Jim; Loney, Emily – Regional Educational Laboratory Midwest, 2016
This study analyzed data on students in three Ohio school districts who had completed grades 8 and 9 to determine which data elements were the most accurate indicators of students' failure to graduate from high school on time. The most accurate indicators varied by district and grade level, which underscores the importance of having school systems…
Descriptors: Dropout Prevention, Academic Failure, Graduation, Accuracy
Kuch, Frederick H. – ProQuest LLC, 2012
Typically in calibration research, subjects perform a task and make a judgment about the success of the task. Accurate findings help subjects improve self-calibration. In addition, researchers rely on the accuracy of findings to make inferences about underlying metacognitive processes. Consequently, it is important that the measures used to assess…
Descriptors: Statistical Bias, Accuracy, Monte Carlo Methods, Statistics
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Shelton, Amy Lynne; Clements-Stephens, Amy M.; Lam, Wai Yim; Pak, Diana M.; Murray, Alexandra J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2012
Real-world perspective-taking problems frequently involve interactions among individuals, suggesting a potential social element to this seemingly spatial problem. Previous studies have suggested that the agency of the target in a perspective-taking task might influence reasoning. This hypothesis is tested directly by manipulating whether one takes…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Competence, Perspective Taking, Spatial Ability, Young Adults
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Waubert de Puiseau, Berenike; Assfalg, Andre; Erdfelder, Edgar; Bernstein, Daniel M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2012
Eyewitnesses often report details of the witnessed crime incorrectly. However, there is usually more than 1 eyewitness observing a crime scene. If this is the case, one approach to reconstruct the details of a crime more accurately is aggregating across individual reports. Although aggregation likely improves accuracy, the degree of improvement…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Memory, Differences, Models
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Picard, Delphine; Lebaz, Samuel – Journal of Visual Impairment & Blindness, 2012
The topic of tangible drawings for individuals who are blind is an important one to the field of visual impairment. However, it has not been addressed so far in a literature review. In this article, the authors review the selected literature on tactile picture naming and provide a quantitative look at this literature by presenting results related…
Descriptors: Assistive Technology, Visual Aids, Blindness, Literature Reviews
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Moutsopoulou, Karolina; Waszak, Florian – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012
The differential effects of task and response conflict in priming paradigms where associations are strengthened between a stimulus, a task, and a response have been demonstrated in recent years with neuroimaging methods. However, such effects are not easily disentangled with only measurements of behavior, such as reaction times (RTs). Here, we…
Descriptors: Priming, Responses, Reaction Time, Accuracy
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Slezak, Diego Fernandez; Sigman, Mariano – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2012
The time spent making a decision and its quality define a widely studied trade-off. Some models suggest that the time spent is set to optimize reward, as verified empirically in simple-decision making experiments. However, in a more complex perspective compromising components of regulation focus, ambitions, fear, risk and social variables,…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Reaction Time, Accuracy, Games
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Levy, Joshua; Hoover, Elizabeth; Waters, Gloria; Kiran, Swathi; Caplan, David; Berardino, Alex; Sandberg, Chaleece – American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 2012
Purpose: Prior studies of discourse comprehension have concluded that the deficits of persons with aphasia (PWA) in syntactically based comprehension of sentences in isolation are not predictive of deficits in comprehension of sentences in discourse (Brookshire & Nicholas, 1984; Caplan & Evans, 1990). However, these studies used semantically…
Descriptors: Aphasia, Sentences, Semantics, Syntax
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Butler, Lucas P.; Markman, Ellen M. – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2012
In making causal inferences, children must both identify a causal problem and selectively attend to meaningful evidence. Four experiments demonstrate that verbally framing an event ("Which animals make Lion laugh?") helps 4-year-olds extract evidence from a complex scene to make accurate causal inferences. Whereas framing was unnecessary when…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Inferences, Evidence, Logical Thinking
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Ullen, Fredrik; Soderlund, Therese; Kaaria, Lenita; Madison, Guy – Intelligence, 2012
Intelligence correlates with accuracy in various timing tasks. Such correlations could be due to both bottom-up mechanisms, e.g. neural properties that influence both temporal accuracy and cognitive processing, and differences in top-down control. We have investigated the timing-intelligence relation using a simple temporal motor task, isochronous…
Descriptors: Accuracy, Intelligence, Time, Motivation
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Holling, Heinz; Bohning, Walailuck; Bohning, Dankmar – Psychometrika, 2012
Meta-analysis of diagnostic studies experience the common problem that different studies might not be comparable since they have been using a different cut-off value for the continuous or ordered categorical diagnostic test value defining different regions for which the diagnostic test is defined to be positive. Hence specificities and…
Descriptors: Diagnostic Tests, Accuracy, Nonparametric Statistics, Meta Analysis
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Warmbrod, J. Robert – Journal of Agricultural Education, 2014
Forty-nine percent of the 706 articles published in the "Journal of Agricultural Education" from 1995 to 2012 reported quantitative research with at least one variable measured by a Likert-type scale. Grounded in the classical test theory definition of reliability and the tenets basic to Likert-scale measurement methodology, for the…
Descriptors: Agricultural Education, Educational Research, Periodicals, Journal Articles
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Trikalinos, Thomas A.; Hoaglin, David C.; Small, Kevin M.; Terrin, Norma; Schmid, Christopher H. – Research Synthesis Methods, 2014
Existing methods for meta-analysis of diagnostic test accuracy focus primarily on a single index test. We propose models for the joint meta-analysis of studies comparing multiple index tests on the same participants in paired designs. These models respect the grouping of data by studies, account for the within-study correlation between the tests'…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Diagnostic Tests, Accuracy, Comparative Analysis
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Arnott, Wendy; Goli, Tara; Bradley, Andrew; Smith, Andrew; Wilson, Wayne – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2014
Purpose: In the present study, the authors aimed to investigate the language confounds of filtered words tests by examining the repetition of real words versus nonsense words as a function of level of filtering. Method: Fifty-five young, native-English-speaking women with normal hearing were required to repeat 80 real-word and 80 nonsense-word…
Descriptors: Females, Language Tests, Native Speakers, English
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