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Coleman, Janice – ProQuest LLC, 2008
A study was conducted to investigate the teaching methods valued and used by faculty in Arkansas public higher education institutions at the freshman and sophomore levels. The participants were 336 teachers who responded to a 21 item survey distributed to college teachers in Arkansas. The study sought to collect relevant demographic data and to…
Descriptors: Teaching Experience, Teaching Methods, Community Colleges, Higher Education
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Caulfield, Jay – International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2007
The purpose of this empirical research study was to investigate what motivates students to provide formative anonymous feedback to teachers regarding their perceptions of the teaching and learning experience in order to improve student learning. Expectancy theory, specifically Vroom's Model, was used as the conceptual framework for the study.…
Descriptors: Student Motivation, Student Evaluation of Teacher Performance, Feedback (Response), Expectation
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Wagner, Mary; Newman, Lynn; Cameto, Renee; Levine, Phyllis; Marder, Camille – National Center for Special Education Research, 2007
The National Longitudinal Transition Study-2 (NLTS2) was initiated to provide a national picture of the characteristics and experiences of youth with disabilities, including their self-representations, their schooling, their personal relationships, and their hopes for the future. This report presents findings drawn from the first time (2003) data…
Descriptors: Attitudes toward Disabilities, Expectation, Youth, Disabilities
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Liu, Yuliang – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2007
This comparative study was designed to investigate how online and traditional face-to-face (FtF) students used different learning styles in a graduate educational course. A nonequivalent control group design was employed. The study involved 19 students in an experimental group (online section) and 25 students in a control group (FtF section) in a…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Experimental Groups, Cognitive Style, Control Groups
Cazabon, Maria M. – ProQuest LLC, 2009
The purpose of this study was to examine students' levels of engagement in educational practices by enrollment status, time of enrollment, and size of college in community colleges. Specifically, this study assessed the quality of the undergraduate education through students' self-reported data about their academic and nonacademic activities. The…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Study, Extracurricular Activities, Community Colleges, Evening Programs
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Bernstein, Lawrence; Rappaport, Catherine Dun; Olsho, Lauren; Hunt, Dana; Levin, Marjorie – National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance, 2009
This report summarizes the findings from a national evaluation of mentoring programs funded under the U.S. Department of Education's Student Mentoring Program. The impact evaluation used an experimental design in which students were randomly assigned to a treatment or control group. Thirty-two purposively selected School Mentoring Programs and…
Descriptors: Control Groups, Research Design, School Schedules, Mentors
Johnston, Lloyd D.; O'Malley, Patrick M.; Bachman, Jerald G.; Schulenberg, John E. – National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), 2008
Since the mid-1960s, when illicit drug use burgeoned in the normal youth population, substance use by American young people has proven to be a rapidly changing phenomenon. Smoking, drinking, and illicit drug use are leading causes of morbidity and mortality, both during adolescence as well as later in life. How vigorously the nation responds to…
Descriptors: Stimulants, Substance Abuse, Smoking, Narcotics
Johnson, Colleen Cook; Rakow, Ernest A. – 1994
This research explored the degree to which group sizes can differ before the robustness of analysis of variance (ANOVA) and analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) are jeopardized. Monte Carlo methodology was used, allowing for the experimental investigation of potential threats to robustness under conditions common to researchers in education. The…
Descriptors: Analysis of Covariance, Analysis of Variance, Educational Research, Monte Carlo Methods
Thompson, Bruce – 1992
Conventional statistical significance tests do not inform the researcher regarding the likelihood that results will replicate. One strategy for evaluating result replication is to use a "bootstrap" resampling of a study's data so that the stability of results across numerous configurations of the subjects can be explored. This paper…
Descriptors: Analysis of Covariance, Analysis of Variance, Correlation, Discriminant Analysis
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Towse, John N.; Hitch, Graham J. – 1994
This paper summarizes an experiment conducted to examine the counting performance of 7- and 8-year-olds. Analysis of variance was computed on counting errors produced when enumerating a set of squares on a computer screen. The factors included in the analysis were age, gender, array size, error type, proximity, and error form. The primary…
Descriptors: Computation, Data Analysis, Data Interpretation, Error Patterns
Reinhardt, Brian M. – 1992
Statistical significance is often inappropriately equated with evaluating result importance and evaluating result replicability, even though these are three somewhat different issues. The prudent researcher must separately assess each of these elements of the "research triumvirate" by using different methods. This paper focuses on two…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Computer Uses in Education, Estimation (Mathematics), Heuristics
Tompkins, Phillip K. – 1983
Concerned with imprecision in researchers' use of the word, "interpretive," this report draws from the work of Max Weber to describe the characteristics of an interpretive science of organizational communication and then briefly lists some advantages of following the interpretive approach. First examining the role of subjective meaning…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Communication (Thought Transfer), Interpersonal Communication, Motivation
Braver, Sanford L.; Sheets, Virgil L. – 1990
Numerous designs using analysis of variance (ANOVA) to test ordinal hypotheses were assessed using a Monte Carlo simulation. Each statistic was computed on each of over 10,000 random samples drawn from a variety of population conditions. The number of groups, population variance, and patterns of population means were varied. In the non-null…
Descriptors: Analysis of Variance, Hypothesis Testing, Mathematical Models, Monte Carlo Methods
Thompson, Bruce; And Others – 1991
Problems with using stepwise analytic methods are discussed, and better alternatives are illustrated. To make the illustrations concrete, an actual data set, involving responses of 91 medical school admissions directors to 30 variables, was used. The 30 variables involved perceptions of barriers to medical school with respect to characteristics of…
Descriptors: Admissions Officers, Data Interpretation, Effect Size, Higher Education
Thayer, Jerome D. – 1986
A dichotomous dependent variable is used to determine a combination of variables that will predict group membership. Dichotomous variables are frequently encountered in multiple regression analysis. However, several textbooks question the appropriateness of using multiple regression analysis when analyzing dichotomous dependent variables. The…
Descriptors: Analysis of Covariance, Analysis of Variance, Discriminant Analysis, Multiple Regression Analysis
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