Publication Date
| In 2026 | 0 |
| Since 2025 | 822 |
| Since 2022 (last 5 years) | 4031 |
| Since 2017 (last 10 years) | 7947 |
| Since 2007 (last 20 years) | 13824 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
| Wang, Wen-Chung | 29 |
| de Jong, Ton | 28 |
| Chang, Hua-Hua | 24 |
| Meijer, Rob R. | 24 |
| Cohen, Allan S. | 23 |
| Nandakumar, Ratna | 23 |
| Mislevy, Robert J. | 22 |
| Sinharay, Sandip | 21 |
| Gwo-Jen Hwang | 20 |
| Reckase, Mark D. | 20 |
| Cai, Li | 18 |
| More ▼ | |
Publication Type
Education Level
Audience
| Practitioners | 1775 |
| Teachers | 1337 |
| Researchers | 451 |
| Students | 202 |
| Administrators | 123 |
| Policymakers | 72 |
| Community | 15 |
| Counselors | 14 |
| Media Staff | 14 |
| Parents | 10 |
| Support Staff | 6 |
| More ▼ | |
Location
| Australia | 374 |
| Turkey | 313 |
| United Kingdom | 271 |
| China | 269 |
| Canada | 255 |
| Taiwan | 233 |
| United States | 202 |
| Germany | 189 |
| Spain | 185 |
| California | 157 |
| Indonesia | 146 |
| More ▼ | |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
| Meets WWC Standards without Reservations | 4 |
| Meets WWC Standards with or without Reservations | 5 |
| Does not meet standards | 3 |
Zhang, Jinming; Lu, Ting – ETS Research Report Series, 2007
In practical applications of item response theory (IRT), item parameters are usually estimated first from a calibration sample. After treating these estimates as fixed and known, ability parameters are then estimated. However, the statistical inferences based on the estimated abilities can be misleading if the uncertainty of the item parameter…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Ability, Error of Measurement, Maximum Likelihood Statistics
Nishide, Ryo; Shima, Ryoichi; Araie, Hiromu; Ueshima, Shinichi – Journal of Educational Multimedia and Hypermedia, 2007
Evaluation experiments have been essential in exploring home delivery of lectures for which users can experience campus lifestyle and distant learning through 3D virtual space. This paper discusses the necessity of virtual space for distant learners by examining the effects of virtual space. The authors have pursued the possibility of…
Descriptors: Factor Analysis, Distance Education, Educational Environment, Program Evaluation
Hill, Jonnie Lynn – Simulation & Gaming, 2007
This article explores the simulation of four television quiz shows for students in China studying English as a foreign language (EFL). It discusses the adaptation and implementation of television quiz shows and how the students reacted to them.
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Television, Simulation, English (Second Language)
Guo, Jinhua; Xiang, Weidong; Wang, Shengquan – Journal of Information Technology Education, 2007
As networking systems have become more complex and expensive, hands-on experiments based on networking simulation have become essential for teaching the key computer networking topics to students. The simulation approach is the most cost effective and highly useful because it provides a virtual environment for an assortment of desirable features…
Descriptors: Simulation, Active Learning, Virtual Classrooms, Evaluation Methods
Ben-Zvi, Tal – Journal of Information Systems Education, 2007
In this study a business game is used as a vehicle for implementing decision support systems (DSS). Eighteen companies, consisting of ninety graduating M.B.A. students, participating in a business game were required to develop DSS and to report on the systems developed. Each of the eighteen companies developed a system of their own choosing,…
Descriptors: Business, Games, Simulation, Decision Support Systems
Tubbs, James – Science and Children, 2007
The kids in today's classrooms spend lots of time playing video games, surfing the net, listening to iPods, and text messaging on cell phones. Known as Digital Kids and the Net Generation, they have grown up surrounded by digital media of all types (Tapscott 1999). Because they are already knowledgeable, why not use digital technologies to capture…
Descriptors: Science Activities, Science Interests, Science Fairs, Interactive Video
Papanastasiou, Elena C.; Reckase, Mark D. – International Journal of Testing, 2007
Because of the increased popularity of computerized adaptive testing (CAT), many admissions tests, as well as certification and licensure examinations, have been transformed from their paper-and-pencil versions to computerized adaptive versions. A major difference between paper-and-pencil tests and CAT from an examinee's point of view is that in…
Descriptors: Simulation, Adaptive Testing, Computer Assisted Testing, Test Items
Foster, Andrea L. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
Immersive Education is a multimillion-dollar project devoted to build virtual-reality software exclusively for education within commercial and nonprofit fantasy spaces like Second Life. The project combines interactive three-dimensional graphics, Web cameras, Internet-based telephony, and other digital media. Some critics have complained that…
Descriptors: Video Games, Fantasy, Computer Software, Foreign Countries
Glas, C. A. W.; Dagohoy, Anna Villa T. – Psychometrika, 2007
A person fit test based on the Lagrange multiplier test is presented for three item response theory models for polytomous items: the generalized partial credit model, the sequential model, and the graded response model. The test can also be used in the framework of multidimensional ability parameters. It is shown that the Lagrange multiplier…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Goodness of Fit, Psychometrics, Models
Kuntzleman, Thomas S.; Swanson, Matthew S.; Sayers, Deborah K. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2007
An exercise is presented in which the kinetics of the irreversible "reaction" of pennies in the heads-up state to pennies in the tails-up state is simulated by a hands-on, Monte Carlo approach. In addition, the exercise incorporates a second simulation in which the irreversible "reaction" of dice with a red face uppermost to a blue face uppermost…
Descriptors: Monte Carlo Methods, Kinetics, Probability, Item Response Theory
Shieh, Gwowen – Psychometrika, 2007
The underlying statistical models for multiple regression analysis are typically attributed to two types of modeling: fixed and random. The procedures for calculating power and sample size under the fixed regression models are well known. However, the literature on random regression models is limited and has been confined to the case of all…
Descriptors: Sample Size, Monte Carlo Methods, Multiple Regression Analysis, Statistical Analysis
Hoshino, Takahiro – Psychometrika, 2007
Due to the difficulty in achieving a random assignment, a quasi-experimental or observational study design is frequently used in the behavioral and social sciences. If a nonrandom assignment depends on the covariates, multiple group structural equation modeling, that includes the regression function of the dependent variables on the covariates…
Descriptors: Structural Equation Models, Simulation, Observation, Behavioral Science Research
Kim, G. D.; Engelhardt, J. – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2007
A k-dimensional integer point is called visible if the line segment joining the point and the origin contains no proper integer points. This note proposes an explicit formula that represents the number of visible points on the two-dimensional [1,N]x[1,N] integer domain. Simulations and theoretical work are presented. (Contains 5 figures and 2…
Descriptors: Numbers, Number Concepts, Mathematical Formulas, Problem Solving
Perry, Jamie; Kuehn, David; Langlois, Rick – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2007
Learning real three-dimensional (3D) anatomy for the first time can be challenging. Two-dimensional drawings and plastic models tend to over-simplify the complexity of anatomy. The approach described uses stereoscopy to create 3D images of the process of cadaver dissection and to demonstrate the underlying anatomy related to the speech mechanisms.…
Descriptors: Physiology, Anatomy, Visual Aids, Computer Simulation
Kulick, George; Wright, Ronald – International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2008
Grading on the curve is a common practice in higher education. While there are many critics of the practice it still finds wide spread acceptance particularly in science classes. Advocates believe that in large classes student ability is likely to be normally distributed. If test scores are also normally distributed instructors and students tend…
Descriptors: Grading, Higher Education, Scores, Outcomes of Education

Peer reviewed
Direct link
