This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis via the DOI in this recordLord's Paradox occurs when a continuous covariate is statistically controlled for and the relationship between a continuous outcome and group status indicator changes in both magnitude and direction. This phenomenon poses a challenge to the notion of evidence-based policy, where data are supposed to be self-evident. We examined 50 effect size estimates from 34 large-scale educational interventions, and found that impact estimates are affected in magnitude, with or without reversal in sign, when there is substantial baseline imbalance. We also demonstrated that multilevel modelling can ameliorate the divergence in sign and/o...
Effect size is the basis of much evidence-based education policymaking. In particular, it is assumed...
Tu et al. (Emerg Themes Epidemiol 5:2, 2008. https://doi.org/10.1186/1742-7622-5-2) asserted that su...
Simpson’s paradox refers to the reversal of a statistical relationship between two variables in sub-...
Lord's Paradox occurs when a continuous covariate is statistically controlled for and the relationsh...
Lord's Paradox occurs when a continuous covariate is statistically controlled for and the relationsh...
Background Educational and developmental psychologists often examine how groups change over time. Tw...
Among the many peculiarities that were dubbed “paradoxes ” by well meaning statisticians, the one re...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2015Lord (1967) describes a hypothetical “paradox” in whic...
In this paper we review, and elaborate on, the literature on a regression artifact related to Lord's...
Evidence-based education aims to support policy makers choosing between potential interventions. Thi...
This article discusses three statistical paradoxes that pervade epidemiological research: Simpson&ap...
ABSTRACT: Tu et al present an analysis of the equivalence of three paradoxes, namely, Simpson's, Lor...
By applying four analytic models with comparable outcomes and covariates to a dataset of 20 outcomes...
Tu et al present an analysis of the equivalence of three paradoxes, namely, Simpson's, Lord's, and t...
Effect sizes are the statistic generated by meta-analyses, a commonly used statistic in education re...
Effect size is the basis of much evidence-based education policymaking. In particular, it is assumed...
Tu et al. (Emerg Themes Epidemiol 5:2, 2008. https://doi.org/10.1186/1742-7622-5-2) asserted that su...
Simpson’s paradox refers to the reversal of a statistical relationship between two variables in sub-...
Lord's Paradox occurs when a continuous covariate is statistically controlled for and the relationsh...
Lord's Paradox occurs when a continuous covariate is statistically controlled for and the relationsh...
Background Educational and developmental psychologists often examine how groups change over time. Tw...
Among the many peculiarities that were dubbed “paradoxes ” by well meaning statisticians, the one re...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2015Lord (1967) describes a hypothetical “paradox” in whic...
In this paper we review, and elaborate on, the literature on a regression artifact related to Lord's...
Evidence-based education aims to support policy makers choosing between potential interventions. Thi...
This article discusses three statistical paradoxes that pervade epidemiological research: Simpson&ap...
ABSTRACT: Tu et al present an analysis of the equivalence of three paradoxes, namely, Simpson's, Lor...
By applying four analytic models with comparable outcomes and covariates to a dataset of 20 outcomes...
Tu et al present an analysis of the equivalence of three paradoxes, namely, Simpson's, Lord's, and t...
Effect sizes are the statistic generated by meta-analyses, a commonly used statistic in education re...
Effect size is the basis of much evidence-based education policymaking. In particular, it is assumed...
Tu et al. (Emerg Themes Epidemiol 5:2, 2008. https://doi.org/10.1186/1742-7622-5-2) asserted that su...
Simpson’s paradox refers to the reversal of a statistical relationship between two variables in sub-...