1. Ecometrics: Toward a Science of Assessing Ecological Settings, with Application to the Systematic Social Observation of Neighborhoods
- 1 August 1999
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Sociological Methodology
- Vol. 29 (1) , 1-41
- https://doi.org/10.1111/0081-1750.00059
Abstract
This paper considers the quantitative assessment of ecological settings such as neighborhoods and schools. Available administrative data typically provide useful but limited information on such settings. We demonstrate how more complete information can be reliably obtained from surveys and observational studies. Survey-based assessments are constructed by aggregating over multiple item responses of multiple informants within each setting. Item and rater inconsistency produce uncertainty about the setting being assessed, with definite implications for research design. Observation-based assessments also have a multilevel error structure. The paper describes measures constructed from interviews, direct observations, and videotapes of Chicago neighborhoods and illustrates an “ecometric” analysis—a study of bias and random error in neighborhood assessments. Using the observation data as an illustrative example, we present a three-level hierarchical statistical model that identifies sources of error in aggregating across items within face-blocks and in aggregating across face-blocks to larger geographic units such as census tracts. Convergent and divergent validity are evaluated by studying associations between the observational measures and theoretically related measures obtained from the U.S. Census, and a citywide survey of neighborhood residentsKeywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Multilevel Factor Analysis of Class and Student Achievement ComponentsJournal of Educational Measurement, 1991
- A Multilevel, Multivariate Model for Studying School Climate With Estimation Via the EM Algorithm and Application to U.S. High-School DataJournal of Educational Statistics, 1991
- Fear of Crime in Urban Residential Neighborhoods: Implications of Between- and Within-Neighborhood Sources for Current ModelsThe Sociological Quarterly, 1991
- Generalized Linear Models with Random Effects; a Gibbs Sampling ApproachJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1991
- Growing Up in Poor Neighborhoods: How Much Does It Matter?Science, 1989
- Community Structure and Crime: Testing Social-Disorganization TheoryAmerican Journal of Sociology, 1989
- Block Crime and Fear: Defensible Space, Local Social Ties, and Territorial FunctioningJournal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, 1984
- PSYCHOMETRIC IMPLICATIONS OF THE UNIT‐OF‐ANALYSIS PROBLEM (WITH EXAMPLES FROM THE MEASUREMENT OF ORGANIZATIONAL CLIMATE)Journal of Educational Measurement, 1980
- Systematic Observation of Natural Social PhenomenaSociological Methodology, 1971