The Implications of Meta‐analysis for Educational Research
Open Access
- 1 February 1985
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in British Educational Research Journal
- Vol. 11 (1) , 45-49
- https://doi.org/10.1080/0141192850110105
Abstract
Meta‐analysis, as developed over the last few years by Glass and others, is a quantitative method for synthesising research results. Its use is illustrated here by means of examples ranging from irreproachable to dubious. Being simple to use and easily understood, meta‐analysis will undoubtedly become popular and this increasing use may well bring about some notable changes. The well‐controlled, small‐scale experiment is likely to become more important and better use will be made of many existing research reports, reports which can now be dusted off and incorporated into meta‐analyses. Because meta‐analysis focuses on how much difference something makes (the magnitude of an effect) and not on whether or not the difference was statistically significant at a pre‐specified level, its use encourages a more scientific approach to the interpretation of quantitative results. It also offers some hope that we might eventually have a clearer idea of the conditions under which research findings can be generalised. Progress in this direction will require mutual support between quantitative and qualitative research methods.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Pupil Tutoring: the educational conjuring trickEducational Review, 1982
- Educational Outcomes of Tutoring: A Meta-analysis of FindingsAmerican Educational Research Journal, 1982
- Individual and Teacher/Class Effects in Aptitude Treatment StudiesAmerican Educational Research Journal, 1980
- Policy for the Unpredictable (Uncertainty Research and Policy)Educational Researcher, 1979
- Meta-Analysis of Research on Class Size and AchievementEducational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 1979
- The Case Against Statistical Significance TestingHarvard Educational Review, 1978
- A note on class effects in Aptitude × Treatment interactions.Journal of Educational Psychology, 1978
- Tutoring by StudentsThe School Review, 1969