Regression Analyses and Education Production Functions: Can They Be Trusted?
- 1 September 1975
- journal article
- Published by Harvard Education Publishing Group in Harvard Educational Review
- Vol. 45 (3) , 325-350
- https://doi.org/10.17763/haer.45.3.661951r044l05128
Abstract
Many studies have purported to demonstrate that schooling has little independent impact on achievement and that administrators can do little to boost students'test scores. Daniel F. Luecke and Noel F. McGinn question such results and use variations of a computer simulation model to generate data sets similar to those collected by educational researchers. They subject the data generated to several kinds of aggregation procedures and regression analysis, and compare the statistics thus yielded with their knowledge of the causal relationships programmed into the data. They conclude that many "no significant effect" findings may be artifacts of statistical techniques used to analyze cross-sectional survey data.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
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- Problems in Making Policy Inferences from the Coleman ReportAmerican Sociological Review, 1970
- A Comparison of Four Methods of Obtaining Discrepancy Measures Based on Observed and Predicted School System Means on Achievement TestsAmerican Educational Research Journal, 1969