4.5 Article

Methodology in Our Education Research Culture: Toward a Stronger Collective Quantitative Proficiency

Journal

EDUCATIONAL RESEARCHER
Volume 39, Issue 3, Pages 229-240

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.3102/0013189X10365102

Keywords

doctoral education; effect sizes; graduate curriculum; quantitative methods; scientifically based research

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How doctoral programs train future researchers in quantitative methods has important implications for the quality of scientifically based research in education. The purpose of this article, therefore, is to examine how quantitative methods are used in the literature and taught in doctoral programs. Evidence points to deficiencies in quantitative training and application in several areas: (a) methodological reporting problems, (b) researcher misconceptions and inaccuracies, (c) overreliance on traditional methods, and (d) a lack of coverage of modern advances. An argument is made that a culture supportive of quantitative methods is not consistently available to many applied education researchers. Collective quantitative proficiency is defined as a vision for a culture representative of broader support for quantitative methodology (statistics, measurement, and research design).

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