Conference Papers
Multilevel modelling for accountability systems in education
- Multilevel modelling for accountability systems in education
- 2006
- International Symposium on Methodological Tools for Accountability Systems in Education (2006: Ispra, Italy)
-
- Hong Kong
-
- 1997.7 onwards
-
- Unknown or Unspecified
- Data collected for accountability purposes often involve nested or hierarchical data structure. For instance, in the development of a value-added indicator system, achievement data are collected at the student-level but inferences are to be made at the school and system levels. Here, students are nested within classes, classes are nested within schools, and schools within regions. Since the late 1980s multilevel modelling has been used as a standard approach to handle such nested data structure. Research has shown that failure to apply multilevel models to nested data structure leads to wrong statistical inferences. Furthermore, much valuable information may be lost if the nested data structure is not modelled explicitly. In the last twenty years, the application of multilevel modelling has been extended to areas other than the handling of nested data structure. Multilevel modelling can now be applied for effective analysis of complicated data structures, including longitudinal data (e.g. growth trajectory), multivariate data (e.g. achievement in the four skills in the learning of English), discrete outcome data (e.g. students’ choice of entry to universities versus work), multiple membership data (e.g. the modelling of students’ mobility across schools in the estimation of the value added by schools to academic achievement), and cross-classified data structure (e.g. secondary schools taking students from a number of ‘feeder’ primary schools). The presentation will provide a non-technical introduction to multilevel modelling. Examples will be drawn from the value-added indicator system of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, and research on self-directed learning using the latest version of the MlwiN software package (Goldstein, 2003). Strengths and weaknesses of multilevel modelling will be discussed in the analyses of these real data.
- Paper presented at the International Symposium on Methodological Tools for Accountability Systems in Education
-
- English
- Conference Papers
- https://bibliography.lib.eduhk.hk/en/bibs/2601166b
- 2015-04-15
Recent Conference Papers
共同成功: 促進香港主流和非主流學生的福祉及學校與社會參與Conference Papers
語料庫在提升古代漢語教學效果中的角色Conference Papers
紀行致遠:香港融合教育回顧與展望Conference Papers
Comparing the effectiveness of an emotion regulation intervention for preservice teachers in Canada and Hong KongConference Papers
What we learnt from training Hong Kong teacher leaders about national educational system and development in mainland ChinaConference Papers
Closing the learning gap for ethnic minority children: A case study of early childhood education in Hong KongConference Papers
Supporting teacher leadership and growthConference Papers
Teaching Hong Kong literatureConference Papers