Education Policy Analysis Archives (EPAA)
Files
Download Full Text (255 KB)
Publisher
Arizona State University, University of South Florida
Publication Date
July 2006
Abstract
The purpose of this article is to comment on the prior article entitled “Examining Instruction, Achievement and Equity with NAEP mathematics data,” by Sarah Theule Lubienski. That article claims that a prior article by the author suffered from three weaknesses: (1) An attempt to justify No Child Left Behind (NCLB); (2) drawing causal inferences from cross-sectional data; (3) and various statistical quibbles. The author responds to the first claim, by indicating that any mention of NCLB was intended purely to make the article relevant to a policy journal; to the second claim, by noting his own reservations about using cross-sectional data to draw causal inferences; and to the third claim by noting potential issues of quantitative methodology in the Lubienski article. He concludes that studies that use advanced statistical methods are often so opaque as to be difficult to compare, and suggests some advantages to the quantitative transparency that comes from the findings of randomly controlled field trials.
Keywords
Educational equalization, Mathematics--Study and teaching, National Assessment of Educational Progress (Project)
Extent
8
Volume
14
Issue
17
Language
English; Spanish
Media Type
Journals (Periodicals)
Format
Digital Only
Note
Citation: Wenglinsky, H. (2006). On ideology, causal inference and the reification of statistical methods: Reflections on “Examining instruction, achievement and equity with NAEP mathematics data.” Education Policy Analysis Archives, 14(17). Retrieved [date] from http://epaa.asu.edu/epaa/v14n17/.
Identifier
E11-00490
Creative Commons
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License.
Recommended Citation
Wenglinsky, Harold, "On Ideology, Casual Inference and the Reification of Statistical Methods: Reflections on "Examining Instruction, Achievement and Equity with NAEP Mathematics Data"" (2006). Education Policy Analysis Archives (EPAA). 204.
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/usf_EPAA/204