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Avoiding Bias When Estimating the Consistency and Stability of Value-Added School Effects

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  • George Leckie

    (University of Bristol)

Abstract

The traditional approach to estimating the consistency of school effects across subject areas and the stability of school effects across time is to fit separate value-added multilevel models to each subject or cohort and to correlate the resulting empirical Bayes predictions. We show that this gives biased correlations and these biases cannot be avoided by simply correlating “unshruken†or “reflated†versions of these predicted random effects. In contrast, we show that fitting a joint value-added multilevel multivariate response model simultaneously to all subjects or cohorts directly gives unbiased estimates of the correlations of interest. There is no need to correlate the resulting empirical Bayes predictions and indeed we show that this should again be avoided as the resulting correlations are also biased. We illustrate our arguments with separate applications to measuring the consistency and stability of school effects in primary and secondary school settings. However, our arguments apply more generally to other areas of application where researchers routinely interpret correlations between predicted random effects rather than estimating and interpreting these correlation directly.

Suggested Citation

  • George Leckie, 2018. "Avoiding Bias When Estimating the Consistency and Stability of Value-Added School Effects," Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, , vol. 43(4), pages 440-468, August.
  • Handle: RePEc:sae:jedbes:v:43:y:2018:i:4:p:440-468
    DOI: 10.3102/1076998618755351
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. George Leckie & Harvey Goldstein, 2011. "A note on ‘The limitations of school league tables to inform school choice’," Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series A, Royal Statistical Society, vol. 174(3), pages 833-836, July.
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    5. George Leckie & Harvey Goldstein, 2009. "The limitations of using school league tables to inform school choice," Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series A, Royal Statistical Society, vol. 172(4), pages 835-851, October.
    6. Leckie, George & Charlton, Chris, 2013. "runmlwin: A Program to Run the MLwiN Multilevel Modeling Software from within Stata," Journal of Statistical Software, Foundation for Open Access Statistics, vol. 52(i11).
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