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Effect Size in Education Research×प्रभाव आकार (Effect Size)×What Works Clearinghouse Standards×
क्षेत्रEducationअनुसंधान सांख्यिकीEducation
परिवारProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
उद्भव वर्ष198819882022
प्रवर्तकStatistical methodology (Cohen; Glass; Hedges & Olkin) applied in educationJacob CohenInstitute of Education Sciences (IES), U.S. Department of Education
प्रकारStandardized index of the magnitude of an effect or differenceConceptStandards and procedures for assessing the causal credibility of education studies
मौलिक स्रोतCohen, J. (1988). Statistical Power Analysis for the Behavioral Sciences (2nd ed.). Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. ISBN: 9780805802832Cohen, J. (1988). Statistical Power Analysis for the Behavioral Sciences (2nd ed.). Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. ISBN: 0-8058-0283-5What Works Clearinghouse. (2022). What Works Clearinghouse Procedures and Standards Handbook, Version 5.0. Institute of Education Sciences, U.S. Department of Education. link ↗
उपनामEducational Effect Size, Standardized Mean Difference in Education, Hedges' g in Education, Effect Size ReportingES, Cohen's d, standardized effect, practical significanceWWC Standards, WWC Evidence Standards, What Works Clearinghouse Review, WWC Study Rating
संबंधित243
सारांशAn effect size is a standardized, scale-free measure of the magnitude of a difference or relationship — how big an effect is, not just whether it is statistically significant. In education research it is the common currency for reporting intervention impacts and for combining studies in meta-analysis, with the standardized mean difference (Cohen's d, or its bias-corrected form Hedges' g) the most familiar. Effect sizes let researchers compare effects across studies, outcomes, and scales, and translate statistical results into terms practitioners can weigh.Effect size quantifies the magnitude of a research finding independent of sample size. While a p-value tells you whether a result is statistically significant, an effect size tells you how big the result is. Jacob Cohen formalized effect size measurement in behavioral sciences (1988), establishing standard benchmarks (small = 0.2, medium = 0.5, large = 0.8 for Cohen's d). Effect sizes are essential for meta-analysis, power analysis, and communicating the practical importance of research findings.The What Works Clearinghouse (WWC) standards are the protocol the U.S. Institute of Education Sciences uses to judge how much confidence an education study's findings deserve as causal evidence. They specify which designs can support causal claims, how to screen for threats such as attrition and confounding, and how to rate each study — Meets Standards Without Reservations, With Reservations, or Does Not Meet Standards — before synthesizing the body of evidence. The standards are a cornerstone of evidence-based education policy in the United States.
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