Displaying results 1 - 14 of 14 (Go to Advanced Search)
Dataset
Part of Project: Embedding Working Memory Training within Math Problem Solving
Description: This file contains data associated with "Children’s Baseline Working Memory Moderates the Effects of Working Memory Training,” a paper submitted for publication by Lynn Fuchs, Sonya Sterba, Marcia Barnes, and Douglas Fuchs of Vanderbilt University.
Dataset
Part of Project: The Home Math Environment and Children's Math Achievment: A Meta-Analysis
Description: The data are in long form, with some studies having multiple lines and includes a sample of children ranging from 3.54 to 13.75 years old. The main effect size is the r, correlation coefficient, and the accompanying sample size is also included.
Dataset
Part of Project: Colorado Twin Project
Description: This is the Colorado Twin Dataset in Long Format
Dataset
Part of Project: Vanderbilt University Learning Disabilities Innovation Hub: Word Problems, Language, & Comorbid Learning Disabilities
Description: Nesting variables, treatment condition, demographics, pretest and posttest reading and math variables, text-structure knowledge for classmates of second-grade children with comorbid learning difficulty
Dataset
Part of Project: Embedding Working Memory Training within Math Problem Solving
Description: This file contains data associated with "Building Word-Problem Solving and Working Memory Capacity: A Randomized Controlled Trial Comparing Three Intervention Approaches", a publication in the Journal of Education Psychology (2022), 2022, Vol. 114, No. 7, 1633–1653.
Dataset
Part of Project: Embedding Working Memory Training within Math Problem Solving
Description: This file contains data associated with "Building Word-Problem Solving and Working Memory Capacity: A Randomized Controlled Trial Comparing Three Intervention Approaches," a publication in the Journal of Education Psychology (2022), 2022, Vol. 114, No. 7, 1633–1653.
Dataset
Part of Project: Project KIDS
Description: This data set includes all total scores, demographics, home literacy environment, etc. for Project KIDS. Data are in wide format, with separate variables for each wave of assessments. All 4038 participants are represented in the data.
Dataset
Part of Project: Florida Twin Project on Reading, Behavior, and Environment
Description: This dataset contains results from the first wave of surveys sent to parents of twin pairs in 2012.
Dataset
Part of Project: Florida Twin Project on Reading, Behavior, and Environment
Description: This dataset contains results from the second wave of surveys sent to parents of twin pairs in 2014.
Dataset
Part of Project: Florida Twin Project on Reading, Behavior, and Environment
Description: This dataset contains results from the third wave of surveys sent to parents of twin pairs in 2016.
Dataset
Part of Project: Florida Twin Project on Reading, Behavior, and Environment
Description: This dataset contains results from the wave 2 survey completed by the twins who were 9 and older about themselves, administered in 2012. This contains measures related to the child's home and school environment, attitudes regarding books, home, school, and friends, and several behavioral surveys (PANAS, CADS, etc.).
Dataset
Part of Project: Early Home Learning Environment
Description: These data are parent reports of survey questions about their beliefs and their children's home learning environments. Data are cross-sectional and include responses from parents with children ranging from 0 - 13 years of age.
Dataset
Part of Project: Math Achievement, Attitudes, and Anxiety
Description: Mathematics achievement, attitudes, and anxiety were longitudinally assessed for 342 (169 boys) adolescents from 7th to 9th grade, inclusive, and Latent Growth Curve Models were used to assess the relations among these traits and developmental change in them.
Dataset
Part of Project: Sex Differences in Mathematics Anxiety and Attitudes
Description: Sex differences in the strength of the relations between mathematics anxiety, mathematics attitudes, and mathematics achievement were assessed concurrently in sixth grade (n = 1,091, 545 boys) and longitudinally from sixth to seventh grade (n = 190, 97 boys).