Author

Xueqi Wang

Publication Date

7-12-2014

Abstract

Large entry-level courses are commonplace at public 2- and 4-year institutions of higher education (IHEs) across the United States. Low pass rates in these entry-level courses, coupled with tight budgets, have put pressure on IHEs to look for ways to teach more students more effectively at a lower cost. Efforts to improve student outcomes in such courses are often called ``course redesigns.' The difficulty arises in trying to determine the impact of a particular course redesign; true random-controlled trials are expensive and time-consuming, and few IHEs have the resources or patience to implement them. As a result, almost all evaluations of efforts to improve student success at scale rely on observational studies. At the same time, standard multilevel models may be inadequate to extract meaningful information from the complex and messy sets of student data available to evaluators because they throw away information by treating all passing grades equally. We propose a new Bayesian approach that keeps all grading information: a partially ordered multinomial probit model with random effects fit using a Markov Chain Monte Carlo algorithm, and a logit model that can be fit with importance sampling. Simulation studies show that the Bayesian Partially Ordered Probit/Logit Models work well, and the parameter estimation is precise in large samples. We also compared this model with standard models considering Mean Squared Error and the area under the Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curve. We applied these new models to evaluate the impact of a course redesign at a large public university using the students' grade data from the Fall semester of 2012 and the Spring semester of 2013.

Degree Name

Statistics

Level of Degree

Doctoral

Department Name

Mathematics & Statistics

First Committee Member (Chair)

Michael D. Sonksen

Second Committee Member

Kristin Umland

Third Committee Member

Erik Barry Erhardt

Fourth Committee Member

James P. Selig

Language

English

Keywords

Markov Chain Monte Carlo, latent variable models, multilevel logistic regression, model diagnostics, missing data

Document Type

Dissertation

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