Back to Search Start Over

Multilevel Modeling: A Review of Methodological Issues and Applications

Authors :
John M. Ferron
Jeffrey D. Kromrey
Kristine Y. Hogarty
Thomas R. Lang
John D. Niles
Robert F. Dedrick
Reginald S. Lee
Melinda R. Hess
Source :
Review of Educational Research. 79:69-102
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
American Educational Research Association (AERA), 2009.

Abstract

This study analyzed the reporting of multilevel modeling applications of a sample of 99 articles from 13 peer-reviewed journals in education and the social sciences. A checklist, derived from the methodological literature on multilevel modeling and focusing on the issues of model development and specification, data considerations, estimation, and inference, was used to analyze the articles. The most common applications were two-level models where individuals were nested within contexts. Most studies were non-experimental and used nonprobability samples. The amount of data at each level varied widely across studies, as did the number of models examined. Analyses of reporting practices indicated some clear problems, with many articles not reporting enough information for a reader to critique the reported analyses. For example, in many articles, one could not determine how many models were estimated, what covariance structure was assumed, what type of centering if any was used, whether the data were consistent with assumptions, whether outliers were present, or how the models were estimated. Guidelines for researchers reporting multilevel analyses are provided.

Details

ISSN :
19351046 and 00346543
Volume :
79
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Review of Educational Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........981b5f6a16c8e03995a809b950b535fe
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3102/0034654308325581