POCLS publications
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Showing 111 - 120 of 170 items
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Australian Institute of Family Studies. (2017). Do Wave 1 participants differ from study-eligible non-participants? Results of non-response analyses (Report No. 3)
This report aims to shed light on whether response bias may have occurred and whether weighting of the data is necessary
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Wulczyn, F., Collins, L., Chen, L. and Huhr, S. (2017). Statistical Power, Selection Bias, and Non-response Correction (Report No. 5)
This report examines issues of statistical power, non-response bias, and survey weights if and when survey respondents differ from non-respondents
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2018 Methodology of Longitudinal Surveys II Conference, Essex UK. Overview of the Pathways of Care Longitudinal Study design and data collection.
Andy Cubie, Social Research Institute, Ipsos. Conference presentation.
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2018 Research to Practice Forum. Institute of Open Adoption Studies University of Sydney. POCLS design, data and analyses. Using longitudinal research to understand children’s outcomes
Marina Paxman and Joanna Hopkins. Family and Community Services NSW. Conference presentation.
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2018 Research to Practice Forum. Institute of Open Adoption Studies University of Sydney. A profile of foster care and kinship care in New South Wales
Professor Paul Delfabbro, University of Adelaide. Conference presentation.
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2018 Research to Practice Forum. Institute of Open Adoption Studies University of Sydney. Benefits on longitudinal research
Professor Judy Cashmore, University of Sydney. Conference presentation.
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2018 Research to Practice Forum. Institute of Open Adoption Studies University of Sydney. Data security and SURE data repository. Using longitudinal research to understand children’s outcomes.
Matt Gorringe, Sax Institute. Conference presentation.
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2018 Research to Practice Forum. Institute of Open Adoption Studies University of Sydney. Using longitudinal research to understand children’s outcomes.
Professor Paul Delfabbro, University of Adelaide. Conference presentation.
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CREATE Foundation NSW. (2011). CREATE consultation with young people in out-of-home care
Summarises feedback received from young people on methodology, topics to include in the survey and draft questions
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Paxman, M., Tully, L., Burke, S. and Watson, J. (2014). Pathways of Care Longitudinal Study on children and young people in out-of-home care in New South Wales. Family Matters, 94, p.15-28.
The Study protocol. The study tracks a cohort of all children entering OOHC for the first time in NSW between May 2010 and October 2011 using multiple data sources: surveys of children, caregivers, caseworkers, teachers [...]