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PowerUpR (version 0.1.2)

power.cra3r3: Model 3.2: Statistical Power Calculator for 3-Level Cluster Random Assignment Designs, Treatment at Level 3

Description

power.cra3r3 calculates statistical power for designs with 3-levels where level 3 units are randomly assigned to treatment and control groups.

Usage

power.cra3r3(mdes=.25, alpha=.05, two.tail=TRUE, rho2, rho3, P=.50, g3=0, R12=0, R22=0, R32=0, n, J, K, ...)

Arguments

mdes
minimum detectable effect size.
alpha
probability of type I error.
two.tail
logical; TRUE for two-tailed hypothesis testing, FALSE for one-tailed hypothesis testing.
rho2
proportion of variance in the outcome explained by level 2 units.
rho3
proportion of variance in the outcome explained by level 3 units.
P
proportion of level 3 units randomly assigned to treatment.
g3
number of covariates at level 3.
R12
proportion of level 1 variance in the outcome explained by level 1 covariates.
R22
proportion of level 2 variance in the outcome explained by level 2 covariates.
R32
proportion of level 3 variance in the outcome explained by level 3 covariates.
n
harmonic mean of level 1 units across level 2 units (or simple average).
J
harmonic mean of level 2 units across level 3 units (or simple average).
K
level 3 sample size.
...
to handle extra parameters passed from other functions, do not define any additional parameters.

Value

Details

Power formula was derived within power analysis framework descibed by Hedges & Rhoads (2009). Further definition of design parameters can be found in Dong & Maynard (2013).

References

Dong & Maynard (2013). PowerUp!: A Tool for Calculating Minum Detectable Effect Sizes and Minimum Required Sample Sizes for Experimental and Quasi-Experimental Design Studies,Journal of Research on Educational Effectiveness, 6(1), 24-6.

Hedges, L. & Rhoads, C.(2009). Statistical Power Analysis in Education Research (NCSER 2010-3006). Washington, DC: National Center for Special Education Research, Institute of Education Sciences, U.S. Department of Education. This report is available on the IES website at http://ies.ed.gov/ncser/.

See Also

mdes.cra3r3, mrss.cra3r3, optimal.cra3r3

Examples

Run this code
## Not run: 
# 
#     power.cra3r3(rho3=.06, rho2=.17,
#                  n=15, J=3, K=60)
# 
#   ## End(Not run)

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