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Investigating the spatial linkage of primary school performance and catchment characteristics

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Investigating the spatial linkage of primary school performance and catchment characteristics. / Martin, David; Atkinson, Peter M.
In: Geographical and Environmental Modelling, Vol. 5, No. 1, 2001, p. 67-83.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Martin D, Atkinson PM. Investigating the spatial linkage of primary school performance and catchment characteristics. Geographical and Environmental Modelling. 2001;5(1):67-83. doi: 10.1080/13615930120032626

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Martin, David ; Atkinson, Peter M. / Investigating the spatial linkage of primary school performance and catchment characteristics. In: Geographical and Environmental Modelling. 2001 ; Vol. 5, No. 1. pp. 67-83.

Bibtex

@article{55be626ce31f4c49ba1f5743663d1d61,
title = "Investigating the spatial linkage of primary school performance and catchment characteristics",
abstract = "This paper is concerned explicitly with spatial aspects of primary school performance results in northern England. In particular, the effect of the data framework (e.g. the area of each individual observation and the spatial arrangement of observations as an ensemble) on observed relationships between school performance and catchment characteristics is investigated. This work is particularly relevant to the interpretation of more substantive studies involving observed relationships that necessarily depend upon the data framework. Five geometric approaches to catchment area definition are evaluated in conjunction with a simple regression model. These approaches to the spatial linkage problem are compared to an autoregressive modelling approach, in which the structure of the spatial data is treated as part of the modelling process rather than a separate spatial allocation problem.",
author = "David Martin and Atkinson, {Peter M.}",
note = "M1 - 1",
year = "2001",
doi = "10.1080/13615930120032626",
language = "English",
volume = "5",
pages = "67--83",
journal = "Geographical and Environmental Modelling",
issn = "1361-5939",
publisher = "Carfax Publishing Ltd.",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Investigating the spatial linkage of primary school performance and catchment characteristics

AU - Martin, David

AU - Atkinson, Peter M.

N1 - M1 - 1

PY - 2001

Y1 - 2001

N2 - This paper is concerned explicitly with spatial aspects of primary school performance results in northern England. In particular, the effect of the data framework (e.g. the area of each individual observation and the spatial arrangement of observations as an ensemble) on observed relationships between school performance and catchment characteristics is investigated. This work is particularly relevant to the interpretation of more substantive studies involving observed relationships that necessarily depend upon the data framework. Five geometric approaches to catchment area definition are evaluated in conjunction with a simple regression model. These approaches to the spatial linkage problem are compared to an autoregressive modelling approach, in which the structure of the spatial data is treated as part of the modelling process rather than a separate spatial allocation problem.

AB - This paper is concerned explicitly with spatial aspects of primary school performance results in northern England. In particular, the effect of the data framework (e.g. the area of each individual observation and the spatial arrangement of observations as an ensemble) on observed relationships between school performance and catchment characteristics is investigated. This work is particularly relevant to the interpretation of more substantive studies involving observed relationships that necessarily depend upon the data framework. Five geometric approaches to catchment area definition are evaluated in conjunction with a simple regression model. These approaches to the spatial linkage problem are compared to an autoregressive modelling approach, in which the structure of the spatial data is treated as part of the modelling process rather than a separate spatial allocation problem.

U2 - 10.1080/13615930120032626

DO - 10.1080/13615930120032626

M3 - Journal article

VL - 5

SP - 67

EP - 83

JO - Geographical and Environmental Modelling

JF - Geographical and Environmental Modelling

SN - 1361-5939

IS - 1

ER -