Abstract
The problem motivating the paper is the quantification of students' preferences regarding teaching/coursework quality, under certain numerical restrictions, in order to build a model for identifying, assessing and monitoring the major components of the overall teaching quality. We propose a Bayesian hierarchical beta regression model, with a Dirichlet prior on the model coefficients. The coefficients of the model can then be interpreted as weights and thus they measure the relative importance that students give to the different attributes. This approach not only allows for the incorporation of informative prior when it is available but also provides user-friendly interfaces and direct probability interpretations for all quantities. Furthermore, it is a natural way to implement the usual constraints for the model coefficients. This model is applied to data collected in 2009 and 2013 from undergraduate students in the Panteion University, Athens, Greece and besides the construction of an instrument for the assessment and monitoring of teaching quality, it gave some input for a preliminary discussion on the association of the differences in students' preferences between the two time-periods with the current Greek socioeconomic transformation. Results from the proposed approach are compared with the ones obtained by two alternative statistical techniques.
Disclosure
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Supplemental data
The appendix for this article can be accessed at 10.1080/02664763.2015.1054793.
Notes
1. Individual decisions form a complete set of explanatory variables and therefore whatever happens can ultimately be described exhaustively in terms of the individuals involved.
2. We must note that according to methodological individualism the social groups of any form are not but sums of individuals and as a result the characteristics of these social groups can only be analyzed on the basis of the individual characteristics. For an analysis of the issue, see mainly Hodgson [Citation17], Watkins [Citation34], Arrow [Citation2], Hodgson [Citation18] and Udehn [Citation32]. Arrow [Citation2] himself, however, recognizes the limits of the extreme methodological individualism by accepting the inevitable adoption of social principles, arguing that economic theories require social elements even under the strictest acceptance of standard economic assumptions. Of course, methodological individualism collapses in cases where social phenomena, macroeconomic issues or aggregate variables cannot be analyzed in terms of individual behavior; see, for example, Blaug [Citation5].