Matthew Courtney

Work place: Assessment Research Centre Melbourne Graduate School of Education Level 8, 100 Leicester Street, The University of Melbourne, Victoria 3010 Australia

E-mail: matthew.courtney@unimelb.edu.au

Website:

Research Interests:

Biography

Dr. Matthew Courtney was born in New Zealand and completed his PhD in Education from The University of Auckland in 2015. Matthew's skills and expertise lie in the fields of educational measurement, statistics, quantitative research designs in education, and the social sciences. He has multiple peer-reviewed journal publications, several book chapters, and experience as a masters and doctoral supervisor. Matthew’s area of interest is quite broad having taken part in projects related to the quantitative modelling of child and adult learning and development across Australasia and Africa. 

Author Articles
Educational Data Mining: A Case Study Perspectives from Primary to University Education in Australia

By B.M. Monjurul Alom Matthew Courtney

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5815/ijitcs.2018.02.01, Pub. Date: 8 Feb. 2018

At present there is an increasing emphasis on both data mining and educational systems, making educational data mining a novel emerging field of research. Educational data mining (EDM) is an attractive interdisciplinary research domain that deals with the development of methods to utilise data originating in an educational context. EDM uses computational methodologies to evaluate educational data in order to study educational questions. The first part of this paper introduces EDM, describes the different types of educational data environments, diverse phases of EDM, the applications and goals of EDM, and some of the most promising future lines of research. Using EDM, the second part of this paper tracks students in Australia from primary school Year 1 through to successful completion of high school, and, thereafter, enrolment in university. The paper makes an assessment of the role of student gender on successive rates of educational completion in Australia. Implications for future lines of enquiry are discussed.

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