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  2. Cohort (educational group) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cohort_(educational_group)

    A cohort is a group of students who work through a curriculum together to achieve the same academic degree together. Cohortians are the individual members of such a group. [1] [2] In a cohort, there is an expectation of richness to the learning process due to the multiple perspectives offered by the students. [3]

  3. Cohort study - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cohort_study

    Cohort studies differ from clinical trials in that no intervention, treatment, or exposure is administered to participants in a cohort design; and no control group is defined. Rather, cohort studies are largely about the life histories of segments of populations and the individual people who constitute these segments.

  4. Cohort - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cohort

    Cohort (statistics), a group of subjects with a common defining characteristic, for example age group; Cohort (floating point), a set of different encodings of the same numerical value; Cohort (taxonomy), in biology, one of the taxonomic ranks; Cohort study, a form of longitudinal study used in medicine and social science

  5. Learning community - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Learning_community

    A learning community is a group of people who share common academic goals and attitudes and meet semi-regularly to collaborate on classwork. Such communities have become the template for a cohort-based, interdisciplinary approach to higher education. This may be based on an advanced kind of educational or 'pedagogical' design. [1]

  6. Cohort (statistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cohort_(statistics)

    Case–control study versus cohort on a timeline. "OR" stands for "odds ratio" and "RR" stands for "relative risk".In statistics, epidemiology, marketing and demography, a cohort is a group of subjects who share a defining characteristic (typically subjects who experienced a common event in a selected time period, such as birth or graduation).

  7. Cohort analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cohort_analysis

    In cohort analysis, "each new group [cohort] provides the opportunity to start with a fresh set of users," [5] allowing the company to look at only the data that is relevant to the current query and act on it. For example, in eCommerce, customers who signed up in the last two weeks and who made a purchase may constitute a cohort.

  8. Multi-age classroom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multi-age_classroom

    Multi-age classrooms or composite classes are classrooms with students from more than one grade level. They are created because of the pedagogical choice of a school or school district. They are different from split classes which are formed when there are too many students for one class – but not enough to form two classes of the same grade ...

  9. Study group - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Study_group

    A group of students study in Currier House's dining hall. A study group is a small group of people who regularly meet to discuss shared fields of study. [1] These groups can be found in a high school or college/university setting, within companies, occasionally primary/junior school and sometimes middle school.