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William L. Sanders (26 April 1942 [1] – 16 March 2017) was an American statistician, a senior research fellow with the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.He developed the Tennessee Value-Added Assessment System (TVAAS), also known as the Educational Value-Added Assessment System (EVAAS), a method for measuring a teacher's effect on student performance by tracking the progress of ...
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William Sanders (statistician) (1942–2017), senior research fellow with the University of North Carolina William Sanders (writer) (1942–2017), American speculative fiction writer William David Sanders (1951–1999), U.S. teacher and victim of Columbine High School massacre
Sanders married Louann H. Feuille on May 18, 1974 in El Paso. [9] They have two sons and three daughters. Sanders' middle daughter, Amy, is the wife of Beto O'Rourke , former Democratic U.S. Rep. of Texas's 16th congressional district .
Peirce, Charles Sanders: American: 1839: 1914: Formulated modern statistics in "Illustrations of the Logic of Science" (1877–1878) and "A Theory of Probable Inference" (1883). With a repeated measures design, introduced blinded, controlled randomized experiments (before Fisher).
William Sanders Scarborough (February 16, 1852 – September 9, 1926) was an American classical scholar and academic administrator. He is generally thought to be the first African American classical scholar.
Captain William Stephen Sanders CBE [1] (2 January 1871 – 6 February 1941) was a British Labour Party politician. Sanders married Beatrice Martin , who later became a prominent suffragette. [ 2 ] Both were active members of the Union of Ethical Societies (now Humanists UK ), with Sanders writing and lecturing widely on its behalf, and acting ...
Sanders served in the U.S. Army in Korea as a mortar platoon leader and, later, as the commanding officer of the Pacific Stars and Stripes Army Unit in Seoul (1955–1957). He took his separation from the Army in Japan and worked as a Department of the Army civilian reporter-artist for Pacific Stars and Stripes in Tokyo (1957–1958).