Dear Colleagues
It is not too late to register for the European Consortium for Political Research Summer School in Methods and Techniques hosted by Central European University in Budapest, Hungary (July 27 - Aug 12)
With many SEM related (and other including qualitative) courses on offer, and held at Budapest, the European capital with all that a European capital has to offer but without the price tag, this is a methods school you really should check out. Launched as a methods school for political scientists but grew into an interdisciplinary and multi-method event. Reasonable course prices with additional deep discounts for ECPR member institutions. (Check here if your institution is a member. You may be surprised: https://ecpr.eu/Membership/CurrentMembers.aspx )
Online registrations end June 1 so make sure you register this month if you wish to take a course. (Afterwards, manual processing fee will be applied.)
Several SEM related courses only need 1-2 people to ensure they are going to run. These include:
Introduction to Mplus. July 27 - 29 https://tinyurl.com/yaddxsdz
Introduction to Structural Equation Modelling July 31 - Aug 11
Multilevel Structural Equation Modelling
July 31 - Aug 4 https://tinyurl.com/ya3febfr
Advanced Structural Equation Modelling Aug 7 - 11
Hope you will check these, and the rest of the courses out at https://ecpr.eu/Events/EventDetails.aspx?EventID=116
Feel free to forward this note.
Thanks and Cheers,
L
--
Levente (Levi) Littvay, Associate Professor
Department of Political Science / Political Behavior Research Group (PolBeRG)
Central European University (CEU), Budapest, Hungary
Academic Convener, European Consortium for Political Research (ECPR) Methods School
Facebook: littvay / Twitter: @littvay / Skype: littvay / Google: littvay
Recent Publications: Zoltán Fazekas and Levente Littvay (2015) “The importance of context in the genetic transmission of US party identification” Political Psychology 36(4).
BK Thege, L Littvay, DL Tarnoki, AD Tarnoki (2017) Genetic and Environmental Effects on Eudaimonic and Hedonic Well-Being: Evidence from a Post Communist Culture. Current Psychology