Piperic
similar sites
‹ ProfileAI ReportTools

Sites similar to arkevaluation.com

Alana R. Kinarsky, PhD — Social Science Research & Evaluation · ranked by shared content topics & relevance
73match
amreds.com
Academic Magazine for Research & Experimental Development in Social Science
1 shared topicseducation
71match
ilanabrody.com
Ilana Brody – Behavioral Science Researcher
1 shared topicseducation
70match
ijhumas.com
KIU Journal of Humanities – Arts & Social Sciences Research
1 shared topicseducation
69match
research-hive.com
Research Hive – Science Communication Blog by PhD Researchers
1 shared topicseducation
69match
siobhanmcguirk.com
Siobhán McGuirk – Research & Education for Social Change
1 shared topicseducation
69match
nadiajessop.com
UNLEaRN Lab – Social Developmental Psychology Research in Education
1 shared topicseducation
68match
ijssn.com
International Journal of Social Sciences Nexus
1 shared topicseducation
68match
arl.org
Home — Association of Research Libraries
1 shared topicseducation
68match
andres-navarrete.com
Andres Navarrete's Blog – Blogging for research, monitoring, and evaluation.
1 shared topicseducation
68match
margatorre.com
Marga Torre – Social Scientist
1 shared topicseducation
68match
annaleegood.com
Annalee G. Good – Intersections between education research, evaluation, and communities
1 shared topicseducation
67match
ijssa.com
International Journal of Social Science Archives (IJSSA)
1 shared topicseducation
67match
andrewtarter.com
Andrew Tarter, Ph.D. – Interdisciplinary social scientist
1 shared topicseducation
67match
4socialstudies.com
4SocialStudies -- Search Engine for Social Studies Resources
1 shared topicseducation
67match
ijroms.com
International Journal of Research on Multidisciplinary Studies
1 shared topicseducation
67match
researchanalyticshub.org
Home | Research Evaluation and Analytics Capacity Hub
1 shared topicseducation
67match
arnaconnect.org
Action Research Network of the Americas
1 shared topicseducation
67match
ethicalreviewss.com
Ethical Review of Social Sciences
1 shared topicseducation

How the match score works

Each match is a 0–100 similarity score — the higher it is, the more two sites resemble one another. It’s computed automatically from our own crawl data (never from what a site says about itself) by combining several independent signals, so a high score means several of them point the same way:

No single signal decides the result — they’re blended together. Treat the score as a way to rank candidates rather than an absolute percentage; the chips on each result show which signals contributed.