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The Practice of Business Statistics w/CD | 
enlarge | Authors: David S. Moore, George P. Mccabe, William M. Duckworth, Layth Alwan Publisher: W. H. Freeman Category: Book
Buy Used: $55.00
New (37) Used (22) from $55.00
Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 283672
Media: Hardcover Edition: 2nd Pages: 859 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 4.3 Dimensions (in): 10.2 x 8.1 x 1.5
ISBN: 142922150X Dewey Decimal Number: 519 EAN: 9781429221504 ASIN: 142922150X
Publication Date: February 15, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
The Practice of Business Statistics offers a welcome innovation by allowing students to make data-informed, real-world business decisions almost from day one. By discussing data production and interpretation early in the book data analysis can then be used throughout the course. This approach drives home the relevance and usefulness of statistical ideas to the business world from the onset. New Format OptionsThe Practice of Business Statistics responds to concerns about textbook length by offering instructors a number of alternatives: A core book containing the first 14 chapters Companion chapters on advanced inference topics (available on the book companion site, or through W.H. Freeman Custom Publishing): 15. Two-Way Analysis of Variance 16. Nonparametric Statistics 17. Logistic Regression 18. Bootstrapping Methods and Permutation Tests
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| Customer Reviews: Read 1 more reviews...
fast and great condition! October 30, 2008 S. Englehart 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
It came within a week and was in perfectly good condition! brand new! would definitely buy from this seller again!
cheap book! :) October 16, 2008 D. Polyakova (Chicago, IL USA) Thanks for the book! Really cheap and in great condition! I got this book for... a couple bucks! and somebody was trying to sell it to me for $80!!!
Strongly recommended for college courses in business statistics March 1, 2008 Charles Ashbacher (Marion, Iowa United States(cashbacher@yahoo.com)) 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
I teach a college course in basic statistics at least once a year and for some time have used the book "The Basic Practice of Statistics" by one of the authors of this one. I have no intention of switching to this book, but I did examine it with the idea of determining if it would be appropriate for a course in basic statistics for business. My conclusion is affirmative; there are a large number of worked examples that are applications of business scenarios. The discussions are clear, concise and there are a large number of associated diagrams, which are essential to the learning of statistics. I strongly recommend this book for courses in basic business statistics.
Dreadful November 4, 2005 Random# (IL, US) 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
This book is so terrible I cannot even begin to describe it. The format is unnatural and hard to get used to, especially if you're used to normal textbooks. It introduces a few facts, but the examples are just not very good and then it gives you problems to try out and then that format continues througout the whole chapter, making the whole learning experince very odd and uneven. I found it very hard to focus on the material because of that problem. The material is not hard to learn, if presented the right way, which this book does not do. I can't wait to sell it back. If you want to get a real understanding of statistics and actually remember some of it, I would advise you to try another book.
I would adopt it if the course focused on business October 17, 2004 Charles Ashbacher (Marion, Iowa United States(cashbacher@yahoo.com)) 7 out of 7 found this review helpful
While the authors of texts in basic statistics always claim to the contrary, there is a repetitive sameness to the books. Decades ago, general agreement was reached as to what topics should be covered in the class. Although the advances in technology have made performing computations much easier, that has not led to significant differences in content. Therefore, the only factor that differentiates texts is the style of writing and the focus and quality of the applications. This book is advertised as being focused on how statistics is used in business, and the authors are effectively consistent in using examples applied to business. Their worked examples are almost exclusively taken from business settings and are appropriate for the current topic. The exercises follow the same pattern, they are numerous and answers to the odd-numbered ones are included in an appendix. The style of writing is at the right level for the introductory student. Another unique feature of the book is that it is the core for a total package that has seven additional supplementary chapters. These chapters are: *) Statistics for Quality: Control and Capability. *) Time Series Forecasting. *) One-Way Analysis of Variance. *) Two-Way Analysis of Variance. *) Nonparametric Tests. *) Logistic Regression. *) Bootstrapping Methods and Permutation Tests. The supplements are separate from the core book, if you are interested in using one of the supplementary chapters, you need buy only the ones you need. This is very sensible, as the core material is generally enough to fill any semester class. Since the statistics course that I teach is for students from all backgrounds, I will not be adopting this text for the class. However, if it was focused on the business student, I would.
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