- Students get valuable practice in interpreting statistical reporting as it actually appears in journals. In each of the 62 exercises, your students will read a brief excerpt of statistical reporting from a published research article.
- Each exercise begins with guidelines for interpreting the statistics in the excerpt.
- The questions on the excerpts promote learning by requiring students to
- interpret information in tables and figures,
- perform simple calculations to further their interpretations,
- critique data-reporting techniques, and
- evaluate procedures used to collect data.
- Each exercise covers a limited number of statistics, making it easy for you to coordinate the exercises with lectures and a main textbook.
- The questions in each exercise are divided into two parts: (1) Factual Questions and (2) Questions for Discussion. The factual questions require careful reading for details, while the discussion questions show students that interpreting statistics is more than a mathematical exercise. These questions require them to apply good judgment as well as statistical reasoning in arriving at appropriate interpretations.
- Thirteen new exercises interspersed throughout show how to interpret a greater array of statistical reporting.