For courses in Statistical Methods for the Social Sciences . Statistical methods applied to social sciences, made accessible to all through an emphasis on concepts Statistical Methods for the Social Sciences introduces statistical methods to students majoring in social science disciplines. With an emphasis on concepts and applications, this book assumes you have no previous knowledge of statistics and only a minimal mathematical background. It contains sufficient material for a two-semester course. The 5th Edition gives you examples and exercises with a variety of “real data.” It includes more illustrations of statistical software for computations and takes advantage of the outstanding applets to explain key concepts, such as sampling distributions and conducting basic data analyses. It continues to downplay mathematics–often a stumbling block for students–while avoiding reliance on an overly simplistic recipe-based approach to statistics.
This is the best introductory stats book that I have read. Clear with many examples to make sure that you understand every step and the purpose behind each statistical test. An excellent text.
I rate this one star not because the information is bad or it's a bad textbook. It got 1 star because I hate statistics with a purple and blue passion, and I cannot separate this from my rating. Sorry. But if you have to learn doctoral level social science stats, this isn't a bad choice.
Naturally, I read this for a class. I didn't fully finish, left off 2-3 chapters in the end. The way this book is written makes some of the concepts a bit challenging to grasp. I found myself frequently asking "who writes sentences like that?". However, the diagrams, organization(kind of), and pullout boxes of key concepts are really helpful, and the book is, of course, thorough and packed full of useful information.
This book is much more detailed and focused extensively on advanced statistical methods compared to the other books with similar topics written by the same author. Highly recommend it to the beginning researchers.