It’s a textbook on statistics. What more can I say? I may keep it as a tool to use in the future, but unless you’re going into research and statistics this book is uninteresting and difficult to understand.
It's a textbook. I don't know what anyone's expecting but it is neither thrilling nor well edited. It covers everything its supposed to and that gives it a second star, but it can only go higher if you need something to put you to sleep.
It would be difficult to write this book in a more sensible way, and there really does not seem to be any certain linear way in which to teach this material. Uses good, compelling examples and does well to try and explain rather challenging concepts to the reader in simple words. Of course, there is still the issue of whether or not the entirely empirical and positivist framework that such a book espouses is really the end-all-and-be-all of how we should examine politics. Such a framework seems to me rather dehumanizing and allows little room for intricacies and details. Also, distances the researcher too greatly from work.
This book conveys in a very short book, a standard toolbox of basic statistical methods for political scientists. It has some good examples in it. The downside is that there isn't enough math and there is a glaring omission: analysis of residuals to assess model adequacy. Personally, I would supplement this book with a standard text in descriptive statistics and Montgomery and Peck's Introduction to Linear Regression Analysis (one of my favorite texts on statistics because it has just enough math to be relevant to the practitioner while still being a very thorough treatment).
Very practical text for beginning grad students in political science who are getting ready to choose their research thesis topic. Especially helpful with the corresponding SPSS workbook - and the workbook is excellent.
I read this for my Research Methods and Analysis class! This book was very helpful in my research methods course it worked well for class, I actually kinda liked it.