Sebanyak 3 item atau buku ditemukan

Study Guide to Accompany Neil J. Salkind's Statistics for People Who (Think They) Hate Statistics

"This study guide is desgined to provide help for an often intimidating subject with an approach that is informative, personable, and clear. It walks the user through various statistical procedures, including descriptive statitics, correlation, and graphical representation of data, and inferential techniques, analysis of variance, and more"--Back cover.

"This study guide is desgined to provide help for an often intimidating subject with an approach that is informative, personable, and clear.

Study Guide to Accompany Neil J. Salkind's Statistics for People Who (Think They) Hate Statistics, 4th Edition

Prepared by David Kremelberg (University of Connecticut, Storrs), this study guide offers additional review and practice to help you succeed in your statistics class. Each chapter corresponds to the appropriate chapter in Neil Salkind's Statistics for People Who (Think They) Hate Statistics, Fourth Edition, and contains the following: a chapter outline; learning objectives; key terms; a chapter summary; true/false, short-answer, and essay questions; and exercises.

Prepared by David Kremelberg (University of Connecticut, Storrs), this study guide offers additional review and practice to help you succeed in your statistics class.

Encyclopedia of Educational Psychology

The field of educational psychology draws from a variety of diverse disciplines including human development across the life span, measurement and statistics, learning and motivation, and teaching. And within these different disciplines, many other fields are featured including psychology, anthropology, education, sociology, public health, school psychology, counseling, history, and philosophy. In fact, when taught at the college or university level, educational psychology is an ambitious course that undertakes the presentation of many different topics all tied together by the theme of how the individual can best function in an "educational" setting, loosely defined as anything from pre-school through adult education. Educational psychology can be defined as the application of what we know about learning and motivation, development, and measurement and statistics to educational settings (both school- and community-based).

The field of educational psychology draws from a variety of diverse disciplines including human development across the life span, measurement and statistics, learning and motivation, and teaching.