Research Books
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Used price: $11.65

I learned more than I already knew about my own job!Review Date: 2000-10-09
An Outstanding ContributationReview Date: 2000-08-03
The Insider's Guide to Grantmaking is an invaluable resource for anyone interested in seeking funds from a foundation, or anyone interested in a career in a foundation. His years of experience give both experienced and inexperienced readers a window into a sometimes-shadowy world. Orosz lets the light shine in a way that is understandable and justifiable.
This long over due body of work is a must have for everyone in the third sector and especially should be required reading for those working in and leading foundations.
Don't give away another dollar until you've read thisReview Date: 2000-07-28
Outsiders will read it for its clear-cut description of philanthropy worklife and practice; insiders will find themselves affirmed or inspired. Both will enjoy the author's mix of humor and scholarship. Sure to be a classic in its field.
A Much Needed PerspectiveReview Date: 2000-06-26


Very ResourcefulReview Date: 2001-05-08
Internet Medical & Health, Searching & Sources GuidebookReview Date: 2000-10-17
Excellent resource....Review Date: 2000-05-17
Invaluable Internet Medical ReferenceReview Date: 1999-12-03

Used price: $29.01

Introduction to the Analysis of VarianceReview Date: 2008-02-13
Good IntroductionReview Date: 2007-04-04
Analysis of Varience Made Easy.Review Date: 2007-01-03
On the day the book arrived, I read the first few chapters, found a completed example that was fundamentally the same as my problem, and using the example as a guide set up a spreadsheet program to do my analysis. Within three hours of receiving the book my analysis was complete; and, I understood the statistical rationale on which the analysis was based. The book was exactly what I needed!
Fabulous introduction to different forms of ANOVAReview Date: 2005-03-03
Whenever I need to re-learn the fundamentals and assumptions of a particular technique, I find it useful to spend a half-hour or so with my favorite textbook on that subject. This handbook has become that textbook: there's nothing wrong with being easy to read.
My only complaint is that for $27, you don't get an in-depth introduction to ANCOVA, which is a very common related technique. Too bad, but it does not prevent me from giving this small book my highest recommendation. Of course, there are many $90+ books out there that lack either clarity about ANOVA or discussion of ANCOVA or both.

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Just what I ordered.Review Date: 2007-05-13
Strong FoundationReview Date: 2006-12-22
Excellent Book.Review Date: 2005-12-10
For Breaking PlasterReview Date: 2001-09-23
First and foremost, this is a textbook. It was specifically designed for students in allied health professional studies and human service curricula. Compared to most textbooks, it is NOT dry writing. Clearly, the authors have a flare for words.
Second, the primary strength of this text is its evenhandedness. More so than any other text, DePoy and Gitlin address both the qualitative and quantitative methodologies. No text completes this task as effectively and as efficiently.
When Ph.D. students (within my doctoral cohort) were being educated, they shared an unsavory learning experience. Most of us were taught to become number crunchers. The value of qualitative research was downplayed. In some cases we were specifically taught that qualitative research methodologies were hampering the image and progress of the social sciences. Thus, qualitative techniques were portrayed as a strategy employed by professors to engage the interest of undergraduate students. Qualitative methods were often adopted as a "play time." The possible exception for my observation is anthropology. However, even doctoral educators in anthropology noted the value of number crunching.
DePoy and Gitlin offer a doorway to turn our thinking around. They contend that the research question must drive the research method - not the other way around. During my education (Baccalaureate, Masters, and Ph.D.), I was taught to design research questions that could be answered by employing regression analysis or a variation of it. DePoy and Gitlin do more to legitimize qualitative methodologies than any current authors. They accomplish this task by systematically examining a wide range of methods by demonstrating the value of each.
I see two problems.
First, the authors have embarked on a Herculean task. They skim the surface of the various methodologies, but offer little depth. In the end, students will not have an adequate knowledge base to employ any single research method without some additional educational support. Perhaps such educational support is a role for the research professor. Thus, the lack of depth may be a blessing in disguised.
Second, few of my students (3 to 25%) will enroll in graduate school. Thus, it is highly unlikely that they will be actively involved in a substantive research project. These students need to employ research methodologies to improve their job performance and gain insight into self-evaluation. This is a flaw in the work of DePoy and Gitlin. The authors do not directly address self-evaluation.
In the end, I believe that DePoy and Gitlin offers the best preparation for graduate school. Nothing comes closer. I highly recommend this book.

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The book for the Smart investor!Review Date: 2003-05-23
HOW TO...For the lay personReview Date: 2003-05-22
This book changes all that. Written in concise prose and including lots of example to illustrate points, this book is eminently readable, providing simple and logical explanations of what to look for when considering investment. It provides numerous portfolio models based on one needs, objectives and perspective.
Does it contain all you need to know? I can't say. But I can tell you it has provided me in one read enough information to become a nuisance to my advisor. Hey, the fees I pay buy me that license. Read this book no matter how much you know!
Unparalleled Educational Resource!!!Review Date: 2003-05-12
Investment Survival Is Packed with Useful SuggestionsReview Date: 2002-12-27
What I liked about Investment Survival is that I learned practical things I have never found in any other investment book. It is especially helpful about how to use the information and opinions I hear on TV, read in the newspapers and in research reports my broker sends me. In other words, this book is packed with "news you can use."
It explained to me how to figure out how risky my portfolio is by going to a free website and putting in the ticker symbols the stocks I own. The book also explains how I can decrease the risk in my portfolio or increase it, if I care to. I realized as a result that I was overloaded with technology and communications stocks and, perhaps, I should reduce my holdings in these two areas.
It also explains what I should do next when I read or hear an opinion I agree with. For example, when somebody says, "You should overweight retail stocks" and I want to do that. Now I know what "overweight" or "underweight" means in terms of dollars and cents in my portfolio.
It also explains how to check out my own opinions. By that I mean, how to figure out if analysts, investment strategists and other just plain investors agree with my thinking or not.
I liked the fact that the book doesn't preach. Instead, it gave me some simple ways to clarify my thinking and simplify the job of monitoring my portfolio and figure out when I should do more research and when to ignore the advice I am getting. It's also easy to read and it explains clearly whenever it uses a technical term.
I would recommend this book to somebody who isn't new to the game and believes that she or he can do better in the market. Someone who has been investing for a while and owns at least a dozen different stocks. If you are willing to spend a few hours a month working on getting more profits from your stocks, I think you will thank me for recommending this book.
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Intriguing reading for any age level interested in virology.Review Date: 1997-09-28
wonderful and informative!Review Date: 1999-08-02
Researcher ! That is what I wannabe !Review Date: 1998-01-19
The Story of the Emerging Age of VirusesReview Date: 1997-04-14


Understanding Japanese generationsReview Date: 2002-03-20
In the first half, you'll read about Japan's history and the evolution of its society. In the second, you'll use those arguments to understand the behaviour of the groups of Japanese identified through the book.
The book set clearly two distinctions:
1. Talk about groups of Japanese, not "the Japanese," that is, don't use stereotypes.
2. Consider the time. Any argument is valid only in a certain period of time.
On that second point, the book was edited in 2001. It has arguments for 2005 or so. After that, you should look for new arguments.
Consuming JapanReview Date: 2003-09-07
Japanese consumers explainedReview Date: 2000-06-08
A Very Worthwhile BookReview Date: 2000-05-29

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Brother's Birthday PresentReview Date: 2008-04-28
music fanaticReview Date: 2007-06-15
find out where your favorite artists standReview Date: 2007-06-08
indispensable for the chart fanaticReview Date: 2007-09-01

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Great Read for MarketerReview Date: 2008-03-11
Smart Fun and Readable. Great Insights!Review Date: 2007-07-12
Genuinely HelpfulReview Date: 2007-07-11
you. I saw the book sitting on my boss's desk, and the title made me think
it might be a little goofy. But once I started to read it, I realized the
author really knows what he's talking about. (He runs a market research
company in New York, basically talks to consumers for a living.) Karma
Queens, Ms. Independents, Parentocrats etc. and all the other consumer types
described in the book seem like real people -- usually someone in my own life
immediately came to mind -- and after reading the chapter on them I thought
that I really did have a handle on how to sell to them. I'd highly recommend
it to anyone in in brand management or marketing.
Fascinating and funReview Date: 2007-07-11

Used price: $33.60

Good Product, missing attached brochureReview Date: 2007-05-12
THANK YOU
Very helpful and user-friendlyReview Date: 2008-01-22
All students should read this book!Review Date: 2007-09-16
Using the book as the ProfessorReview Date: 2007-05-20
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Every grantseeker who bemoans the fact that foundations don't want to fund ongoing operating expenses should read this book simply for the explanation of the difference between charity and philanthropy and where foundations fit in.
Likewise, the tips on meeting etiquette, attributes of a good grant proposal, and top four reasons proposals are denied will benefit professionals on both sides of the proposal.
Had the opportunity to see the author speak -- if you get the same opportunity, don't pass it by.