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Research Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Research
Shortwave Receivers Past & Present: Communications Receivers 1942-1997
Published in Paperback by Universal Radio Research (1998-04)
Author:
List price: $24.95
Used price: $160.00

Average review score:

An EXCELLENT reference volume
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-08-15
Fred has done an excellent job of cataloging a wide range of shortwave receivers from the early WWII "boat anchors" up through the modern integrated-circuit PLL synthesized high performance radios of the 1990s. He not only covers the usual radios such as Collins, Drake and National but also the more obscure like the beautiful Gelosos from Italy (I DROOLED over those in catalogs in the '50s).

I guarantee you this book will raise your appreciation for the radios created by the gifted engineers (and the "dogs" created by some NOT so gifted ones) - these wonderful devices not only entertain and educate us but help save lives at sea and keep our conuntries safe.

Receivers Guide
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-07
The Shortwave Receivers Past & Present: Communications Receivers 1942-1997 is an excellent resource book for collectors and those interested in used radios. There are pictures specs and evaluations of hundreds for the shortwave radios in this era.If you are in the market for a used receiver or a collector this is an invaluable resource. Also provided is a realistic pricing of the true value of each receiver as well as a 1 to 5 star evaluation based on the author's many years in the hobby.
This is the Bible for radio hobbists on the subject

This is the sole resource for Shortwave Receivers
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2004-12-08
If you do not already have this book, and have avid interest in communications receivers, shame on you. You have no right to gripe if you are in the dark without the info. Fred needs to come out with a new edition soon. A bargain at the price. A must have, what else is there to say?

Some receivers is missing, but you can help!
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-29
Yes, this is a catalog of base receivers, 1945-now. Osterman provides many useful informations, and if it may be true that some informations may not be useful to an european reader (e.g. the 'used' prices), you wil not find elsewhere a so comprehensive guide. Another book will be dedicated to portable sw radios. Osterman is not God, so many data are provided by the readers: it's the way the informations flow in the scientific communities, why not here? If you are an european reader, and you know something Osterman does not, write him. I've done so, and a new chapter in this edition was added with the informations I retrieved.

Very comprehensive summary of most vintage/modern receivers
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-02
Nearly 500 pages of pictures & data on most SW receivers built in North America & abroad. Contains basic specs & features, picture, descriptions, and data on when built, physical dimensions, and estimates on values. A must for collectors.

Research
Side Effects: A Prosecutor, a Whistleblower, and a Bestselling Antidepressant on Trial
Published in Hardcover by Algonquin Books (2008-06-17)
Author: Alison Bass
List price: $24.95
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Average review score:

Outstanding Story about Pharmaceutical Industry Coverup
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-12
Side Effects reads like a novel, even though it is a factual, non-fiction book. It is a well-written, outstanding story that depicts how several pharmaceutical firms along with the FDA intentionally did not disclose the negative, suicidal side affects of anti-depressant drugs such as Paxil, Prozac and Zoloft. Alison Bass weaves this story through a few victims and researchers who were trying to get out the truth and stand up against some very powerful, manipulative and well-financed pharmaceutical companies who make billions of dollars from these drugs. A must read!

Outstanding Exposé
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2008-06-23
Alison Bass brings all the players to life, both the good and the bad, in this well documented story behind the NY Attorney General's legal action against GSK. This book is in the tradition of Erin Brokavich or A Civil Action; it reads like a novel, like a thriller in fact, only it's true. No one could make this stuff up. I could not put it down. Bass deserves a lot of credit for her courage in writing this. Not only does she expose the underbelly of academic research at prestigious Ivy League schools, but also uncovers the sordid manipulation of patient advocacy groups like NAMI by pharmaceutical interests. Nothing is sacred. She goes after it all and it's a story that needs to be told in full just as it is here. I hope it will be widely read. It is a useful and exciting addition to the many books coming out about the corruption in the pharmaceutical industry, academic research, and the regulatory authorities, bringing it down to a very human level.

A Gripping Expose of the Pharmaceutical Industry
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-20
In this gripping expose, Alison Bass manages to turn the inner workings of medical research, clinical trials and the legal system into a literary page-turner. Through tireless reporting, she brings to life several characters who made a huge impact in one small corner of the pharmaceutical industry, while also laying bare a medical system that continues to put Americans at risk. This is an important book that deserves much attention.

Definitely a must-read for us (and our legislators)
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-06

It's horrifying to read about our dependence on drugs. I was shocked with the first story: A teenager feels uncomfortable in social situations. She sees an ad on television promising a drug to turn teens from wallflowers to social butterflies. She asks her doctor for the drug. No problem, he says. He's not a psychiatrist, but he is an MD.

Aside from concerns about effects of these drugs on children and young people, why doesn't someone ask why doctors encourage patients to seek solutions in a bottle? How is depression diagnosed (or over-diagnosed)?

Then we have a story of a psychiatrist at Brown University who appears to be billing the government for research he's not conducting. He's also adjusting research reports to discount side effects.

He's still around, still holding a prestigious position at Brown University, still receiving research grants.

Author Bass also quotes a disturbing statistic: doctors who accept money from pharmaceutical companies (for research, consulting or testifying) tend to prescribe a lot more medication than those who don't.

The fiery, likeable prosecutor battles her own vision problems as well as the pharmaceutical industry. It's frustrating to read about the legal minutiae she has to address while people are dying from these drugs. The judge's name sounds familiar: I believe she was also the judge in the Martha Stewart case.

At the end of the book, we learn that the troubled teen lost her pill-induced "suicidal ideation" after discontinuing Ambien and Paxil. She has learned to accept her personality and she's found the perfect job as a veterinary technician.

That's the good news. But as Bass reports, FDA reports still depend on doctors who accept money from drug companies, but claim they remain unbiased. Maybe they could work on a drug to cure their deep denial.






A Must-Read in Our Pill-Popping Culture
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2008-07-02
This account of shady goings on in the U.S. drug-industrial complex is an eye-opener. Even though the subject matter might seem a bit sterile -- clinical trials, the FDA, the pharmaceutical industry, and university researchers -- Side Effects is a delightful page-turner. The reader is drawn into the lives of the characters and the details of their compelling stories as if one were reading a novel or detective story. Side Effects is a must read in our pill-popping culture.

Research
Skillstreaming the Adolescent : New Strategies and Perspectives for Teaching Prosocial Skills (Program Forms Booklet)
Published in Spiral-bound by Research Press (IL) (1997-11)
Authors: Arnold P. Goldstein and Ellen McGinnis
List price: $18.95
New price: $11.99
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Average review score:

Great for groups!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-25
I am a School Psychologist and I use this program with Middle School students. The lessons are age-appropriate and easy to implement. The teacher checklist in the back is also very helpful in planning which lessons to use. I also use, and love, the early childhood and elementary skillstreaming programs.

Skillstreaming in a Middle School
Helpful Votes: 13 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2000-09-22
I came across this book while working with a group of middle school students who were lacking social skills. This book provides step by step social skills information directed at the specific deficiencies. I am looking forward to continuing to work with the information I have gathered from reading this book.

Good if aggression in adolesents is your area
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-21
This book is primarily directed at teachers and professionals trying to manage and socially 'skill' aggressive and delinquent adolescents. The book consists of short exercises sandwiched between buffers of explanatory material. The exercises are fairly much standard prosocial activities involving discussions and role-plays. As an overview, or outline, of what to do, these are good. However, the instructional sequences are short, and occassionally vague. My overall reaction to the book is that it needs a companion manual to realise its usefulness. There is also a deal of repetition of points that may or may not be useful depending on the audience. The amount of explanatory text is high for a book that is not theoretically laden down, and this weakened its appeal to me. In my own opinion, it is hard to beat (pardon the pun) for detail Teaching Social Skills from the Boystown Press for this youth segment.

Also Excelent With Training Severely Mentally Ill Clients
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-20
I was introduced to this book by the co-ordinator of out patient services as a book that she thought highly of in working with adolescents. A chronically mentally ill client from my program was seeing her outpatient for counseling and she thought the book may work well in assisting the client with social skills. On an individual basis it worked very well with the client. We decided to start a group within our program to see how it would work with other chronically mentally ill clients and it has worked extremely well.

Life skills
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2001-03-03
A super book for working with socially challenged youth. High risk kids often get into trouble because they don't possess appropriate social skills, and they are not motivated to practice positive skills. They simply don't see the value. All to often their innappropriate skills have been rewarded in life. This book prepares teachers and adolescent group leaders to develop missing social skills in a step by step well thought out and research proven manner. The book also prepares the leader with great stratagies for recognizing and dealing with trainee/client resistance. Of course in your group you will not experience this. If you really want results and not just feel good discussions with kids this material is state of the art. Highly recommended!

Research
The Sky is Your Laboratory: Advanced Astronomy Projects for Amateurs
Published in Kindle Edition by Praxis (2007-07-31)
Author: Robert Buchheim
List price: $34.95
New price: $20.76

Average review score:

Better Than I Thought
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-25
Most of the topics in this book will be somewhat beyond those that a casual amateur astronomer would want to pursue. However, the book is worth buying just for what you will learn about the different topics. Of course, if you want to try some of the scientific work then you are all set with the material given.

Worth a read for the in depth discussion of observation, imaging with CCDs, practical issues with both, and an understanding of observational and imaging science.

I recommend it.

Beyound Hobby Towards Science
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2008-05-02
Astronomy is one of the very few sciences where amateurs can make significant contributions and where amateur contributions are valued by the professional community. I returned to serious astronomy several years ago. I wanted to do more than just star gaze and taking pretty photos (which I still love). If you have felt the same way, then this book is a must read. Buchheim presents a plethora of different research programs that can be undertaken with modest (or even no) equipment. One of my particular interests is photometry, the measurement of light to study such things as variable stars and asteroid light curves. Buchheim takes the novice through all of the concepts and presents this material in a manner that allows the reader to understand the basic concepts and how to undertake a number of observing programs from differential photometry to all-sky to asteroid light curves The same is true for astrometry and the search for asteroids. And, these are just two of the areas of research discussed. In short, if you want to move from "just observing," and get into astronomical research and make valued contributions to science, this book will guide you through to success.

GREAT, thorough treatment!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-06
I agree with the other reviews I've seen here: this book is excellent!

Are you ready to move beyond visual observing or taking CCD pix for aesthetic appreciation? Do you want to feel like you're doing a bit of science? If you answered yes to these questions, then this is undoubtedly a good book for you. It contains a survey of a wide range of areas where YOU, with relatively inexpensive amateur gear, can do observations that go far beyond the "Oh, isn't that pretty!" (Not, though, that I have anything against "pretty!")

This book is well written, and unlike many other books in our hobby, gets into the nitty-gritty details of how-to-do-it! It's well written and the author speaks with authority. Each chapter has an excellent reference at its end. Using these references allows you to do additional reading.

Although it doesn't go into much depth on the topic, this book has a short and adequate introduction on spectroscopy. The overview is good and it has references on where to find further info. I've found spectroscopy very exciting. Without much work, with a simple webcam & tiny scope, in the city, without a lengthy or complicated observing program, you can be analyzing the composition of distant stars! Now THAT'S science! (The Rainbow Optics or StarAnalyser spectroscopes are a great introduction.)

GREATEST ASTRONOMY BOOK ON THE PLANET
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-28
This is a really neat book! It opens up a whole new kind of amateur astronomy;real research projects where you make observations that are useful to professional astronomers.Amateur astronomers can gather new information or make new dsicoveries,using skills that are common amoung experienced stargazers,and equipment that is widely available. Here is a step-by-step instruction manual for getting started in these projects,from learning why each project area is important, to the equipment and procedures that are needed, and how to analyze your results.The chapters are organized roughly in order of increasing difficulty of the projects, from simple(naked-eye meteor counting) to complex (extra solar planet searches and supernova discovery). I was paticularly pleased that each project includes an explaination of how and where to submit your results, so that they will be useful to "real" astronomers.
I do not think there is any compairable book available. There are plenty of "advanced observing guides", and many "textbooks",but this book fits right in between them. It gives careful description of celestial objects or events,and how and why you should try to see them, so it's sort of an observing guide(although there are not any spectacular photos).It also explains why the observations are important,and gives a meticulous explaination of the data gathering and analysis procedures for each project,so it is sort of a textbook. But it is not stuffy,pedantic tome. The style is friendly,helpful and encouraging. There are some equations,but if you made it through high school algebra they will not give you any trouble(and only some projects require you to use them).There is even a story line! Short tales about challenges,successes,and memorable experiences are scattered throughout the text. They make it easy to read,and highlite the author's enthusiasm for his subject.
Any amateur atronomer who has ever wished he could be a "real scientist" will definitely find this book worth having on his desk.

A must buy
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2008-01-07
For amateurs who have passed the beginner rites of the Messier and Caldwell lists, Buchheims's _Sky_ contains the measured voice of the elder mentor of your astronomy club. If that expert mentor is lacking in your local club, Buchheim's _Sky_ is a must buy that will save you in time many times its purchase. Each _Sky_ observing project is written like an after star-party club coffee meeting, with Buchheim patiently guiding you through practical field problems commonly encountered when starting photometry, double star astrometry or supernovae searching. He includes references to landmark manuals, amateur organizations and internet resources for each topic. Where appropriate, Buchheim fills in with basic observing skills that are often left unexplained as assumed knowlege in other texts, e.g. timing uncertainty reduction when timing asteriod occultations. For this Amazon review, the 18 observing projects are listed in the Table of Contents, listed above. _Sky_ now sits on my "ready reference" shelf - sandwiched between other amateur classics - like Berry's _HAIP_, Sidgwick's _Amateur Astronomer's Handbook_, North's _Advanced Amateur_ or Meeus's _Algorithms_. If you have been hooked in the hobby for two or three years and want a roadmap to the next 10 years, Buchheim's _Sky_ is what you need.

Research
SPSS for Windows Step by Step: A Simple Guide and Reference, 10.0 Update (3rd Edition)
Published in Paperback by Allyn & Bacon (2001-01-01)
Authors: Darren George and Paul Mallery
List price: $50.00
New price: $13.87
Used price: $0.76

Average review score:

By far the best beginner's SPSS reference
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-22
If you are as clueless about SPSS as I am, you must buy this book. It has clear, concise instructions in language a layman can understand. If you want a more advanced manual because you already know the basics, you may want to look elsewhere (Tabachnik & Fidel's book would be the next step up from this one). This would be a great textbook for a Statistics course at either the undergrad or graduate levels. It also explains each type of statistic clearly with great examples. It covers t tests, ANOVAs, regression, and much more. It was great for me to be able to review the statistic I was going to use to ensure that I understood it.

Dummy-Proof!
Helpful Votes: 15 out of 15 total.
Review Date: 2002-06-02
If you want to go from a stupid to savvy about statistics, this is the book for you. No jargon, no obtuse references, just simple explanations and directions. I secretly credit this book with getting me through my Ph.D. Also,Darren George's willingness to answer questions and offer help via e-mail was invaluable. This book makes things so clear, that I am now able to explain statistics to others -- something that once would have seemed as likely as inventing a calorie-free shake. A must for any researcher in the social sciences.

Great Book for dissertation reference! SPSS for Windows
Helpful Votes: 27 out of 27 total.
Review Date: 2001-04-27
I am a grad student working on my dissertation. I searched everywhere for an excellent and simple SPSS book. I was lost until I found yours. I have some of the others listed in the category; they are missing the step by step examples. I knew what I wanted to do, but did not know how to put into SPSS. They examples are CLEAR. There is even information about the statistics, so if you are unsure about assumptions for the type of test, you can check. Simple instructions and EXAMPLES FOR THE SCREEN. I love it.Thanks for putting together an excellent reference tool.

This book is essential
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2002-08-01
The book is extremely well written and is essential reading for anyone who wants to learn SPSS. It has great coverage of all major SPSS procedures except survival analysis. I highly recommend it!

A comment from the Author
Helpful Votes: 42 out of 43 total.
Review Date: 2001-05-30
Paul Mallery (my co-author) and I have gone to excruciating efforts, particularly on the first 16 chapters of this book, to create a tool that makes SPSS absolutely clear to the beginner. In the final 12 chapters our book explores more complex statistical procedures (log-linear models, factor analysis, discriminant analysis, multi-dimensional scaling, and others) in the identical format as the earlier chapters.

The comments by the individuals from Iowa and Minnesota reflect the many e-mails we have received on this book from, literally, all over the world. While we routinely recommend that anyone who uses the book first take a course in statistics, for anyone with reasonable math aptitude, the first 16 chapters should be understandable without ANY statistical background. If you are looking for a book that is comprehensive yet ultimately understandable for fundamental statistical procedures (data entry, data manipulation, frequencies, descriptives, chi-squares, t-tests, correlations, ANOVAs, simple linear and multiple regression analysis, graphs) but includes excellent coverage on the more advanced procedures we suggest that this book was made for you.

We, the authors, welcome your comments. These are considered carefully as we create new editions of the book.

Research
Standardized Minds: The High Price Of America's Testing Culture
Published in Hardcover by Da Capo Press (2000-01-06)
Author: Peter Sacks
List price: $26.00
New price: $8.94
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Average review score:

A Good Resource
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2000-06-27
Too often, the high-stakes testing debate wanders into the realm smoke and mirrors. If you follow this debate, you'll find the same arguments presented here that have been presented all along: standardized tests are biased, they do not measure intelligence or knowledge, etc. What you don't normally get are the facts that back up this argument, and that is what Sacks provides. This book concretizes what has become (wrongly) a very abstract, political issue, and should be regularly referenced by all who oppose the mediocrity such testing rewards. These tests may sound good in theory, but in practice, Sacks shows with convincing success, they just don't do the job.

Must Read For Anyone Interested In Education
Helpful Votes: 22 out of 24 total.
Review Date: 2000-04-09
I was in the middle of reading Standardized Minds when I heard a panel of "Experts" talk about the future of LA Unified School District on Which Way LA, a local radio show. Specifically they were discussing the notion of linking teacher bonus pay to the performance of their students on standardized tests. I wish Peter Sacks had been on the program as he successfully demolishes the continued folly of our reliance on standardized tests as a way to judge our schools, our teachers and our students. I wholeheartedly endorse the opinions of the previous two reviewers. Speaking as a parent, I can only say that the more people who read this book, engage in a discussion about the issues so eloquently raised within it and help push the national dialogue on education forward in the directions the author suggests, the better off our kids and we as a society will be.

Review of "Standardized Minds"
Helpful Votes: 22 out of 22 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-08
Mr. Sacks in his new publication, Standardized Minds, has done an outstanding job of placing norm-refrenced standardized tests, along with their associated multiple-choice item formats, in proper perspective. These tests have set standards for academic assessment for many years, and, as Mr. Sacks points out, are being questioned by many in the testing profession as being inapporpriate and insensitive as single and simplisthic guages of educational progress. He has documented extensive research on this subject, presented some impressive "case studies" of those who have been penalized in their career and life chioces based on "low" test scroes when all other extracurricular or in-school performances predicted otherwise. In addition to the many problems associated with mulitple-choice item types, a main focus is on the misunderstanding and misuse of the scores by all levels of society. As he so eloquently states, many educators are not properly taught how to interpret and use these data, legislative or government policy-makers have little or any idea of the substance or meaning of these scores, the media are at the mercy of the lack of knowledge (or political direction) fed them, and parents and children are left confused with numbers that do not give them specific constructive instructional information. The end result is that these test results are forced into a political and unethical framework which has greatly weakened their usefulness. If the desire is to help children learn and teachers teach, some interesting and effective alternatives are provided. I would strongly recommend this book to anyone interested in improving educational assessment.

A Book for STUDENTS, who are taking these silly tests!
Helpful Votes: 49 out of 55 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-06
I am a high school senior so I am currently getting a lot of pressure from my parents to get that silly 1600 on my SAT which will take place in October and December this year. Then there's also the ACTs and the 3 SAT IIs! I was always suspicious of test prep companies, the ETS, and the SATs themselves. Living in Los Angeles, these test prep companies have grown like weeds in the community, sucking up money from middle and upper class students. Though I am fortunate, my parents have also forcefully enrolled me at one of these. My SAT school is doing a nice job with its profits and have managed to get a new paint job, redecorate the "classrooms", and to get more students and more teachers, to just get it bigger and bigger. While my "teachers" explain the concepts of the SAT, I can't help but wish I was in the library reading more books such as this or practicing the piano. It is so unfair that only the rich people can afford these classes and they are the ones who get the good scores on the SATs. After getting a mediocre score on the SAT in June, my parents have now considered me a total idiot, even though my report cards and comments from teachers say otherwise. This book is so chock-full of information that deserves wide reading. The author has done the most extensive research imaginable. The controversy of the standardized tests is something that should have been addressed and Peter Sacks is the best one to do it. He has full of statistics and information to back up everything he says, yet he never just blows them off to you, but explains them. In addition to statistics, are the personal recollections of the people he interviewed-the teachers, educators, college admissions people, and even students. The tale of one student who had 7 tries to take a silly test and not being able to graduate and forced to stay in high school was frightening to the say the least. I am also glad that the author also included a section about the infamous incident in 1998 in Massachusetts when everyone condemned the teachers that they failed "a basic reading and writing test", which had become a punch-line for many of Jay Leno's jokes that year. It was rather strange that the media did not go into detail about the exact questions or the more specifics of that exam, but everyone just wanted to call these teachers "idiots".

The book is comprehensive on all testing, with the exception of secondary school admissions tests such as the ISEE and the SSAT. Going to California private schools, I have become familiar with ERBs and the Stanford 9 tests. In order to get into private high schools, I had to take the ISEE and the SSAT. Now I have the SATs and ACTs to conquer.

This is more than a book analyzing the damaging effects of the testing culture. The author suggest an standing ovation-worthy proposal of evaluating students on what they can do, whether it is projects and more research opportunities such as outside occupational research or conducting a lab or evaluating a student 's portfolio, instead of standardized tests.

Yes, this book should be read by politicians educators, teachers, yet I am here to emphasize STUDENTS should read this book too. Students who are daunted by the SATs need to be educated about our obsessive testing culture and that they are NOT idiots for a silly number.

Suprebly Researched Indictment of Standardized Testing
Helpful Votes: 60 out of 63 total.
Review Date: 2000-02-27
In today's US it is almost impossible to avoid encountering standardized tests--mass-produced, multiple-choice, fill-in-the-bubble, machine-scored exams of all sorts. Standardized tests are used to assess the performance of public schools, in many systems to determine which students will be held back a grade, to decide who will get into college, and into graduate and professional school, and who will get certain jobs.

In "Standardized Minds," Peter Sacks delivers a devastating critique of the use of such tests. His indictment includes a wide range of particulars, only some of which can be summarized here.

First, standardized tests are not a source of useful information. A widely used reading test given to elementary school students can err by as much as three grade levels in measuring a student's reading level. The SAT, required for admission to most colleges, has no use other than to make predictions, with limited accuracy, of students' freshman year grades. The GRE, required for admission to most Ph.D. programs, actually has a negative correlation with future success as a scholar.

Second, standardized tests are very biased. The best known of these biases is that of the SAT against low-income, minority students. Sacks shows that this bias extends to other tests as well. Another bias identified by Sacks is that standardized tests are biased in favor of superficial thinking--the ability to rapidly recall and repeat facts--and against the deeper thinking necessary to solve complex real-world problems.

Third, and perhaps most harmfully, standardized tests promote "teaching to the test." A number of states have established what Sacks terms "high-stakes accountability" programs, in which standardized test scores determine whether students are promoted to the next grade or are allowed to graduate, and are used to rank the performance of schools. Sacks documents how such "high-stakes" programs cause teachers to spend enormous amounts of time drilling students in preparation for the tests. Such teaching practices promote rote memorization and superficial thinking at the expense of critical thinking skills and genuine understanding--hardly a desireable educational goal.

It is important to note that Sacks is not merely giving his personal opinions. He has studied and mastered a great deal of research. At the same time, his book is far more than a dry academic recital. Unlike the Dinesh D'Souzas of the world, Sacks knows the proper usage of anecdotes--to illustrate a generalzation, not as the basis for it. Of the many illuminating stories he tells, one bears repeating. St. John's University's psych department requires students entering the Ph.D. program to take the GRE, which is useless except to make somewhat accurate predictions of first-year grades. Students seeking a masters degree only, while they take the same first-year courses, are not required to take the GRE. However, if these students wish, on completing a masters degree, to enter the Ph.D. program, they must then take the GRE, even though the only value of the exam is to "predict" their grades in courses they have already taken.

Sacks ends the book by noting some optimistic trends, such as the growing number of colleges and universities which no longer require applicants to take the SAT. However, breaking the tyranny of standardized testing will not be easy--the political pressures for the kind of superficial "standards" and "accountability" such tests provide are enormous. But reading Sacks' book, and freeing your own mind from the spell cast by standardized test scores, would be a good start.

Research
Statistical Power Analysis for the Behavioral Sciences (2nd Edition)
Published in Hardcover by Lawrence Erlbaum (1988-01-15)
Author: Jacob Cohen
List price: $75.00
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Average review score:

Power analysis
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-15
Classic stats book for the scientific grant writer. Excellent info and tables concerning power analyses for experimental effects. If you don't include a power analysis in your proposal, you're wasting your time...

The classic statistical power reference.
Helpful Votes: 19 out of 25 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-29
Clearly, a must for every statistical library. This book is considered the authority on power analysis.

excellent early book on sample size determination, prepared with researchers from the behavioral sciences in mind
Helpful Votes: 21 out of 21 total.
Review Date: 2008-02-22
In the design of clinical trials particularly in the regulatory environment of the FDA the determination of the appropriate number of subjects to recruit for a well-powered statistical hypothesis test ot tests is extremely important. This topic is often neglected in statistical texts, even the elementary ones. It has also been neglected in many of the statistical software products that are available. Recognizing this need Janet Elashoff and Ralph o'Brien were among the first to construct tools for sample size determination and calculation of statistical power. There are now many software products available including nQuery Advisor (Janet Elashoff's product), Power and Precision, PASS, and StatXact. For group sequential and adaptive design methods thare are products such as East, PEST, SeqTrial+ and ADDPLAN to mention a few. Ralph O'Brien's package has now been modified and implimented in SAS with the procedures PROC Power and PROC Glmpower.

This book by Jacob Cohen preceded these developments and became a classic reference for researchers particularly those in the social sciences including behavioral scientists as mentioned in the title. I know of only one other competing book from that time period that being "How Many Subjects" by Helen Kraemer of Stanford University.

The Definitive Power Analysis Text
Helpful Votes: 34 out of 34 total.
Review Date: 1999-12-02
Cohen does a masterful job of taking the guesswork out of statistical power estimation. This text provides procedural guidelines for determining power for many designs, and can be quite helpful in determining proper sample sizes. Not for the casual reader, but a necessary addition to any serious researchers statistical library.

Definitive - But
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-08-18
Absolutely the main text but check it out from the library - you will use it approximately 10-15 times in your research life.

Research
Sukey and the Mermaid
Published in Paperback by Center for Applied Research in Education (1998-04)
Author: Robert D. San Souci
List price: $5.99

Average review score:

good children's book
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2008-03-22
a Caribbean Cinderella story, well told and intriguingly illustrated. My daughter (9) requested the book after we had read the Public Library copy.

One of my daughter's favorite bedtime books
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-12-30
I probably read this to my daughter for the first time when she was about 7 and it has been a favorite of hers and mine ever since. I am at a loss to explain exactly what is so captivating about it, but it just seems more real and a notch above other mermaid stories.

What a marvelous book!
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2000-07-16
My children sat spellbound as we read this book. We loved this story for the original plot, the strange dialect (not too heavily used), and the unusual art work.

This was a good book about a little girl and a mermaid.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 1999-01-14
I am a fifth grade student at North Hills Traditional Academy. And,yes, I like this book. I like this book because the pictures are pretty. I like this book because the words are beautiful. I like this book because it tells a sweet story. This book is for people who are caring.

An Excellent Children's Book
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2000-12-01
This book has become a mainstay in my children's library. I read this book to them over and over again. My 3 daughters never tire of it. The way the tale is written allows the reader to inflect his/her own creativity in delivering the story to an entranced child's ears. You can choose to sing parts of the tale, you can inflect tonality and create the dialect as you see fit, as well. Along with the wonderful, unique artwork, this book will become a classic children's tale for generations to come!

Research
Tales from an Irish Wake: A Novel of Irish Immigration in Wisconsin
Published in Hardcover by Library Research Associates Inc (1990-07)
Author: Margaret Doar Armstrong
List price: $19.95
New price: $232.28
Used price: $18.95

Average review score:

A story of survival, love and hope
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2006-03-29
This is more than just a story about an Irish immigrant. It tells of the cruelty of life and the hope brought by love. Leaving a starving Ireland aboard a horrific "coffin Ship" in the mid-19th century, this father and daughter arrive at a prejudiced U.S., and eventually settle in Boston. With all of their difficulties, it is love and hope that keep them focused. Overcoming tragedy and setbacks, a loving and compassionate Bridget McGraw makes her way to Wisconsin and becomes a legend in her own time. Based on family memories and geneaological research, the author shines a bright light on the history of two countries going through difficult times, and the people who persevered. This book leaves you with a good taste in your mouth and a warm feeling in your heart.

Bridget, her family and friends come alive.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-20
Margrate Doar tells us the story of a young girl born in County May of the 1850's Ireland. She develops the story of Bridget as she faces life in Ireland as the child of a widowed father, travels to Boston in the USA and eventually to Wisconsin.

Bridget comes alive as she grows up, has a family and grows old. How she faces the problems of life from day to day made her the grandmother I never knew.

Bridget, her family, friends and a few special people become part of your life in this book. I will reread this one and recommend it highly.

A great example of family lineage
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2000-10-31
This book is an excellent example of my family's immigration to the states and the hardships they faced. I have been told so many stories and read a lot of family essays, and I feel this is a shining example. Great job Aunt Peggy Ann!

Bridget, her family and friends come alive.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-20
Margrate Doar tells us the story of a young girl born in County May of the 1850's Ireland. She develops the story of Bridget as she faces life in Ireland as the child of a widowed father, travels to Boston in the USA and eventually to Wisconsin.

Bridget comes alive as she grows up, has a family and grows old. How she faces the problems of life from day to day made her the grandmother I never knew.

Bridget, her family, friends and a few special people become part of your life in this book. I will reread this one and recommend it highly.

A terrific book about a warm, loving Irish family.
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-26
This book tells the story of Bridget and her descendents. The reader can picture the people and the stories are wonderful. It is well written and easy, enjoyable read.

Research
The Tao of Statistics: A Path to Understanding (With No Math)
Published in Paperback by Sage Publications, Inc (2005-08-05)
Author: Dana K. Keller
List price: $34.95
New price: $27.45
Used price: $22.00

Average review score:

Excellent Book, fast , fast shipping...
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-16
The service that I received when I ordered this book was outstanding. Materials were in perfect condition, just as advertised. I have always been pleased when I use Amazon. I use Amazon very frequently, all through my undergraduate classes and now into my graduate classes. The savings over the past several years have been incredible...

Following the path
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-26
Many books have made efforts - more or less successful - to "debunk" the complex topic of statistics. This book avoids condescension through humor and dryness by offering real life examples. At the same time, Dr. Keller's discussions delve deep enough into the subjects to provide a genuine level of understanding for his readers.

And for those with a liking for Haiku, the writing is delightful for its own sake.

This book works...
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2006-12-29
I am a young professor who teaches statistics to sociology and nursing majors at a Washington, DC area university. "The Tao of Statistics" was the first book of which I ever received an unsolicited evaluation copy. I am so glad I did. After I made this book required reading grades have risen among the students who actually read it. The most telling incident was when I over heard the captain of one of the athletic teams telling several teammates in the class, "Dude, you gotta read this book. It explains it all." If you are an instructor, require this book. If you are a student get a copy and read it.


Tao of Statistics
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2005-10-18
An excellent introduction to the ways information from statistics can change the way one looks at the world. Understanding something about probability and base rates, for example, can enlighten how one interprets the presence or absence of individual events. Understanding distributions and sampling can further enlighten. The same could be said about correlations, covatriances, and statistical models. Keller's book covers only the introduction to these ideas, but does it in a nice way, and motivates readrs to continue their journey along the path he describes. A must read for persons wanting to know what statistical knowledge can and cannot do.

an instructive delight for the non-statistician
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2005-11-03
If you use statistics in your daily work, but are not a statistician and are always meaning to read or reread your statistics book from that one course you took or the new statistics book you ordered, but you fall asleep a couple of pages into the first chapter, then this book is for you. If you have an idea that means are not always a good measure of central tendency for a population, but you would be hard pressed to come up with the exact reason, then this is for you. This book covers all the major statistical concepts that most of us non-statisticians use (confidence intervals, correlations, regressions, etc) and makes them all understandable. Believe it or not, this statistics book is FUN to read and you will remember the delightful Haiku and the illustrations which drive each concept home. I recommend this book, ordered my own copy, and now am ordering copies for my staff.


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