Data on government sector receipts, and on taxes in particular, are basic inputs to most structural economic descriptions and economic analyses and are increasingly used in international comparisons. This annual publication gives a conceptual framework to define which government receipts should be r
Teaching of Statistics and Statistical Consulting
β Scribed by Jagdish S. Rustagi, Douglas Alan Wolfe
- Publisher
- Elsevier Inc, Academic Press Inc
- Year
- 1982
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 519
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Table of Contents
Content:
Inside Front Cover, Page ii
Front Matter, Page iii
Copyright, Page iv
Dedication, Page v
Contributors, Pages xi-xiii
Preface, Pages xv-xvi
BIOGRAPHY OF D. RANSOM WHITNEY, Pages 1-4, T.A. Willke
STATISTICS AT THE OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY, Pages 5-8, Jagdish S. Rustagi, Douglas A. Wolfe
CONTENT AND SCOPE OF GRADUATE PROGRAMS IN STATISTICS, Pages 11-19, Richard G. Cornell
OBSERVATIONS ON GRADUATE PROGRAMS IN STATISTICS AND RELATED ISSUES, Pages 21-33, Seymour Geisser
GRADUATE PROGRAMS IN STATISTICS, Pages 35-69, William G. Hunter
ON GRADUATE PROGRAMS IN STATISTICS, Pages 71-79, Robert V. Hogg
GRADUATE PROGRAMS IN STATISTICS - A DISCUSSION, Pages 81-91, Ralph A. Bradley
PANEL DISCUSSION ON GRADUATE PROGRAMS IN STATISTICS, Pages 93-99, Franklin A. Graybill
DISCUSSION OF THE βGRADUATE PROGRAMS IN STATISTICSβ SESSION, Pages 101-111, Gary G. Koch
GRADUATE PROGRAMS IN STATISTICS: PANEL DISCUSSION COMMENTS, Pages 113-117, Vijay K. Rohatgi
REJOINDER, Pages 119-122, Seymour Geisser
TEACHING THE SERVICE COURSE - SERVANT OR MASTER, Pages 125-134, J. Leroy Folks
A NEW INTRODUCTORY COURSE IN STATISTICS, Pages 135-163, L.H. Koopmans
A TASK ANALYSIS APPROACH TO DESIGNING A REGRESSION ANALYSIS COURSE, Pages 165-187, Donald G. Watts
PANEL DISCUSSION ON TEACHING SERVICE COURSES AND SHORT COURSES IN STATISTICS, Pages 189-191, Marvin A. Kastenbaum
TEACHING SERVICE COURSES AND SHORT COURSES IN STATISTICS - A RESPONSE, Pages 193-196, Fred C. Leone
PANEL DISCUSSION OF INVITED PAPERS ON TEACHING SERVICE COURSES AND SHORT COURSES IN STATISTICS, Pages 197-208, Stephen R. Lowry
DISCUSSION OF KOOPMANS' NEW INTRODUCTORY COURSE, Pages 209-212, Gottfried E. Noether
CONSULTING AND RESEARCH IN THE CSIRO DIVISION OF MATHEMATICS AND STATISTICS, Pages 215-231, J. Gani
THE STATISTICAL COMPUTING PORTION OF A GRADUATE EDUCATION PROGRAM IN STATISTICS, Pages 233-245, William J. Kennedy Jr.
PREPARING STATISTICIANS FOR GOVERNMENT CAREERS, Pages 247-255, Lincoln E. Moses
CONTRIBUTION TO PANEL DISCUSSION ON TRAINING STATISTICIANS FOR EMPLOYMENT IN INDUSTRY AND GOVERNMENT, Pages 257-281, Churchill Eisenhart
DISCUSSION ON TRAINING STATISTICIANS FOR EMPOLYMENT IN INDUSTRY AND GOVERNMENT, Pages 283-286, William J. Hill
DISCUSSION ON TRAINING STATISTICIANS FOR EMPLOYMENT IN INDUSTRY AND GOVERNMENT, Pages 287-292, R. Lyman Ott
DISCUSSION: PANEL ON TRAINING STATISTICIANS FOR EMPLOYMENT IN INDUSTRY AND GOVERNMENT, Pages 293-300, Bertram Price
DISCUSSION - TRAINING STATISTICIANS FOR EMPLOYMENT IN INDUSTRY AND GOVERNMENT, Pages 301-307, Edward J. Wegman
EXPERIENCE WITH A STUDENT CONSULTING SERVICE, Pages 311-326, Lyle D. Calvin
PRACTICING STATISTICS OR WHAT THEY FORGOT TO SAY IN THE CLASSROOM, Pages 327-342, Brian L. Joiner, Alison K. Pollack
SOME ASPECTS OF TEACHING BIOSTATISTICAL CONSULTING, Pages 343-365, Gerald van Belle
DISCUSSION OF REMARKS BY LYLE CALVIN, BRIAN JOINER AND GERALD VAN BELLE, Pages 367-370, Herbert T. David
STATISTICAL CONSULTING: REACTION AND COMMENTS, Pages 371-374, George P. McCabe Jr.
THE ROLE OF STATISTICAL CONSULTING IN GRADUATE TRAINING A RESPONSE, Pages 375-378, Lennart Rade
DISCUSSION, Pages 379-389, John W. Tukey
REJOINDER, Pages 391-393, Brian L. Joiner
REJOINDER, Page 395, Gerald van Belle
STATISTICS TEACHING AT A DISTANCE, Pages 399-422, Daniel Lunn, John Richmond
SOME EXAMPLES IN TEACHING BINOMIAL DISTRIBUTION, Pages 425-430, J. Blass, Vijay K. Rohatgi
THE TEACHING OF STATISTICS TO NON-MAJORS AND THE PRESERVATION OF STATISTICS AS A MATHEMATICAL SCIENCE, Pages 431-441, Grace O. Esimai
COMPARATIVE EXPERIMENTATION: SOME PRINCIPLES AND PRESCRIPTIONS, Pages 443-463, John A. Flueck
SOME ADVANTAGES OF INDIVIDUALLY GENERATED DATA SETS IN STATISTICAL METHODOLOGY COURSES, Pages 465-469, Gerald R. Hobbs Jr.
THE EFFECT OF TEACHING IMPROVEMENT TECHNIQUES ON STUDENT EVALUATION IN STATISTICAL METHODS COURSES, Pages 471-478, Stephen R. Lowry
THE USE OF AUDIO TAPES FOR SUPPLEMENTAL STUDY, Pages 479-483, Richard W. Madsen
THE ROLE OF MICROCOMPUTERS IN STATISTICAL COMPUTING, Pages 485-496, J. Burdeane Orris
A GRADUATE LEVEL SERVICE COURSE IN NONPARAMETRIC METHODS: THE TECHNIQUE OF SUBJECT MATTER REPORTS USING A COMPUTER PACKAGE, Pages 497-502, Walter R. Pirie
CLIENT - CONSULTANT INTERACTION, Pages 503-509, Ronald D. Platt
UTILIZATION OF THE LOCAL MEDIA IN AN INTRODUCTORY STATISTICS COURSE, Pages 511-515, Martyn R. Smith
TEACHING STATISTICAL CONSULTING: STATISTICAL AND NON-STATISTICAL ASPECTS, Pages 517-536, Douglas A. Zahn
DISCUSSION OF TEACHING STATISTICAL CONSULTING: STATISTICAL AND NON-STATISTICAL ASPECTS BY DOUGLAS A. ZAHN, Pages 537-540, James R. Boen
THE EVOLUTION OF SUPERVISED STATISTICAL CONSULTING AT FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY: A RESPONSE TO THE REVIEW OF JAMES R. BOEN, Pages 541-548, Douglas A. Zahn
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p>The motivation for this book arose from the statistical consulting course that we have taught regularly for several years. In that course, we focus on the themes: β’ Understanding the statistical consulting "process" β’ Developing effective communication skills β’ Obtaining experience through case s
<P>This book is intended for the statistician or student interested in becoming a statistical consultant, as well as clients who need to understand what is involved in the consulting process. It discusses different consulting environments, provides detailed descriptions of communication skills a con
This book is aimed primarily at microbiologists who are undertaking research, and who require a basic knowledge of statistics to analyse their experimental data. Computer software employing a wide range of data analysis methods is widely available to experimental scientists. The availability of this