Do your research and read your math book! You're not going to succeed in the future if you just ask for questions! hahaha
cluster sampling
Assessor Parcel Numbers (APN) are 8 digits long. The standard formatting for the numbers is 000-000-00. The book number is the first three digits. The page number is the next two digits. Your APN can be found on your value notice or tax bill.
According to Anderson, Sweeney Williams book Essential of Statistics For Business and Economics, 4e Edition, 2006 p. 34 cumulative frequency distribution is "a variation of the frequency distribution that provides another tabular summary of quantitative data." In simple terms, the cumulative frequency distribution is the sum of the frequencies of all points or outcomes below and including the current point.
24/5 books = 4.80 per book
Quantitative data is collective data that can be measured by numbers and qualitative is data that is are words and cannot be divided by numbers.This is true. Here is a more precise answer:Quantitative data can be classified as continuous or numerical.Continuous data could for example: time, weight, age etc...Numerical would be zip codes of a given area, phone numbers in a telephone book etc...
Do your research and read your math book! You're not going to succeed in the future if you just ask for questions! hahaha
A telephone book.
Yes a telephone directory is a telephone book. Which includes listings of all the numbers of people in a certain area. I myself would consider a telephone directory any list or book that includes a list of people and phone numbers that are in a certain area.
A telephone book or a telephone directory. Here's my silly joke about telephone book. 'Great book to read !!!! Plenty of people , Plenty of places , But I can't make out the story line!!! ... Ha!!!Ha!!!Ha!!! Ugh!!!!
A measurement must be quantitative, as the result is a quantity. A qualitative property is something that can't be measured, such as your opinion of someone, or of a book you have read. Absolutely incorrect. In science you have both qualitative and quantitative measurements. A quantitative measurement is just as it sounds, measuring the quantity of something. A qualitative measurement systematically measures the quality of a system. Temperature is a qualitative measurement of heat. Where as heat is a quantitative measurement of energy. You can't "add" temperature but you can "add" heat to a system by increasing the temperature or the mass of the system. Mass is a quantitative measurement, where as weight is a qualitative measurement of the force of gravity on a mass and is dependent on where it is measured (gravity). If you can "add" or "subtract" something it is quantitative. If you can only "change" it it is qualitative. Thus it is scientifically incorrect to say "adding weight", you must say "increasing weight".
C. Remigius Fresenius has written: 'Quantitative chemical analysis' 'Qualitative Chemical Analysis' -- subject(s): Accessible book 'Qualitative chemical analysis' 'Anleitung zur qualitativen chemischen Analyse: Oder die Lehre von den ..' -- subject(s): Accessible book
Qualitative versus Quantitative has been always fiercely debated in the academic field. It is really what you as the researcher think it is important. There is no right or wrong answer. Until I have taken a qualitative research class at USF I thought that quantitative research is more "scientific" than qualitative research. I thought that qualitative research should be should be done before quantitative research. Well, nothing is sure in this world, and we don't even agree in the notion of objectivity. Since I came to USF I learned to question everything, which I guess it was a good lesson. I was pleasantly surprised by John W. Creswell's book about qualitative research. He also says that qualitative research allows the researcher to study deeply a problem and go beyond the numbers. I started to like qualitative research because it is more flexible, interactive, the research design can be modified and it involves fieldwork (patients should be interviewed in their natural setting). Therefore, a qualitative research can provide a more complex answer to certain problems such as minority and race. For example, can racism be easily answered? No, it calls for a qualitative study because it may involve economical, political, and cultural and gender related problems. I guess journalists mainly use qualitative research if they write a longer and deeper article about topics like race, unemployment, etc. I realize that numbers do not mean always the "whole" picture. I would use qualitative research methods if I want to do a deeper research, if I want to gain a deeper understanding of a problem using multiple views.
When looking for a business telephone number for free the best place to look is in the White Pages of your city's telephone book. You can also use your computer to look up business telephone numbers for free.
Sure. Quantitative observations: Measuring the temperature of water, counting the number of leaves on a plant, recording the weight of an object, timing how long it takes for a pendulum to swing, measuring the length of a book. Qualitative observations: Describing the color of a flower, noting the smell of freshly baked bread, observing the texture of a rock, listening to the sound of chirping birds, feeling the softness of a cotton fabric.
A good place to search for phone numbers is the phone book. There are also online versions of the phone book, and other websites that list telephone numbers.
the correct answer is blue book