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Quantitative Literacy, Digital Update by Bruce Crauder; Benny Evans; Jerry Johnson; Alan Noell - Third Edition, 2022 from Macmillan Student Store
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Quantitative Literacy, Digital Update

Third  Edition|©2022  Bruce Crauder; Benny Evans; Jerry Johnson; Alan Noell

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  • About
  • Digital Options
  • Contents
  • Authors

About

Discover the way mathematical thinking can help you understand the information you read, see, and hear every day.

Quantitative Literacy: Thinking Between the Lines helps you make better-informed decisions about money, voting and politics, health issues, and many other areas of life where math comes into play. The book’s online content in Achieve gives you the practice you need to prepare for class, exams, and life after school.

Affordable e-textbook option available!

Take notes, add highlights, and download our mobile-friendly e-textbook. Compatible with iOS or Android devices, Mac, PC, Kindle Fire, or Chromebook.

Digital Options

E-book

Read online (or offline) with all the highlighting and notetaking tools you need to be successful in this course.

Learn More

Achieve

Achieve is a single, easy-to-use platform proven to engage students for better course outcomes

Learn More

Contents

Table of Contents

1 Critical Thinking

  • 1.1 Public Policy and Simpson’s Paradox: Is “Average” Always Average
  • 1.2 Logic and Informal Fallacies: Does That Argument Hold Water?
  • 1.3 Formal Logic and Truth Tables: Do Computers Think?
  • 1.4 Sets and Venn Diagrams: Pictorial Logic
  • 1.5 Critical Thinking and Number Sense: What Do These Figures Mean?

2 Analysis of Growth

  • 2.1 Measurements of Growth: How Fast Is It Changing?
  • 2.2 Graphs: Picturing Growth
  • 2.3 Misleading Graphs: Should I Believe My Eyes?

3 Linear and Exponential Change: Comparing Growth Rates

  • 3.1 Lines and Linear Growth: What Does A Constant Rate Mean?
  • 3.2 Exponential Growth and Decay: Constant Percentage Rates
  • 3.3 Logarithmic Phenomena: Compressed Scales
  • 3.4 Quadratics and Parabolas

4 Personal Finance

  • 4.1 Saving Money: The Power of Compounding
  • 4.2 Borrowing: How Much Car Can You Afford?
  • 4.3 Saving for the Long Term: Build That Nest Egg
  • 4.4 Credit Cards: Paying Off Consumer Debt
  • 4.5 Inflation, Taxes, and Stocks: Managing Your Money

5 Introduction to Probability

  • 5.1 Calculating Probabilities: How Likely Is It?
  • 5.2 Medical Testing and Conditional Probability: Ill or Not?
  • 5.3 Counting and Theoretical Probabilities: How Many?
  • 5.4 More Ways of Counting: Permuting and Combining
  • 5.5 Expected Value and the Law of Large Numbers: Don’t Bet on It

6 Statistics

  • 6.1 Data Summary and Presentation: Boiling Down the Numbers
  • 6.2 The Normal Distribution: Why the Bell Curve?
  • 6.3 The Statistics of Polling: Can We Believe the Polls?
  • 6.4 Statistical Inference and Clinical Trials: Effective Drugs?

7 Graph Theory

  • 7.1 Modeling With Graphs and Finding Euler Circuits
  • 7.2 Hamilton Circuits and Traveling Salesmen: Efficient Routes
  • 7.3 Trees: Viral E-mails and Spell Checkers

8 Voting and Social Choice

  • 8.1 Measuring Voting Power: Does My Vote Count?
  • 8.2 Voting Systems: How Do We Choose a Winner?
  • 8.3 Fair Division: What Is a Fair Share?
  • 8.4 Apportionment: Am I Represented?

9 Geometry

  • 9.1 Perimeter, Area, and Volume: How Do I Measure?
  • 9.2 Proportionality and Similarity: Changing the Scale
  • 9.3 Symmetries and Tilings: Form and Patterns

Appendices

  • Appendix 1 Unit Conversion
  • Appendix 2 Exponents and Scientific Notation
  • Appendix 3 Calculators, Parentheses, and Rounding
  • Appendix 4 Basic Math
  • Appendix 5 Problem Solving

Answers

Credits

Index

Authors

Bruce Crauder

Bruce Crauder received his B.A. from Haverford College and his M.S. and Ph.D. from Columbia University. After post-doctoral positions at the Institute for Advanced Study, the University of Utah, and the University of Pennsylvania, Crauder came to Oklahoma State University, where he is now Professor of Mathematics and Associate Dean. Crauder’s research in algebraic geometry has resulted in 10 refereed articles in as many years in his specialty, three-dimensional birational geometry.


Benny Evans

Benny Evans received his Ph.D. in mathematics from the University of Michigan. He is currently Professor of Mathematics at Oklahoma State University, where he has served as undergraduate director, associate head, and department head. He has held visiting appointments at the Institute for Advanced Study, Rice University, and Texas A&M. His research interests are topology and mathematics education.


Jerry Johnson

Jerry Johnson received his B.S. in Mathematics from Oklahoma State University and his Ph.D. in Mathematics from the University of Illinois, Urbana. He was on the faculty of Oklahoma State University from 1969 until 1993, when he moved to the University of Nevada, Reno to become director of their Math Center and Math Across the Curriculum Project. From 1995 to 2001 he was chairman of the Department of Mathematics. He has received fifteen funded grants, including seven from the National Science Foundation. He has published 17 refereed papers in mathematics research journals and 36 papers in various journals and conference proceedings related to mathematics education. He is the author of GyroGraphics, a mathematics software package for which he received the EDUCOM Distinguished Mathematics Software award in 1991.


Alan Noell

Alan Noell has a B.A. degree in Mathematics from Texas A&M University, and M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in Mathematics from Princeton University. After a postdoctoral position at CalTech, in 1985 he joined the faculty at Oklahoma State University, where he is now Professor of Mathematics. His research interests are in the area of several complex variables. He has also enjoyed working in the area of curriculum development. His work has been supported by the National Science Foundation and other sources.


GO DIGITAL WITH ACHIEVE
Transform students into informed consumers of the quantitative information they encounter every day.

Discover the way mathematical thinking can help you understand the information you read, see, and hear every day.

Quantitative Literacy: Thinking Between the Lines helps you make better-informed decisions about money, voting and politics, health issues, and many other areas of life where math comes into play. The book’s online content in Achieve gives you the practice you need to prepare for class, exams, and life after school.

Affordable e-textbook option available!

Take notes, add highlights, and download our mobile-friendly e-textbook. Compatible with iOS or Android devices, Mac, PC, Kindle Fire, or Chromebook.

E-book

Read online (or offline) with all the highlighting and notetaking tools you need to be successful in this course.

Learn More

Achieve

Achieve is a single, easy-to-use platform proven to engage students for better course outcomes

Learn More

Table of Contents

1 Critical Thinking

  • 1.1 Public Policy and Simpson’s Paradox: Is “Average” Always Average
  • 1.2 Logic and Informal Fallacies: Does That Argument Hold Water?
  • 1.3 Formal Logic and Truth Tables: Do Computers Think?
  • 1.4 Sets and Venn Diagrams: Pictorial Logic
  • 1.5 Critical Thinking and Number Sense: What Do These Figures Mean?

2 Analysis of Growth

  • 2.1 Measurements of Growth: How Fast Is It Changing?
  • 2.2 Graphs: Picturing Growth
  • 2.3 Misleading Graphs: Should I Believe My Eyes?

3 Linear and Exponential Change: Comparing Growth Rates

  • 3.1 Lines and Linear Growth: What Does A Constant Rate Mean?
  • 3.2 Exponential Growth and Decay: Constant Percentage Rates
  • 3.3 Logarithmic Phenomena: Compressed Scales
  • 3.4 Quadratics and Parabolas

4 Personal Finance

  • 4.1 Saving Money: The Power of Compounding
  • 4.2 Borrowing: How Much Car Can You Afford?
  • 4.3 Saving for the Long Term: Build That Nest Egg
  • 4.4 Credit Cards: Paying Off Consumer Debt
  • 4.5 Inflation, Taxes, and Stocks: Managing Your Money

5 Introduction to Probability

  • 5.1 Calculating Probabilities: How Likely Is It?
  • 5.2 Medical Testing and Conditional Probability: Ill or Not?
  • 5.3 Counting and Theoretical Probabilities: How Many?
  • 5.4 More Ways of Counting: Permuting and Combining
  • 5.5 Expected Value and the Law of Large Numbers: Don’t Bet on It

6 Statistics

  • 6.1 Data Summary and Presentation: Boiling Down the Numbers
  • 6.2 The Normal Distribution: Why the Bell Curve?
  • 6.3 The Statistics of Polling: Can We Believe the Polls?
  • 6.4 Statistical Inference and Clinical Trials: Effective Drugs?

7 Graph Theory

  • 7.1 Modeling With Graphs and Finding Euler Circuits
  • 7.2 Hamilton Circuits and Traveling Salesmen: Efficient Routes
  • 7.3 Trees: Viral E-mails and Spell Checkers

8 Voting and Social Choice

  • 8.1 Measuring Voting Power: Does My Vote Count?
  • 8.2 Voting Systems: How Do We Choose a Winner?
  • 8.3 Fair Division: What Is a Fair Share?
  • 8.4 Apportionment: Am I Represented?

9 Geometry

  • 9.1 Perimeter, Area, and Volume: How Do I Measure?
  • 9.2 Proportionality and Similarity: Changing the Scale
  • 9.3 Symmetries and Tilings: Form and Patterns

Appendices

  • Appendix 1 Unit Conversion
  • Appendix 2 Exponents and Scientific Notation
  • Appendix 3 Calculators, Parentheses, and Rounding
  • Appendix 4 Basic Math
  • Appendix 5 Problem Solving

Answers

Credits

Index

Bruce Crauder

Bruce Crauder received his B.A. from Haverford College and his M.S. and Ph.D. from Columbia University. After post-doctoral positions at the Institute for Advanced Study, the University of Utah, and the University of Pennsylvania, Crauder came to Oklahoma State University, where he is now Professor of Mathematics and Associate Dean. Crauder’s research in algebraic geometry has resulted in 10 refereed articles in as many years in his specialty, three-dimensional birational geometry.


Benny Evans

Benny Evans received his Ph.D. in mathematics from the University of Michigan. He is currently Professor of Mathematics at Oklahoma State University, where he has served as undergraduate director, associate head, and department head. He has held visiting appointments at the Institute for Advanced Study, Rice University, and Texas A&M. His research interests are topology and mathematics education.


Jerry Johnson

Jerry Johnson received his B.S. in Mathematics from Oklahoma State University and his Ph.D. in Mathematics from the University of Illinois, Urbana. He was on the faculty of Oklahoma State University from 1969 until 1993, when he moved to the University of Nevada, Reno to become director of their Math Center and Math Across the Curriculum Project. From 1995 to 2001 he was chairman of the Department of Mathematics. He has received fifteen funded grants, including seven from the National Science Foundation. He has published 17 refereed papers in mathematics research journals and 36 papers in various journals and conference proceedings related to mathematics education. He is the author of GyroGraphics, a mathematics software package for which he received the EDUCOM Distinguished Mathematics Software award in 1991.


Alan Noell

Alan Noell has a B.A. degree in Mathematics from Texas A&M University, and M.A. and Ph.D. degrees in Mathematics from Princeton University. After a postdoctoral position at CalTech, in 1985 he joined the faculty at Oklahoma State University, where he is now Professor of Mathematics. His research interests are in the area of several complex variables. He has also enjoyed working in the area of curriculum development. His work has been supported by the National Science Foundation and other sources.


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