The essential how-to for teachers at all grade levels, this book is filled with specific, classroom-tested templates and techniques that teachers need most.
This guide to enabling middle-grade mathematics teachers to use Microsoft Excel in the classroom focuses primarily on concepts taught in grades 4&–10, with some pre-algebra lessons for higher grades. Including files available for downloading to create custom math worksheets, build self-grading interactive spreadsheets, and use Excel to demonstrate charts and Cartesian math, this handbook provides fun examples of probability, solving equations, magic squares, and compound interest.
This unique text uses Microsoft Excel® workbooks to instruct students. In addition to explaining fundamental concepts in microeconomic theory, readers acquire a great deal of sophisticated Excel skills and gain the practical mathematics needed to succeed in advanced courses. In addition to the innovative pedagogical approach, the book features explicitly repeated use of a single central methodology, the economic approach. Students learn how economists think and how to think like an economist. With concrete, numerical examples and novel, engaging applications, interest for readers remains high as live graphs and data respond to manipulation by the user. Finally, clear writing and active learning are features sure to appeal to modern practitioners and their students. The website accompanying the text is found at www.depauw.edu/learn/microexcel.
This is the first edition of a textbook written for a community college introductory course in spreadsheets utilizing Microsoft Excel; second edition available: https://openoregon.pressbooks.pub/beginningexcel19/. While the figures shown utilize Excel 2016, the textbook was written to be applicable to other versions of Excel as well. The book introduces new users to the basics of spreadsheets and is appropriate for students in any major who have not used Excel before.
Business Statistics Using Excel is packed full of examples and integrated Excel screenshots, guiding students step-by-step through the theory and methods behind the use of statistics in the real world. Student exercises running throughout each chapter serve to engage students and encourage self-directed learning and testing.
Take your Excel formulas to the next level with this updated reference John Walkenbach's name is synonymous with excellence in computer books that decipher complex technical topics. Known as "Mr. Spreadsheet," Walkenbach provides you with clear explanations on all the methods you can use to maximize the power of Excel with formulas within the frameworks of all the new features of Excel 2010. You'll learn how to create financial formulas, maximize the power of array formulas, develop custom worksheet functions with VBA, debug formulas, and much more. This invaluable reference is fully updated for the new Microsoft Office release and provides comprehensive formulas coverage, delivering more than 800 pages of Excel tips, tricks, and techniques you won't find anywhere else. Demonstrates how to use all the new features of Excel 2010 to maximize your formulas Shows how to develop custom worksheet functions with VBA, debug formulas, create financial formulas, and more Serves as an indispensable reference no matter your skill level Includes a valuable CD-ROM with sample files, templates and worksheets from the book, plus John Walkenbach's award-winning Power Utility Pak Prepare to excel with Excel when you have John Walkenbach and Excel 2010 Formulas by your side! Note: CD-ROM/DVD and other supplementary materials are not included as part of eBook file.
An Excel Companion for an Introductory Statistics Course in Social and Behavioral Sciences introduces students to the use of Excel to perform basic and intermediate data analyses that are common in the social and behavioral sciences. The companion focuses on using Excel to perform the types of analyses covered in most textbooks within the discipline. The book covers computations of descriptive statistics, hypothesis testing for means up to one-way ANOVA, correlation, and simple linear regression. Students learn how to perform summation in Excel, build pivot tables, and create compelling and accurate distribution graphs. Measures of central tendency, variability, and location are covered. Additional chapters explore normal distribution, random numbers, probability distributions, cross tabulations, and more. All Excel computations described in the companion rely on basic Excel functions and the Data Analysis ToolPak add-on that comes with Excel. Highly practical and accessible, An Excel Companion for an Introductory Statistics Course in Social and Behavioral Sciences is an ideal supplementary text for introductory statistics courses.