Mental Measurements Yearbook (MMY) online provides test reviews and evaluative information on more than 3000 testing instruments. The MMY series contains information for evaluating test products in psychology, education, business and leadership.
HaPI contains a wide range of records that provide comprehensive, accurate information about a variety of measurement instruments: Checklists, Coding Schemes, Indexes, Interview schedules, projective techniques, questionnaires, rating scales, surveys, test, vignettes/scenarios.
Instruments are taken from peer-reviewed scholarly journals, compendiums, and test publishers' catalogs. HaPI database identifies measurement tools relevant for investigations and explorations in the field of medicine, nursing, psychology, public health, social work, communication, sociology, organizational behavior/human resources.
What is ATLAS.ti?
ATLAS.ti is a powerful workbench for the qualitative analysis of large bodies of textual, graphical, audio and video data.
Sophisticated tools help you to arrange, reassemble, and manage your material in creative, yet systematic ways. ATLAS.ti keeps you focused on the material itself. Whether your field is anthropology, economics, criminology, or medicine: ATLAS.ti will meet your qualitative analysis needs!
CQ Researcher is your first source for information on American politics, federal and state government, American institutions, campaigns and elections, current events, and world affairs.
SPSS is available at John B. Cade Library. Ask a Librarian for more details.
The main page for accessing data compiled by the U.S. Census Bureau. Find information on population, demographic, economic and other data, including trade and manufacturing statistics.
The Census Bureau’s gateway site to population, housing, economic and other data, down to a city, zip code census tract and block level. Select Data Sets in the menu on the left to see a list of available data. As well as running the decadal national census, the bureau operates other surveys, which provide more detailed information from representative samples of the U.S. population, including the Current Population Survey (run jointly with the Bureau of Labor Statistics, see below) and the American Community Survey.
National database of selected Census, American Community Survey, Current Population Survey (run jointly with the Bureau of Labor Statistics, and other economic, business, government and geographical data for all states and counties, and for cities and towns with +25,000 people.
The U.S. Census Bureau provides access to databases related to building permits, imports/exports, employment and earnings (by county), occupational breakdowns by race, and other info.
Annual national crime statistics including National Incident- Based Reporting System, Hate Crime Statistics, Law Enforcement Officers Killed and Assaulted, and The National Use-of-Force Data Collection
The Bureau of Justice Statistics does national surveys to gather data a variety of criminal justice issues, including crime victimization (what crimes people report they have been the victims of), jail populations, adults on parole and probation, etc. Here is its full list of data collections. The National Crime Victimization Survey is an especially useful resource, which together with the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Uniform Crime Reporting program provides the best national data on crime.
Justice Research and Statistics Association provides an interactive U.S. map with links to state agencies that collect, analyze, and disseminate justice data.
The Census Bureau does regular surveys on various national business and economic indicators, as well as an economic census every five years with statistical data down to the county and city level.