New Realities in the Management of Student Affairs: Emerging Specialist Roles and Structures vs Student Affairs by the Numbers: Quantitative Research and Statistics for Professionals
Overall winner: Student Affairs by the Numbers: Quantitative Research and Statistics for Professionals
Key Differences
Product A (Rishi Sriram) is a quantitative-focused resource valued as a practical refresher for student affairs professionals and is tagged for statistics and quantitative research. Product B (Ashley Tull) emphasizes emerging roles and management/leadership in student affairs, has a perfect but smaller review sample, and is tagged for education management and leadership
New Realities in the Management of Student Affairs: Emerging Specialist Roles and Structures
A book on evolving roles and structures in student affairs management. Highlights emerging specialist positions for changing times. Customer insight notes mixed signals and overall positive reception
Pros
- focus on evolving roles in student affairs
- clear exploration of new structures
- positive overall rating from readers
Cons
- features field marked as N/A
- customer insight data is largely unavailable
- no additional concrete benefits listed
Student Affairs by the Numbers: Quantitative Research and Statistics for Professionals
A reference on quantitative research and statistics for student affairs professionals. Provides practical mappings from data to applications. One customer notes it serves as an excellent refresher
Pros
- clear link between quantitative research and practical application
- valued as a refresher for professionals
- concise resource on statistics for student affairs
Cons
- no features listed
- no edition details available
- limited reviewer insights
Head-to-Head
| Criteria | Winner |
|---|---|
| Price | Tie |
| Durability | Tie |
| Versatility | Rishi Sriram |
| User Reviews | Rishi Sriram |