Reference at Newman Library

New Interface for the Statistical Abstract

Proquest has recently revised the interface to the Statistical Abstract of the United States, making it easier to use. The abstract is a good source for federal statistics that cover a wide range of subjects at the national, regional, and state levels. It’s also useful for determining which agency or department in the government is responsible for publishing a given statistic. Citations with links back to the original sources make it possible to uncover additional data (in particular, for smaller geographic areas like counties and places).

The interface gives you the ability to browse by subject and to drill down to individual topics, which mimic the chapters and tables that appear in the print edition. Alternatively you can search by keywords or phrases across the current or previous Proquest editions of the abstract. Even though the abstract is from 2015 and the first Proquest edition is from 2013, many of the tables contain historic data that stretch back several decades. After doing an initial browse or a search you have the ability to filter the results by date, source, and subject term. Tables can be downloaded in a presentation-friendly PDF format or a data-friendly Excel format.

stat_abstract_interface

The Statistical Abstract was an annual publication that was previously published by the Census Bureau. After over 130 years of continuous publication, the Census Bureau terminated the program for the sake of short-sighted budget cuts. The 2012 Abstract was the last public edition. Proquest acquired the rights to publish the abstract and it has been a proprietary, subscription-based product since 2013. Our subscription includes both the electronic (available via our Databases page) and print (Reference HA 202.A4) editions from Proquest. The Census Bureau still provides access to the older editions they published on their website at http://www.census.gov/prod/www/statistical_abstract.html.

Ref Desk Stats to Be Collected September 8-14

As Randy noted in a recent email, we’ll be gathering reference desk statistics from Monday, September 8, through Sunday, September 14. I’ve uploaded Randy’s ref desk stats collection form to the ref desk LibGuide. You can find it on the “Forms” tab of that guide and download it.

FYI: if you ever find yourself unable to locate the ref desk LibGuide, just go to the main LibGuides page at http://guides.newman.baruch.cuny.edu and type “/ref” at the end:

http://guides.newman.baruch.cuny.edu/ref

New Statistics Databases Page

There is a new subject-specific databases page for statistics. One of the challenges in designing this page was to recognize that when a student asks for “statistics” they usually have some specific topic in mind. This page attempts to steer them to some of the more common areas where our students ask for statistics but does not try to overwhelm them with every last possible topic area where they might be seeking statistics.

Over the summer, I’ll do some usability testing with this page to see if how well it aligns with user expectations. I’ll also be looking at the page statistics in LibGuides to see what links people are actually clicking on (Springshare offers instructions on how to do this for your own guides).

If you have any feedback you’d like to offer, please append it here as a comment to this blog post.

Statistical Consulting Laboratory

In this week’s newsletter from the college, there was an interesting announcement about a “Statistical Consulting Laboratory” that faculty and Ph.D. students can go to for help:

The Statistical Consulting Lab is open from Monday through Thursday at the Newman Vertical Campus, Room 11-170. Professor Shula Gross and statistics graduate student Jing Shuai offer statistical support for faculty and their PhD students’ research. The support ranges from discussing possible analytic venues, to alternative analyses when the one already tried failed to highlight aspects of the data you deem important. The lab also offers nine computers for use. Jing offers programming support in data editing and analysis in Excel, SPSS, SAS and R, as well as some STATA. For more information contact Professor Gross at Shulamith.gross@baruch.cuny.edu or call (646) 312-3434.

Data for Computer and Internet Use at Home

The Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey (CPS) is a monthly survey of 50k US households. Each year they include special topics alongside the basic questions that they usually ask; in 2010 they included questions on computer and internet use at home. The tables include household and individual characteristics by school enrollment, age, race, sex and Hispanic origin at the national and state level. You can view the announcement and access the tables here in Excel and CSV format.

Trial to Statista

We have a short trial (until May 3rd) to Statista. It is available on-campus only for the trial.

Statista is a statistical portal that integrates over 60,000 topics from over 10,000 sources onto a single platform. It has been reviewed favorably by Library Journal in their January 1, 2012 issue and by the Center for Research Libraries.

Please take a look and let me know what you think of the interface, search capabilities and its usefulness to supporting the curriculum at Baruch.