Mario Triola’s Elementary Statistics remains the market-leading introductory statistics textbook because it engages readers with an abundance of real data in the examples, applications, and exercises. Statistics is all around us in our daily lives, and Triola is dedicated to finding new real-world examples and data sets that make sense for today’s reader. The Eleventh Edition contains more than 2000 exercises, 87% of which are new, and 82% of which use real data. It also contains hundreds of examples, 86% of which are new and 94% of which use real data. By analyzing real data, students are able to connect abstract concepts to the world at large. As a result, they gain conceptual understanding and learn to think statistically, using the same methods that professional statisticians employ.
Amazon Textbooks and Books Store
Introduction to Statistics; Summarizing and Graphing Data; Statistics for Describing, Exploring, and Comparing Data; Probability; Discrete Probability Distributions; Normal Probability Distributions; Estimates and Sample Sizes; Hypothesis Testing; Inferences from Two Samples; Correlation and Regression; Goodness-of-Fit and Contingency Tables; Analysis of Variance; Nonparametric Statistics; Statistics Process Control; Projects, Procedures, Perspectives,For all readers interested in introductory statistics.
Customer Reviews
Frank![]()
An absolutely outstanding text for conceptual development in elementary statistics. – I’m currently taking a statistical analysis course, and, after having read the vast majority of the text, I’ve found it to be the most clear and intelligently written text on the undergraduate market. (I’ve read most of the competing texts and they really don’t compare). Clear, to the point, lucid prose – explaining not only the calculations, but also the CONCEPTS BEHIND THE PROCEDURES, is what seperates this text from the others. A lot of books lose the reader in computational detail without clearly explaining the ideas behind the procedures. – This book clearly surpasses the others in its conceptual clarity and insight that it offers into critical ideas left out of most other elementary texts I’ve read. I actually went out and got this book after seeing how clearly superior it was in communicating critical ideas necessary to understand the subject – relative to the text that was assigned by the professor for the course. The doctrinaire critiques I’ve read about the book are, to me, entirely unfounded. If you’re looking for a good conceptual foundation in elementary statistics, and calculations that illustrate the concepts, you won’t find a better text on the market.
very good intro stats book![]()
I think this is a great textbook. I have been reviewing texts for an AP statistics course and have settled on this book as a middle ground between very basic texts and rigorous textbooks for math majors.
It is not intended for math majors. I don’t understand why reviewers are criticizing it for it not being more rigorous.
It has enough depth for intro undergrad stats, yet is adaptable to lower levels so some of the boneheads I have in high school can comprehend.
Excellent explanations. Very readable. Decent problem sets.
I approve.
Trash — utter trash.![]()
I am saddened to see the textbook community to mistake color, flash, graphics, and artifical examples as quality textbook. Although I understand they need to market, this book demonstrates the effect of marketing upon education.
My students complain that the text is difficult to read. Although I know they are new, I have to agree with their opinion. I sat and read the text — and found it lacking respectable composition and clarity. I feel for my students and will not use the text again.
In addition, the examples are useless. They match the homework at the end of the chapter, but only “teach to the test”. What’s the point if the student don’t learn methods on how to critically think and approach problems? Oh wow, they know what P(Z>1) is, but what do they know to do with it? Nothing!
Perhaps it is time for the educational community to produce their own compact books, customized to what students (and not publishers) need. I cannot recommend this book for anyone and would beg you to reconsider.


