<p><strong>'...the book functions...as a useful and practical starting point for those intending to use the cohort studies for research.'</strong></p><p><strong>'...extremely helpful to those embarking on their own studies, giving an immediate and comprehensive source of additional background reading...'</strong></p><p><strong>'Alternatively, for those simply in search of an interesting summary of social, political and religious shifts over than past half century, this book is a highly enjoyable read.'</strong><em>-Claire Packham in Significance</em></p>
<p><strong>'...the book functions...as a useful and practical starting point for those intending to use the cohort studies for research.'</strong></p><p><strong>'...extremely helpful to those embarking on their own studies, giving an immediate and comprehensive source of additional background reading...'</strong></p><p><strong>'Alternatively, for those simply in search of an interesting summary of social, political and religious shifts over than past half century, this book is a highly enjoyable read.'</strong><em>-Claire Packham in Significance</em></p><p><strong>'</strong><strong>Summing Up: Recommended. Professionals/practitioners, especially in sociology.' </strong><em>-J. A. Jaffe, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater in Choice, Jan 2012</em></p>
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Michael Wadsworth directed the first birth cohort study until 2006, reconfiguring it as a study of physical and mental change with age, adding a study of the following generation, and the collection of DNA, and writing a history of its findings during the first thirty-six years in their historical and social context in The Imprint of Time.
John Bynner directed the Centre for Longitudinal Studies and the 1958 and 1970 cohort studies within a comparative life course study framework until 2003. He also directed the Wider Benefits of Learning Research Centre and the National Research and Development Centre for Adult Literacy and Numeracy.