If you only need the buying answer, the current hardcover is the strongest clean verified price in the current snapshot. It comes in below the other verified hardcover comparators, which makes ownership easier to justify for readers who expect quantitative methods to keep mattering beyond one course.
| Format | Seller | Current Price | Link |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hardcover New | Merybook | $82.74 | Check price |
| Hardcover New | PBS America | $95.00 | Check price |
| Hardcover New | Wiley | $101.25 | Check price |
The current hardcover undercuts the other verified hardcover prices enough that ownership can be decided on methodological usefulness rather than on paying a premium. That matters because quantitative methods books often become more practical later, when design, measurement, or analysis choices stop being classroom abstractions and start shaping real proposals or theses.
What this book actually teaches
Conducting Quantitative Research in Education is about doing research, not simply naming statistical concepts. A strong book in this area helps readers move from research questions to design, from measurement to analysis, and from technical decisions to defensible educational conclusions. That is what gives it more shelf life than a short statistical refresher.
Methods books are often worth owning only if the reader expects to reuse the framework later. That is often exactly what happens with proposals, theses, dissertations, and early research projects. In that context, the current hardcover is priced well enough to justify keeping it.
Who should buy print and who should not
Buy print if you expect continued use in educational research, thesis work, or proposal design. Skip ownership if you only need a narrow introduction and do not expect to return to quantitative methods soon. In the current market, the hardcover is the strongest verified route for ownership.
Dr. Telly Kamelia 














