Database Systems: Design, Implementation, & Management, 12th
Edition
by Carlos Coronel, Steven Morris
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, Table of Content
Part 1. Database Concepts
Chapter 1. Database Systems
Chapter 2. Data Models
Part 2. Design Concepts
Chapter 3. The Relational Database Model
Chapter 4. Entity Relationship (ER) Modeling
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Chapter 5. Advanced Data Modeling
Chapter 6. Normalization of Database Tables
Part 3. Advanced Design and Implementation
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Chapter 7. Introduction to Structured Query Language (SQL)
Chapter 8. Advanced SQL
Chapter 9. Database Design
Part 4. Advanced Database Concepts
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Chapter 10. Transaction Management and Concurrency Control
Chapter 11. Database Performance Tuning and Query Optimization
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Chapter 12. Distributed Database Management Systems
Chapter 13. Business Intelligence and Data Warehouses
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Chapter 14. Big Data Analytics and NoSQL
Part 5. Databases and the Internet
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Chapter 15. Database Connectivity and Web Technologies
Part 6. Database Administration
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Chapter 16. Database Administration and Security
,Chapter 01: Database Systems
1. Data and information are essentially the same thing.
a. True
b. False
ANSWER: False
POINTS: 1
DIFFICULTY: Easy
REFERENCES: p. 4
LEARNING OBJECTIVES: DATA.CORO.15.LO1-2 - LO1-2
NATIONAL STANDARDS: United States - BUSPROG: Analytic
TOPICS: Data versus Information
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KEYWORDS: Bloom's: Knowledge
2. Data processing can be as simple as organizing data to reveal patterns.
a. True
b. False
ANSWER: True
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POINTS: 1
DIFFICULTY: Easy
REFERENCES: REF: p.4
LEARNING OBJECTIVES: DATA.CORO.15.LO1-2 - LO1-2
NATIONAL STANDARDS: United States - BUSPROG: - Analytic
TOPICS: Data versus Information
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KEYWORDS: Bloom's: Knowledge
3. Data is the result of processing raw facts to reveal its meaning.
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a. True
b. False
ANSWER: False
POINTS: 1
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DIFFICULTY: Easy
REFERENCES: REF: p.4
LEARNING OBJECTIVES: DATA.CORO.15.LO1-2 - LO1-2
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NATIONAL STANDARDS: United States - BUSPROG: Analytic
TOPICS: Data versus Information
KEYWORDS: Bloom's: Knowledge
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4. When data are entered into a form and saved, they are placed in the underlying database as knowledge.
a. True
b. False
ANSWER: False
POINTS: 1
DIFFICULTY: Moderate
REFERENCES: REF: p.4
LEARNING OBJECTIVES: DATA.CORO.15.LO1-2 - LO1-2
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, Chapter 01: Database Systems
NATIONAL STANDARDS: United States - BUSPROG: Analytic - BUSPROG: Analytic skills: Statistics and
Management Science
TOPICS: Data versus Information
KEYWORDS: Bloom's: Comprehension
5. Data constitute the building blocks of information.
a. True
b. False
ANSWER: True
POINTS: 1
DIFFICULTY: Easy
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REFERENCES: REF: p.4
LEARNING OBJECTIVES: DATA.CORO.15.LO1-2 - LO1-2
NATIONAL STANDARDS: United States - BUSPROG: Analytic
TOPICS: Data versus Information
KEYWORDS: Bloom's: Knowledge
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6. Metadata describe the data characteristics and the set of relationships that links the data found within the database.
a. True
b. False
ANSWER: True
POINTS: 1
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DIFFICULTY: Easy
REFERENCES: REF: p.6
LEARNING OBJECTIVES: DATA.CORO.15.LO1-3 - LO1-3
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NATIONAL STANDARDS: United States - BUSPROG: Analytic
TOPICS: Introducing the Database
KEYWORDS: Bloom's: Knowledge
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7. The only way to access the data in a database is through the DBMS.
a. True
b. False
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ANSWER: True
POINTS: 1
DIFFICULTY: Moderate
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REFERENCES: REF: p.6
LEARNING OBJECTIVES: DATA.CORO.15.LO1-3 - LO1-3
NATIONAL STANDARDS: United States - BUSPROG: Analytic - BUSPROG: Analytic skills: Statistics and
Management Science
TOPICS: Introducing the Database
KEYWORDS: Bloom's: Comprehension
8. Database programming languages receive all application requests and translate them into the complex operations
required to fulfill those requests.
a. True
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