Instructor's Resource Guide and Solutions Manual to Finite Mathematics
β Scribed by Margaret L. Lial, Raymond N. Greenwell, Nathan P. Ritchey
- Publisher
- Addison Wesley
- Year
- 2005
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 352
- Edition
- 8th
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
When examining this a book for adoption consideration, my primary concern is how easy it will be for the students to read it. This requires that you intentionally dumb yourself down, reading the explanations in detail, looking for simplistic clarity. If a book has that feature, then it is most likely a good choice. With the exception of including solutions to a large percentage of the problems, all other aspects of the book are secondary. (I consider the lack of solutions to problems in a math book to be a fatal flaw.) In general, I consider the inclusion of more problems of the same type to be trivial padding; after all, the value added by including ten more routine matrix addition problems is minimal. In finite mathematics, it is possible to include problems based on circumstances that actually occur in the real world. The cost of manufacturing some items is in fact locally linear and the allocation of resources can be described by a matrix. Therefore, the realism of the applied problems must also be a consideration when examining a finite math text.
β¦ Subjects
ΠΠ°ΡΠ΅ΠΌΠ°ΡΠΈΠΊΠ°;ΠΡΡΡΠ°Ρ ΠΌΠ°ΡΠ΅ΠΌΠ°ΡΠΈΠΊΠ° (ΠΎΡΠ½ΠΎΠ²Ρ);
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
official instructor's manual for "Introduction to Mathematical Structures and Proofs" (2012), directly obtained through Springer's website. The manual is very short (39 pages), and mostly consists of scanned pages; please blame it on the author.
instructor's solution manual (official) for the book "An Invitation to Abstract Mathematics" (2013) There is also a new, Second Edition for this book but they bare differ in their content; as of 2022, there is currently no official solution manual available for the second edition