Fundamentals of Trigonometry | 
enlarge | Authors: Earl Swokowski, Jeffery A. Cole Publisher: Brooks Cole Category: Book
List Price: $164.95 Buy Used: $33.32 You Save: $131.63 (80%)
New (8) Used (45) from $33.32
Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 669226
Media: Hardcover Edition: 9 Pages: 592 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.7 Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 8 x 1.1
ISBN: 0534361285 Dewey Decimal Number: 516.242 EAN: 9780534361280
Publication Date: November 11, 1998 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Hardcover. Binding is tight. Dust jacket is missing. Heavy wear to cover, inside texts still in good condition. Some pages show wear. Binding shows wear and sticker on it and tearing at header and footer. Corners are also tearing.
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Completing the time-proven Swokowski/Cole precalculus series, this book helps students learn, understand, and appreciate trigonometry without compromising mathematical integrity. The book takes a unit-circle first approach to trigonometry and incorporates the use of the graphing calculator. Numerous application problems help motivate students toward success in learning trigonometry.
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| Customer Reviews:
I've read better math books......... June 2, 1999 6 out of 12 found this review helpful
I read this book in a college mathematics course called college trigonometry. In its explanations of some of the mathematical concepts, the book is way too specific in Chapter 1. The other chapters were way too vauge, and give very little real-world applications in the understanding of the mathematical concepts. This is just the way I saw it. The writer also uses the letters "u" and "v" as variables. This is not good, because of the confusion of the letters "u" and "v" looking the same or very similar when the student writes them down. Also greek letters used for angles, is more confusing than necessary. The excersises at the end of the sections were ok, however, they were repetitive. By this I mean the writer has the same problems over and over again, but increasing slightly in difficulty. There needs to be more real world applications in this book to explain mathematical ideas. Also there are only answers provided in the back of the book and in the student guide to the odd numbered problems. I think a student could do much better in this course if the answers were provided to all the questions, and they were more thouroughly explained in the solutions manual. It would be a good idea to revise this (The students Solutions Manual) The author solves the problems in a hurry, and does not take the time to go through them step by step, which is very important in learning mathematics. Overall I thought the book was written using concepts that were really hard to understand the way they were explained. The only thing that I found helpful about the book was the practice problems, and with some of the issues that I mentioned about varibles, and angle variables, even the practice problems were difficult.
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