Books : Calculus: Single Variable

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Author name: Deborah Hughes-Hallett, Andrew M. Gleason, William G. McCallum, Daniel E. Flath, Patti Frazer Lock, David O. Lomen, David Lovelock, Brad G. Osgood, Thomas W. Tucker, Douglas Quinney, Karen Rhea, Jeff Tecosky-Feldman

 : Calculus: Single Variable
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Type of bind: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 515
EAN num: 9780471484820
ISBN number: 0471484822
Label: Wiley
Manufacturer: Wiley
Quantity: 1
Page Count: 688
Printing Date: November 19, 2004
Publishing house: Wiley
Sale Popularity Level: 3502
Studio: Wiley




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Editor's Notes and Comments:

Product Description:
Now in its fourth edition, Calculus reflects the strong consensus within the mathematics community for a balance between contemporary and traditional ideas. Building on previous work, it brings together the best of both new and traditional curricula in an effort to meet the needs of instructors and students alike. The text exhibits the same strengths from earlier editions including the Rule of Four, an emphasis on modeling, exposition that is easy to understand, and a flexible approach to technology.



Customer Reviews
User popularity level:  out of 5 stars

Rated by buyers 5 out of 5 stars - How I Learned Calculus
This calculus textbook provides challenging sample problems and clear proofs for calculus students. It highlights the main points well, surrounding each must-know point with an extremely helpful blue box (actually you could probably learn calculus by just reading the blue boxes). Exercises range from easy to very challenging and from random to practical. While most of the problems can be done by hand, a graphing calculator is necessary to get the most out of this book. For those taking AP Calculus, this book covers both AB and BC.



Rated by buyers 5 out of 5 stars - Great Book
I've taught out of this book for several years. Students learn to understand the concepts through some very useful and interesting problems. Extremely well-written.



Rated by buyers 3 out of 5 stars - These other ratings are too low
I should start out by saying that I haven't seen this newest edition, but if it's similar to the older ones which also got unfair reviews, I can safely say that this book deserves at least a 3. It is certainly not a one star book, and I suspect that those reviewers are just taking their frustrations out on the easiest target (because as we all know, doing poorly in calculus is NEVER the student's fault).

I don't think this is the book to use if you're a math major, but other than that it's good. I taught myself calculus with an older edition when I was in 11th grade and I felt that I had an intuitive understanding of the subject even if I couldn't do a proof. I think that intuitive understanding should be the goal of a calculus book that isn't necessarily designed for math majors (this book seems more suited for biology majors or something similar).

Probably my biggest complaint is that the book, like so many others, isn't clear about what is an acceptable proof and what is just a convincing(hopefully) argument. Students may believe that such arguments are valid proofs, and I think the authors should make it clear what the case may be. This is the main reason I wouldn't recommend the book to math majors, but just about anyone else should gain a good understanding of calculus from this book.




Rated by buyers 1 out of 5 stars - Opaque; provides little context; all but useless to the freshman
Little explanation or background is provided to orient the student; the book assumes the reader has been using trigonometry and algebra on a daily basis for the better part of adulthood. An example of this is the section on rates and related rates (4.6). There are two paragraphs given in the way of explanation:

"Derivatives represent rates of change. In this section, we see how to calculate rates in a variety of situations."

And...

"In Example 1, the radius of the snowball decreased at a constant rate. A more realistic scenario is for the radius to decrease at different rates at different times. Then, we may not be able to write a formula for V as a function of t. However, we may still be able to calculate dV/dt, as in the following example."

No mention of how the process of working related rates problems is similar to implicit differentiation. No step-by-step outline of a general way to go about working this category of problem. Just examples outside of any framework.

Better for a refresher in Calculus for graduate students than a freshman-level course. I used Stewart's "Calculus: Concepts and Contexts" to learn how to do the assigned work from this text.

Don't think the solutions manual will help--only a subset of the odd problems in the text are described and the explanations are often wanting.



Rated by buyers 1 out of 5 stars - Extremely unhelpful
This book is terrible. Learning Calculus with the "aid" of this textbook was painful and unproductive. Examples are short, lack explanation, and are too specific to be applied to any other exercises. Simply awful. Fortunately my college is switching back to Steward's calculus book, which is like heaven compared to this book. The only acceptable use for this book is toilet paper, and even then it is horrible.

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