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Paperback The Usborne Illustrated Dictionary of Math Book

ISBN: 0794516297

ISBN13: 9780794516291

The Usborne Illustrated Dictionary of Math

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Good

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Book Overview

Equally useful to a parent trying to guide a child through the baffling world of modern mathematics and to children learning for themselves, this book includes: percentages; ratios; managing money;... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

6 ratings

Great book for a Junior high student

This book was a savior for my daughter on her 8th grade math class! The book is Colorful, easy to read for her and just good book to catch up topics she missed during her elementary years ! Recommended !!

Illustrated Dictionary of Math

This is a must for all high school students who are serious about math and would like a reference book that has it "all".

Dictionary of Math

This is an absolutely wonderful book to have around. Purchased from suesbooks.info It's like anything else. If you don't use math all the time, this will help you to get caught up to help your children. It explains it in a very easy simple way. It's a book that will be used in the middle schools often. For a math book, there are great illustrations.

Excellent Precalculus Summary

Although this is not what I would define as a math dictionary, it is an excellent book. It has wonderfully short and clear explanations of most of the precalculus topics, plus good examples. I haven't been able to find another book that is so complete and concise. I am using it to review for the Praxis II Mathematics exam and I am very happy I bought it. However, if you need a true college/high school math dictionary try the "HarperCollins Dictionary of Mathematics" or use Wikipedia.

math ref:

as the husband of a teacher(third and special ed.) and the freind of a retired junior school math teacher, as well as being a retired industrial engineer, I cant say enough about how well presented this material is. every home should have a copy for both a study aid and a reference

Best Little Math Reference of them all!

This is not a strictly alphabetical dictionary, which is one of the best things about it. Table of Contents for this book goes like this... NUMBER: Numbers, Sets, Arithmetic, Fractions, Decimals, Indices and Standard Form, Ratio and Proportion, Percentages. SHAPE, SPACE, and MEASURES: Geometry, Angles, Polygons, Solids, Symmetry, Transformation, Vectors, Geometric Constructions, Loci, Drawing To Scale, Perimeter and Area, Volume, Trigonometry, Circles, Calculations Involving Circlers, Angles in a Circle, Measurement, Time. And so on... Very logical groupings, making it easier to find what you are looking for, even if you've forgotten the exact term. I bought a few different Math Dictionaries to help answer my child's burning curiosities about the "what's next?" of various math topics. What with "No Child Left Behind," the schools now spend such a long time drilling endlessly on each step that there is never time left for the fun part, the "what happens next" and the "what else you can do with this." Kids get bored out of their minds and learn to tune out. In most subjects, I have no trouble adding the "But wait! there's more!" excitement at home, but with math, I had no reference books and not enough background info on my own. Math was my 'hate it" subject. If only I had owned a copy of this in school... everything would have been different. Every topic is explained with clear and concise diagrams, pictures and explanations. Everything is organized by topic, not strictly alphabetically, so you don't look up "denominator" in one place and "numerator" somewhere else with no cohesive overview of fractions. You get units that cover a whole topic. But the index is very thorough, so if you just want to look up the term "quadrant," you can do it quickly. How can this book cover so much and still be so thin? There are no pages of exercises and practice problems to do! This is why it is a "Dictionary," not some other kind of a math book. This is also why it's exhilarating, not drudgery. You look up "Polygons," and you get a concise list of polygons (with a small colored picture of each one) from 3 sides (triangle) all the way up to 20 sides (Icosagon). You look up area, and you get the formula for the area of a rectangle, then you move on to square, triangle, paralellagram, trapezium, circle, and surface area of a soild, all in two pages. No drills, no boring pages of "practice." What is there to practice? Somebody tells you what it is this clearly, and now you know, and on you go. It's exciting. And it goes into more depth in less time than any of the other math references I've checked out. I bought this book for my 8 year old, and she loves it. I've used it with middle school kids, high school kids and adults, and they all love it. What's not to love? You get the fun part of math without the boring turnoff part. And guess what I've observed? Kids look up something, then irresistibly scramble for paper to "try it out" by m
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