$16.95
Reviewed in the United States on August 11, 2014
Adelmarcio: Five Stars. Great!
Reviewed in the United States on December 1, 2009
ARF: This is a great reference book when using the TI-89 calulator. When detailed information is needed this book has the answers for advanced Algebra.
Reviewed in the United States on July 27, 2016
Ken: This book helped me understand Algebra more thoroughly. I love the way Brendan Kelly writes.
Reviewed in the United States on January 6, 2018
Tim Jones: This is an odd little book as professionally published math and calculator books go. It suffers from the lack of tons of editors massaging the life out of the text. The start of Unit 4 on Transcendental Functions, page 55, has a time line that indicates when e was proven transcendental, but what this means is never given. Don’t look in the index; there isn’t one. This last example gives the problem and glory of this little book: it jams a lot in at the expense of some holes in the development. I give the book five stars though because one can look up transcendence and overlook the other flaws. In addition, the investigations, as the author calls them, do challenge readers and combine theory with technology. So there is history, cartoons, theory, not to mention, how to use a calculator, all in exactly 96 pages (same as his other books, exactly 96 pages). Did I mention pictures of historical mathematicians and examples of real programming of a TI-89?
I’ve been reading the text and the first exploration on sequences is poorly placed, in my opinion. It’s too out of the mainstream. Unit 3 on polynomials and rational functions is what most students will be looking for. Also the Dummies book for the TI-89 shows the glory of lots of editors: it gives a slow, easy start and builds. I’m still on with five stars: The Dummies book doesn’t ever go deep. Brendan, the author, does with fractals, linear programming, and even something like abstract algebra — Unit 2, Patterns and Properties of Numbers. The author misses one big one: the current best use of a calculator is regression and modeling. He should try for a book on deterministic modeling that explains what the calculator gives the contemporary world. For such a book the history of algebra’s evolution becomes irrelevant, but algebra becomes immediately real, relevant, and, indeed, critical to our species success: we need to insist every politician speak in terms of models or we are not going to solve modern problems. We are going to go extinct.
Topics Include
- Fundamental Theorem of Algebra
- sequences & series
- polynomial functions
- polynomial equations
- rational functions
- trigonometric functions
- trigonometric identities
- exponential functions
- logarithmic functions
- math of investment
- number theory
- modular arithmetic
- simple programming
- solving equations
- matrices
- linear systems
- linear programming
- complex numbers
- fractals & chaos…and many others
Reviewed in the United States on April 9, 2010
A. Hughes: Shows very neat tricks with the Ti-89. There are 3 books in this series. Very useful in terms of showing you how to use the calculator to do very useful and powerful things. My only complaint is that it is written in a goofy childish manner, most likely in an attempt to take the stigma away from mathematics. The problem is you have to wade through 3 or 4 pages of FLUFF to get to the good stuff. However, once at the good stuff it is very good. It’s sort of like having to listen to the pointless stories of a genius before he helps you 🙂