Have Fun with Math


Book Description

This book contains reproducible puzzles, picture graphs, mazes, brain teasers, puns, coded messages, and number oddities. Topics in this book cover whole numbers, fractions, decimals, percents, powers and roots, metric measures, perimeters, areas, and volumes, miscellaneous questions, problems, tests and pre-algebra.




Solve This


Book Description

This is a collection of intriguing mathematical problems and activities arising from our everyday experience.




Fun with Maths (Fun Series)


Book Description

Wouldn't it be great if you could quickly guess how many people there were in a room, solve a Rubik's Cube in record time or even impress your friends with mental maths tricks? Fun with Maths shows you how to do all these things and more including tips and tricks that help you understand common mathematical formulae, shapes and geometrical patterns, so that maths becomes a subject you can have fun with. So, get set and learn to count right! Key Features This set of entertaining books introduces young readers to numbers their. origins, their historical and scientific significance and their practical use and helps them better understand mathematics. Written in simple, lucid language and filled with fun tips, tricks and riddles, these books bring the world of numbers alive to readers in a fun and interactive way that is appealing and engaging. This set of intellectually stimulating books encourages out of the box thinking and will appeal to all lovers of numbers, mathematics and puzzles.




Teach Your Child Math


Book Description

Introduces your preschooler to math by using visuals and then progresses to games and concepts that can be enjoyed by a fourth or fifth grader.




The Great Big Book of Super-Fun Math Activities


Book Description

Here are more than 100 motivating activities, games, puzzles, and story problems that reinforce key math skills. Illustrations.




Let's Play Math


Book Description




Visual Complex Analysis


Book Description

This radical first course on complex analysis brings a beautiful and powerful subject to life by consistently using geometry (not calculation) as the means of explanation. Aimed at undergraduate students in mathematics, physics, and engineering, the book's intuitive explanations, lack of advanced prerequisites, and consciously user-friendly prose style will help students to master the subject more readily than was previously possible. The key to this is the book's use of new geometric arguments in place of the standard calculational ones. These geometric arguments are communicated with the aid of hundreds of diagrams of a standard seldom encountered in mathematical works. A new approach to a classical topic, this work will be of interest to students in mathematics, physics, and engineering, as well as to professionals in these fields.




Mathematics for the Nonmathematician


Book Description

Erudite and entertaining overview follows development of mathematics from ancient Greeks to present. Topics include logic and mathematics, the fundamental concept, differential calculus, probability theory, much more. Exercises and problems.




Games for Math


Book Description

More than fifty games to help children learn math. Some require simple materials.




Things to Make and Do in the Fourth Dimension


Book Description

A book from the stand-up mathematician that makes math fun again! Math is boring, says the mathematician and comedian Matt Parker. Part of the problem may be the way the subject is taught, but it's also true that we all, to a greater or lesser extent, find math difficult and counterintuitive. This counterintuitiveness is actually part of the point, argues Parker: the extraordinary thing about math is that it allows us to access logic and ideas beyond what our brains can instinctively do—through its logical tools we are able to reach beyond our innate abilities and grasp more and more abstract concepts. In the absorbing and exhilarating Things to Make and Do in the Fourth Dimension, Parker sets out to convince his readers to revisit the very math that put them off the subject as fourteen-year-olds. Starting with the foundations of math familiar from school (numbers, geometry, and algebra), he reveals how it is possible to climb all the way up to the topology and to four-dimensional shapes, and from there to infinity—and slightly beyond. Both playful and sophisticated, Things to Make and Do in the Fourth Dimension is filled with captivating games and puzzles, a buffet of optional hands-on activities that entices us to take pleasure in math that is normally only available to those studying at a university level. Things to Make and Do in the Fourth Dimension invites us to re-learn much of what we missed in school and, this time, to be utterly enthralled by it.