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#1 2017-11-06 06:53:47

numquester
Member
Registered: 2016-12-12
Posts: 19

Book on math fundamentals

Over the last year I have picked up a handful of math books, looking to better my understanding of math fundamentals before going further.  One of those books which I have found to be excellent in clarifying concepts of fundamental topics is,  Yes, But Why?  Teaching for understanding in mathematics, Ed Southall.

This book is obviously aimed at teachers, but as an independent learner I have found it to be an excellent resource for getting a solid birdseye view of various topics and how things work.  I only wish that it existed long ago (it was released earlier this year), as I have wasted alot of time over the years digging through various resources, often running in circles and hitting walls or becoming bored to death.  The book begins at arithmetic and graduates through topics in algebra, geometry, and ends with fundamentals in trigonometry.

What I like about it:

- It gets right to the point of concepts without burrying the reader in a bunch of fluff or too much detail from the getgo.
- It doesn't focus on procedures over concepts.
- It makes good connections from one topic to the next, not leaving gaping holes in understanding.
- Reading it has been a series of 'Ah, ha' moments without the brickwalls of so many other resources.
- It makes good use of graphics for explaining concepts; doesn't include graphics for the sake of dressing things up.
- It isn't stodgy in style; it is very conversational in style.  It is an educational and fun read at the same time.
- It makes many mentions of where math terms come from and how they relate to the topic at hand, along with other historical bits.
- It is (along with many articles at MathisFun) what I feel in many ways, how math should be taught.

I am not associated with this book in any way.  Just sharing a resource that I have found to be exceptional among math books as an adult self-learner relearning math fundamentals.  This book, along with MathisFun, Geogebra, and exploring using a compass and rule (because working with my hands is often more satisfying) have been time well spent.  I am finding myself to be a visual learner, where numbers often are only added precision in application of concepts.

Last edited by numquester (2017-11-06 07:04:27)

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#2 2017-11-06 16:09:03

Monox D. I-Fly
Member
From: Indonesia
Registered: 2015-12-02
Posts: 2,000

Re: Book on math fundamentals

numquester wrote:

- It gets right to the point of concepts without burrying the reader in a bunch of fluff or too much detail from the getgo.
- It doesn't focus on procedures over concepts.

The weakness of many math books (including the ones I wrote).


Actually I never watch Star Wars and not interested in it anyway, but I choose a Yoda card as my avatar in honor of our great friend bobbym who has passed away.
May his adventurous soul rest in peace at heaven.

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#3 2023-01-06 23:22:25

nembagam
Member
Registered: 2022-01-30
Posts: 3

Re: Book on math fundamentals

Adding a free and vast STEM resource here. The Bartleby concept explainers page has free explainer for math and calculus concepts as well

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