Jellofart's Blog --> College --> College Physics
21Jul/105
College Physics
Product Description
While physics can seem challenging, its true quality is the sheer simplicity of fundamental physical theories--theories and concepts that can enrich your view of the world around you. COLLEGE PHYSICS, 8e, provides a clear strategy for connecting those theories to a consistent problem-solving approach, carefully reinforcing this methodology throughout the text and connecting it to real-world examples. For students planning to take the MCAT exam, the text includes exc... More >>
Previous post: « (Spirit) Jailbreak 3.1.3 For ALL Devices UNTETHERED iPhone,iPad & iPod Touch
Next post: Singles and dating lifestyles in North Carolina »
142857 is a cyclic number, the numbers of which always appear in the same order but rotated around when multiplied by any number from 1 to 6. 142857 * 2 = 285714 142857 * 3 = 428571 142857 * 4 = 571428 142857 * 5 = 714285 142857 * 6 = 857142
Copyright 2009 Jellofart - Advertise With Us Jellofart Home | About Jellofart | Contact (Annoy) Jellofart | Shop our Store | Our Privacy Policy


July 21st, 2010 - 15:51
This is a college physics text book. It has a wealth of information and realistic problems and examples that are useful. Unlike many similar texts the support materials and answers in the back are actually correct. In addition I have found it to be one of the few texts at this level that are actually somewhat readable. Walking the fine line between too much information and trivia and not enough content this is a good text.
Rating: 5 / 5
July 21st, 2010 - 17:31
I used this text for one semester because I had just been hired, and there was no time to switch to a different one before the beginning of the semester. This is by far the worst introductory physics textbook I’ve ever used in teaching a course. If a student read this book from cover to cover, and understood everything at the depth at which it was presented, that student would still know almost nothing worthwhile about physics. That’s because the book is simply a dolled-up compendium of equations, without any intellectual underpinnings at all. The whole thing is geared to letting students solve trivial plug-in problems, without understanding what they are actually doing or why. The absurd price tag just adds insult to injury.
Rating: 1 / 5
July 21st, 2010 - 19:11
This book gets bad rap and as much as i thought i’d be here righting a bad review, I find myself agreeing with Mr Nevin’s review. This book is actually good.
So anyway, glancing through this book without reading will scare you because everything will look like greek. Read it and it is the best thing. i don’t even read everything, mostly the parts where it introduces formulas and i work along the examples. If you’re having problems with the examples, because i feel like the author has it broken down to the last bit, then you need an pre-algebra refresher. I got introductory physics as a second language to help me break down this book and to be honest, this book helped me break down the mechanics chapter in the physics as a second language book. I know i read one of the reviews here on amazon where the author wrote that parts of the book has been rewritten so my review only applies to the 8th edition only and not previous editon.
First of all, concepts are very well explained,i take physics online and show up to lecture sometimes to sit in and i primarily study from this book because my instructor moves so fast i don’t know what he’s doing on the board. Each concept is followed by a worked example, a quick quiz and a question as well as a do it yourself example that’s similar to the worked example. The book has tons of examples, i mean worked examples in the book and other examples that require you to do the work and compare your answer to the answer provided. The best part, ALL the answers so far, i’m on chapter 14, are right! No errata, yet. I took a physics course back 2004 that the college dropped and i remember looking at that textbook and not knowing what the author was talking about. This one makes you get the basics. Physics isn’t my favorite subject so i’m the type who just needs to know the basics to rock my exam. If you’re passionate about physics, you’ll love how the author has those little boxes that relate stuff to real life. if you’re like me who needs just the basics to get through the MCAT, this book will be perfect. it has a little MCAT study in it that points you to which parts of the chapter and questions to focus on. I found the MCAT study guide very HELPFUL. Turns out, you don’t need to know a lot of stuff.
Granted, there are few times i look at an example and go where did he get this (in those cases, i had to look again more closely till i figured out what the author did. I think there is one problem in chapter 12 that i don’t know how the author got to one step) but overall, it’s a good physics book. I just completed physics 1 and i don’t think i coulda had a better textbook. if you need a physics book you can self study out of, this is it. Know your trig and algebra, basically log function.
Rating: 4 / 5
July 21st, 2010 - 21:47
The text devotes most of its space to problems, and rather little to explanation. The problems are good and appropriate, though on a few occasions they solved problems in a manner that was unnecessarily obtuse. Explanations and background text should be much greater.
I gave this text a 3 star primarily because the end of chapter problems are far too difficult. The text does not adequately prepare one to solve the problems, and the study guide (which seems to be out of print) offers only a smattering of the problems. There is not the progression of easy to hard problems, so they are uniformly hard.
This text is noncalculus based, which may be good or bad depenending on your needs.
There is a good variety of problems, from biology, engineering, etc.
The Holt text seems to offer better problems, though I have not used the text much.
Rating: 3 / 5
July 21st, 2010 - 22:39
Arrival was very prompt and the book was in great shape. Most definitely a great deal!
Rating: 5 / 5