Slay the calculus monster with this user-friendly guide"Calculus For Dummies, 2nd Edition" makes calculus manageable--even if you're one of the many students who sweat at the thought of it. By breaking down differentiation and integration into digestible concepts, this guide helps you build a stronger foundation with a solid understanding of the big ideas at work. This user-friendly math book leads you step-by-step through each concept, operation, and solution, explaining the "how" and "why" in plain English instead of math-speak. Through relevant instruction and practical examples, you'll soon learn that real-life calculus isn't nearly the monster it's made out to be.
Calculus is a required course for many college majors, and for students without a strong math foundation, it can be a real barrier to graduation. Breaking that barrier down means recognizing calculus for what it is--simply a tool for studying the ways in which variables interact. It's the logical extension of the algebra, geometry, and trigonometry you've already taken, and "Calculus For Dummies, 2nd Edition" proves that if you can master those classes, you can tackle calculus and win.Includes foundations in algebra, trigonometry, and pre-calculus conceptsExplores sequences, series, and graphing common functionsInstructs you how to approximate area with integrationFeatures things to remember, things to forget, and things you can't get away with
Stop fearing calculus, and learn to embrace the challenge. With this comprehensive study guide, you'll gain the skills and confidence that make all the difference. "Calculus For Dummies, 2nd Edition" provides a roadmap for success, and the backup you need to get there.
This book could use more exercises, can I do the work at the end of it explanations, sure I can do the work, I think , but I really could use exercise. I appreciate the humor in which the book presents it's material, but the fact is, if you use this book to learn Calculus, you should probably find a work book as well, this book , as it turns out is not meant as anything but an aid to a class and text, get a workbook, or you are just kidding yourself.
When I started reading that book I was pleasantly surprised by its simplicity and funny style but as I was reading further, that same style felt a bit tiring.
Had to decide that this Dummy is never learning Calculus. Had I the need and inclination I’d need to go back for the prerequisite Pre-Calculus. Back in the 60ies I enjoyed the logic of geometry and algebra more than advanced Mathematics and arithmetic which most today perform on calculators or computers. But when I hit grade 11 physics and chemistry which involved something called the New Math I decided our teachers didn’t have a clue how to explain it. When it came to imaginary numbers involving electrical theory I gave up the ghost. I once knew the math behind calculating square roots and even cube roots. I have some understanding of exponents, quadratic equations, theorems, expressions, absolute numbers, logarithms. trigonometry but I seem to have lost the ability to put it all together and definitely lack the motivation.
I understand that the metric system utilizes base ten and the English system I grew up with uses base 12 for distance base 8 or ten for volume, base 12 for time and base 32 for heat. Celsius degrees lack meaning to me. I know that 90º F is a hot day, 30º C lacks meaning. I get smug satisfaction from the fact that the best minds in the world messed up the building of the Hubble Telescope and that rockets have missed their targets because of miscalculations. I can understand the need for calculus in astronomical science when dealing with ships traveling thousands of miles per hour that have to deal with gravity from the sun and planets and planets traveling in elliptical orbits at incredible speeds. The concept that time ceases to exist at light speed borders on philosophy. Remember the Concord reached NYC before it left Paris.
But I’m going to have to leave it all to younger minds and Good Will Hunting.
I thoroughly enjoyed reading Mary Ryan's explanations of the complex topics and techniques used in Calculus. He covers the topics in a way that I could follow without having to spend a lot of time going through it over and over again. Highly recommend this book.
Math is necessary for modern world. Many modern products require understanding of Math. Calculus is foundation for Engineering.
In Tamil Nadu, If only my middle-school or high-school teachers explained to me. Explained how important mathematics was for my life. All they cared was, marks, which tied into identity of a student. Marks then transitions into, Salary in Adulthood. Does our identity or purpose comes from this? Answer for yourself.
Sadly, I was not good in mathematics. My teachers started to say, "Oh, him, he is not good in math" Look at his score-card. I started to believe this, because of this, I fled from mathematics.
Sadly, this is not true, many students fall into this. Don't believe what your teachers or others say to you.
Once, I started to read seriously, there came a time, I needed Calculus again. In this case, all my fears of teachers came alive to me.
"Will I flunk out?" "Will I survive?"
I grasped one objective truth about myself, which I knew. I loved reading Due to curiosity, I was able to go through Philosophy books I had finished Immanuel Kant's Critique of Reason And then, I asked, if I was able to go through Kant, why not Calculus?
And then, I was able to challenge earlier beliefs from Middle-School. All the fears, Why?
I started from fundamentals in Mathematics. My understanding increased slowly. I asked in each definition, "Why care, Where will I use this?" I no longer feared formulas, math symbols.
To the Students, Professionals. Start slow, read formal definitions, ask questions. Be disciplined, and you'll be able to grasp understanding.
As a high school calculus teacher one of our challenges is to teach without making one of the hardest subjects become boring to the students, I tried so many books but I remembered I used Dummies series for a lot of subjects and actually learned them so I tried the calculus one and it made classes go smoother than ever, this is a great way to teach to the new generations and try to get them at least interesting in the uses of Calculus and stop being afraid of learning it.
I’ll just give a 4 stars review cause I’d like that it had way more examples, I know there’s a book specifically for that, but it kinda ruins the flow in which subjects are advancing.
Not very good. Covers too much information way too quickly. No substitute for an actual calculus class. The explanations are incredibly convoluted for a “dummies” book. I’ve seen college calculus text books that are easier to follow than this. The explanations and examples jump around from over simplified to super complicated.
Borrowed this book from the library and it's a helpful book for me to revise my calculus, definitions, theorems and all. It doesn't have everything I hoped it would have in a book about calculus but it's good in setting the core principles.
This helped me ace my AP calculus course with incredible ease. Use this while doing practice problems after lectures and you will be set to pass your course (although there is no epsilon-delta definition of a limit, among other things).
I love the way the author breaks down these complex mathematical jargons into concepts I can easily understand. I definitely recommend it. I’m reading this book as a primer for my upcoming calculus course this semester.
I did not finish this book. It was very convoluted and hard to understand. I wanted to get a Calculus refresher, but it didn't fill my desires. It tried to do too many different things and was unsuccessful at any of them.
When my kid started her calculus course I realised I had forgotten too much to even be sympathetic, let alone help her, when she was wrestling with an assignment. This did the trick, and I also got her a copy. Fun and interesting.
Definitely one of the only genuinely amusing and surprisingly didactic editions in the Dummies catalog. It’s calculus content is on par with James Stewart’s Calculus textbooks and I LOL’d while reading several times.
(Worked out 90% of differentiation chapters. Planning to revisit rest of the chapters (Integration and Series) later.)
Not bad if you are already well versed with Calculus I and needed a refresher, but it could do less with so called humor which got more and more childish and acerbic!
This book has three things going for it: 1. It's a good refresher that covers a lot of ground in a few hundred pages. 2. People on the train can't tell if you're smart for reading a calculus book, or dumb for reading a "For Dummies" book. 3. It's much lighter than Spivak's Calculus.
Very much helpful in case of understanding with a real-life example, easy to connect with. Anyone can understand the basic concept of the calculus reading this one.