Free shipping on orders over $99
Pearson Mathematics 10 - 10A Student Book

Pearson Mathematics 10 - 10A Student Book 1

by David et al Coffey and David Coffey
Publication Date: 06/02/2012
1/5 Rating 1 Review

Share This Book:

 
$59.95
Pearson Mathematics student book for Year 10 - 10A follows the Australian Curriculum for Mathematics. It has been strategically designed to attract maximum student engagement, develop a deep understanding of key concepts and skills, and to encourage inquiry and problem solving. This student book provides you with extensive material, with a collection of maths games, investigations, problem solving tasks, revision activities, practice questions and technology explorations. All exercises within the student books are split into the Australian Curriculum proficiency strands: fluency, understanding and reasoning. You’ll also find open-ended questions that encourage creative maths thinking. Accuracy has been observed by this series, with experienced teachers carefully checking every question within Pearson Mathematics - up to five times! Pearson Mathematics 10 - 10A student book caters for both the standard and advanced maths courses, with additional questions for advanced students. With this approach, you are given flexibility to select the right program for each of your students.
ISBN:
9781442529656
9781442529656
Category:
Educational: Mathematics & numeracy
Publication Date:
06-02-2012
Publisher:
Pearson Education Australia
Edition:
1st Edition
Dimensions (mm):
281x216mm
Weight:
1.66kg

Click 'Notify Me' to get an email alert when this item becomes available

Reviews

1.0

Based on 1 review

5 Star
(0)
4 Star
(0)
3 Star
(0)
2 Star
(0)
1 Star
(1)

1 Review

Whilst this textbook is nicely laid out and well differentiated, the author is to be commended in creating a well designed text.



The publisher however should hold its head in shame with the release of the ebook support.



The ebook is substandard in every way imaginable, it is slow, it requires its own software, does not work on school internet, and on a screen looks rubbish. Pearson is dragging education back to the 18th century.

Contains Spoilers No
Report Abuse