Physics textbooks: Difference between revisions

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;Astronomy textbook promises "choose your own adventure.":Slater, Slater, & Lyons, 2010. [http://shawnreeves.net/documents/protected/Astronomy_Inquiry-2010-1ed_Oct22-2009.pdf Engaging in Astronomical Inquiry (protected, for internal use only)]. W. H. Freeman Publishing.
;Astronomy textbook promises "choose your own adventure.":Slater, Slater, & Lyons, 2010. [http://shawnreeves.net/documents/protected/Astronomy_Inquiry-2010-1ed_Oct22-2009.pdf Engaging in Astronomical Inquiry (protected, for internal use only)]. W. H. Freeman Publishing.
;Six Ideas That Shaped Physics by Thomas A. Moore. http://physics.pomona.edu/sixideas/ Moore has rethought the scope and sequence of introductory physics for college.


===Textbooks in use in physics classes===
===Textbooks in use in physics classes===

Revision as of 22:03, 11 November 2010

Elements of Physics by Alpheus W. Smith.<bibref f="default.bib">Smith
1943</bibref>
at Carpenter Library
In 1943 preface states purpose "to stress correct scientific thinking rather than to stress the accumulation of facts or to trace the historical development of the subject."
A Textbook of Physics by Edwin Hall. <bibref>Hall
A-text-book-of-AA</bibref>
Electromagnetic Theory by Attay Kovetz
Intermediate classical (non-quantized) electromagnetic theory presented as a string of mathematical obviousnesses. Preface and contents
Astronomy textbook promises "choose your own adventure."
Slater, Slater, & Lyons, 2010. Engaging in Astronomical Inquiry (protected, for internal use only). W. H. Freeman Publishing.
Six Ideas That Shaped Physics by Thomas A. Moore. http://physics.pomona.edu/sixideas/ Moore has rethought the scope and sequence of introductory physics for college.

Textbooks in use in physics classes

See http://www.aip.org/statistics/texts/hsttext.htm for the results of a US survey of physics teachers in 2005 by the American Institute of Physics. The survey classifies courses as "regular, conceptual, honors, Advanced Placement (AP) B, and AP C." 40% of "regular" physics classes are using Zitzewitz' Glencoe book, the most popular.

Contents of textbooks

See First chapters of physics textbooks for one angle.

References

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