Browse Results

Showing 101 through 125 of 6,533 results

Inquiry into Life (Eleventh Edition)

by Sylvia S. Mader

From the unique delivery of biology content, to the time tested art program, to the complete integration of the text with technology, Dr. Sylvia Mader has formed a teaching system that will both motivate and enable your students to understand and appreciate the wonders of all areas of biology. Inquiry into Life, 11e emphasizes the application of all areas of biology to knowledge of human concerns, what the students are able to relate to. This distinctive text was developed to stand apart from all other non-majors texts with a unique approach, unparalleled art, and a straightforward, succinct writing style that has been acclaimed by both users and reviewers.

Hole's Essentials of Human Anatomy and Physiology, Study Guide

by David Shier Jackie Butler Ricki Lewis

Hole's Essentials of Human Anatomy and Physiology assumes no prior science knowledge and supports core topics with clinical applications, making system is highly effective in providing students with as solid understanding of the important concepts in anatomy and physiology.

English Skills with Readings (Fifth Edition)

by John Langan

English Skills with Readings will help students learn and apply the basic principles of effective composition. It will also help them master essential reading skills. It is a nuts-and-bolts book based on a number of assumptions or beliefs about the writing process.

Teach

by James Fraser

For your classes in Introduction to Education, McGraw-Hill introduces the latest in its acclaimed M Series. The M Series started with your students. McGraw-Hill conducted extensive market research with thousands of students to inquire about their studying and buying behavior. They told us they wanted briefer texts with innovative visual appeal at a less expensive price. We also wanted to provide faculty with an approach to reach students without compromising on high quality content. The result is TEACH, a more portable, more current, and more captivating option for your Introduction to Education course. Using vivid and contemporary examples framed around questions that students are likely to ask, such as "Teaching: Is it for me?" and "Who Sometimes Gets Overlooked in School?" TEACH includes primary source readings and integrates the intellectual foundations of education throughout each chapter, offering scholarly and current content in a magazine format that engages the reader, all at a student-friendly price.

Environmental Science: A Study of Interrelationships (10th edition)

by Eldon D. Enger Bradley F. Smith

The book is an introductory environmental science text covering the basic concepts.

Aproximaciones al Estudio de la Literatura Hispánica (quinta edición)

by Carmelo Virgillo Teresa Valdivieso Edward Friedman

Aproximaciones al estudio de la literatura hispánica, Fifth Edition, offers the undergraduate Spanish student---major or nonmajor---an elementary yet comprehensive introduction to literary analysis. Such a text is essential if one is to develop an adequate appreciation of Spanish and Spanish-American literature. Aimed primarily, but not exclusively, at the third-year level of the college curriculum, Aproximaciones provides those possessing a relatively limited knowledge of Spanish, as well as native speakers, with the opportunity not only to grasp the various levels of meaning of the literary texts contained herein, but also to acquire the technical vocabulary needed to describe and debate literary issues appropriately.

Western Civilization: Sources, Images, and Interpretations, Renaissance to the Present (Fourth Edition)

by Dennis Sherman

This collection of primary, secondary, and visual sources for the Western Civilization survey course provides a broad introduction to the materials historians use, the interpretations historians make, and 6,000 years of Western civilization. Its broad selection of documents, photographs, maps, and charts, and its full array of accompanying commentaries--drawn from a balanced spectrum of perspectives and approaches--offer valuable insight into the work of historians and provide the context that helps students understand the texts' full historical significance.

Developmental Psychopathology (Fifth Edition)

by Charles Wenar Patricia Kerig

This accessible, clearly written text approaches child psychopathology as "normal development gone awry" and encourages students to "think developmentally" about psychopathology, from childhood through adolescence. The fifth edition includes cutting-edge research, improved organization, and new coverage of problems that arise in late adolescence/early adulthood.

Human Development Across The Lifespan

by John S. Dacey John F. Travers

This chronologically-organized text is briefer than most of the Human Lifespan texts. Its numerous examples drawn from education, nursing, and psychology make the content relevant to students from a variety of majors and backgrounds, while a highly praised study guide integrated into the text promotes and reinforces conceptual understanding. The new edition includes increased material on cognitive development and expanded coverage of culture. .

Management Information Systems: Managing Information Technology in the Business Enterprise (6th edition)

by James A. O'Brien

This book will be very much useful for business students who must be conversant with the tools of MIS to become successful managers and entrepreneurs. Students learn how Information Technology provides them with a powerful managerial resource that can help manage business operations, make better decisions, and gain competitive advantages.

Readings in Social Theory: The Classic Tradition to Post-Modernism, 4th edition

by James Farganis

This anthology of primary readings in sociological theory covers the major theorists and schools from classic to contemporary, modernist, and postmodernist, in a chronological organization. Its comprehensive coverage makes this book appealing as a main text for professors who want to encourage students to read and interpret original sources or as a supplement for those who use a traditional main text.

America, Russia, and the Cold War 1945-2002 (Updated Ninth Edition)

by Walter Lafeber

Professor LaFeber explains the course of the Cold War as it moved from periods of intense crisis and confrontation to times of relative stability.

Macroeconomics: Principles, Problems, and Policies (Sixteenth Edition)

by Campbell Mcconnell Stanley L. Brue

Revisions of previous books by the authors on macroeconomics and microeconomics. They have been updated to reflect the latest developments in economics. They feature a fully integrated global perspective and a new design and art programme.

Introductory Plant Biology

by Kingsley R. Stern Shelley Jansky James E. Bidlack

This introductory text assumes little prior scientific knowledge on the part of the student. It includes sufficient information for some shorter introductory botany courses open to both majors and nonmajors, and is arranged so that certain sections can be omitted without disrupting the overall continuity of the course. Stern emphasizes current interests ethnobotanical while presenting basic botanical principles.

The Humanistic Tradition, Book 4: Faith, Reason, and Power in the Early Modern World (Fifth Edition)

by Gloria K. Fiero

This book focuses on the creative legacy referred to collectively as the humanities: literature, philosophy, history (in its literary dimension), architecture, the visual arts (including photography and film), music, and dance.

The Humanistic Tradition Book 5: Romanticism, Realism, and the Nineteenth-Century World

by Gloria K. Fiero

The Humanistic Tradition explores the political, economic, and social contexts of human culture, providing a global and multicultural perspective which helps students better understand the relationship between the West and other world cultures.

Algebra for College Students (4th Edition)

by Mark Dugopolski

The unifying theme of this text is the development of the skills necessary for solving equations and inequalities, followed by the application of those skills to solving applied problems. Every section ending in the text begins with six simple writing exercises. These exercises are designed to get students to review the definitions and rules of the section before doing more traditional exercises.

Biology: Student Study Guide (Ninth Edition)

by Sylvia S. Mader

The Study Guide is designed to accompany your text, Biology, ninth edition, by Sylvia S. Mader. A number of different approaches are used to help you achieve mastery of the chapter concepts.

Research Methods in Psychology

by Eugene B. Zechmeister John J. Shaughnessy Jeanne S. Zechmeister

Considered one of the best undergraduate method texts in the field for the past two decades, Research Methods in Psychology captures the excitement of psychological inquiry as well as the importance of understanding the methodology that is used to conduct research. The text has been praised for its clear writing, logical organization, depth of coverage, and wide variety of examples from different fields of psychology. The new edition includes updated research, a thoroughly revised introductory chapter, and improved pedagogical features designed to enhance students' learning.

Understanding Human Sexuality, Ninth Edition

by Janet Shibley Hyde John D. Delamater

This trusted text examines the biological, psychological, and social science of human sexuality, provides practical information needed for everyday living, and familiarizes students with research methods used in sexuality. The author team features a unique combination of a psychologist and a sociologist, which gives this text a distinct interdisciplinary perspective.

Communication: A First Look At Communication Theory (6th Edition)

by Miriam Griffin

The most widely-used textbook for the communication theory course, "A First Look at Communication Theory" analyzes the major communication theories at a level that is appropriate for both lower- and upper- level courses. The 34 theories represented in the text reflect a mix of foundational and recent scholarship, and strike a balance of scientific and interpretive approaches

Physics (7th Edition)

by Paul E. Tippens

"Physics, Seventh Edition" is designed for the non-calculus physics course taken by students who are pursuing careers in science or engineering technology. Content is built through extensive use of examples with detailed solutions designed to develop students' problem-solving skills.

Environmental Geology (Seventh Edition)

by Carla W. Montgomery

Presents the student with an overview of environmental geology. This book looks both at how the earth developed into its present condition. It helps provide the students with a useful foundation for discussing and evaluating specific environmental issues, as well as for developing ideas about how the problems should be solved.

ZUMBERGE'S LABORATORY MANUAL FOR Physical Geology

by James Zumberge Robert H. Rutford James L. Carter

Laboratory Manual for Physical Geology, 14e is written for the freshman-level laboratory course in physical geology. In this lab, students study Earth materials, geologic interpretation of topographic maps, aerial photographs and Earth satellite imagery, structural geology and plate tectonics and related phenomena. With over 30 exercises, professors have great flexibility when developing the syllabus for their physical geology lab course.

Experience Sociology

by David Croteau William Hoynes

Experience Sociology empowers students to use the lenses of Culture, Structure, Power to see sociology everywhere. Bringing theory and sociological concepts together, Experience Sociology helps students move beyond an individual perspective to gain a sociological perspective.

Refine Search

Showing 101 through 125 of 6,533 results