Advertisement
the complete book of fingermath: The Complete Book of Fingermath Edwin M. Lieberthal, 1979 Describes and explains the technique of using the fingers as a calculator to work mathematical problems. |
the complete book of fingermath: The Complete Book of Fingermath Edwin M. Lieberthal, 1982 Describes the techniques for using the ten fingers as a calculator to perform a variety of complex as well as simple arithmetic operations including multiplication, division, and algebra |
the complete book of fingermath: Fingermath Peter K. Gurau, Edwin M. Lieberthal, 1985 |
the complete book of fingermath: The Complete Book of Chisanbop Hang Young Pai, Sung Jin Pai, 1981 |
the complete book of fingermath: Learning , 1978 |
the complete book of fingermath: Fingermath Peter K. Gurau, Edwin M. Lieberthal, 1979 |
the complete book of fingermath: Instructor , 1980 |
the complete book of fingermath: The Complete Book of Fingermath-Simple-Accurate-Scientific Edwin M. Lieberthal, 1979 |
the complete book of fingermath: Figuring: The Joy Of Numbers Shakuntala Devi, 2005-03 There is a range and richness to numbers. They can come alive, cease to be symbols written on a black board, and lead the reader into a world of intellectual adventure where calculations are thrilling. In Figuring: The Joy of Numbers, Shakuntala Devi dramatizes the endless fascination of numbers and their ability to amaze and entertain. She offers easy-to-learn short cuts on how to add long columns in your head, multiply, divide, and find square roots quickly, almost magically. Fractions, decimals, and compound interest become clear and easy to deal with. The author takes delight in working out huge problems mentally, and sometimes even faster than computers. In Figuring she shares her secrets with you. |
the complete book of fingermath: Teaching for the Two-Sided Mind Linda V Williams, 1986-05-15 A guide to Right Brain/Left Brain education |
the complete book of fingermath: Teaching Kids with Learning Difficulties in Today's Classroom Susan Winebrenner, Lisa Kiss, 2017-02-28 A gold mine of practical, easy-to-use teaching methods, strategies, and tips to improve learning outcomes for students who score below proficiency levels. This fully revised and updated third edition of Teaching Kids with Learning Difficulties in Today’s Classroom provides information on integrated learning, problem solving, and critical thinking in line with Common Core State Standards and 21st-century skills. It reflects the use of technology and schoolwide cluster grouping in support of all students and includes proven, practical, classroom-tested strategies and step-by-step instructions for how to use them. Sidebars throughout highlight special information for working with students on the autism spectrum; “tech tips” describe technologies that are especially useful for kids with LD. Digital content includes all of the book’s customizable forms, additional content organization charts, and a PDF presentation for book study groups and professional development. |
the complete book of fingermath: Book of Fingermath The Complete Fingermath Edwin M. Lieberthal, 1979 |
the complete book of fingermath: The Big Book of Home Learning Mary Pride, 1986 The complete guide to everything educational for you and your children. |
the complete book of fingermath: Understanding Information Systems Lee Ratzan, 2004 In a world awash in data, information systems help provide structure and access to information. Since libraries build, manage, and maintain information systems, librarians and LIS students are often propelled onto the front lines of interactions between library users and technology. But what do librarians need to know to best meet their patron's needs? What exactly are information systems and how do they work? Information expert Ratzan uses plain language, humor, and everyday examples like baseball and arithmetic to make sense of information systems (computer hardware, software, databases, the Internet). He also explores their characteristics, uses, abuses, advantages, and shortcomings for your library. Fun exercises and appendixes are provided to illustrate key points in the book and measure understanding. You can be a technophobe and still learn about systems and subsystems to represent, organize, retrieve, network, secure, conceal, measure, and manage information. This basic introduction addresses both theoretical and practical issues, including: What questions to ask technology vendors to meet your library's needs; When technology may not be the solution to a problem; Secrets |
the complete book of fingermath: Test Your Math Iq Steve Ryan, Get ready to test your mathematical skills with these problems!!! |
the complete book of fingermath: The Trachtenberg Speed System of Basic Mathematics Jakow Trachtenberg, 2011-03-01 Do high-speed, complicated arithmetic in your head using the Trachtenberg Speed System. Ever find yourself struggling to check a bill or a payslip? With The Trachtenberg Speed System you can. Described as the 'shorthand of mathematics', the Trachtenberg system only requires the ability to count from one to eleven. Using a series of simplified keys it allows anyone to master calculations, giving greater speed, ease in handling numbers and increased accuracy. Jakow Trachtenberg believed that everyone is born with phenomenal abilities to calculate. He devised a set of rules that allows every child to make multiplication, division, addition, subtraction and square-root calculations with unerring accuracy and at remarkable speed. It is the perfect way to gain confidence with numbers. |
the complete book of fingermath: Homeschooling on a Shoestring Melissa L. Morgan, Judith Waite Allee, 2000-03-07 So you want to homeschool but don’t think you can afford it. This book is a compendium of ideas for the family that wants to start or continue homeschooling on a tight budget. You’ll find it all here: • Ideas for making money while staying at home. • Sources for an inexpensive curriculum. • Thousands of ideas for affordable teaching tools. • Hundreds of suggestions for low-cost field trips. • Ways to save on everything from housing to utilities. • Ways to get free or low-cost computers. |
the complete book of fingermath: The Oxford Handbook of the History of Mathematics Eleanor Robson, Jacqueline Stedall, 2009 This handbook explores the history of mathematics, addressing what mathematics has been and what it has meant to practise it. 36 self-contained chapters provide a fascinating overview of 5000 years of mathematics and its key cultures for academics in mathematics, historians of science, and general historians. |
the complete book of fingermath: Junior High School Library Catalog , 1985 |
the complete book of fingermath: The Arithmetic Teacher , 1983 |
the complete book of fingermath: The Publishers' Trade List Annual , 1985 |
the complete book of fingermath: Stanford-Binet Form L-M Compilation John Ruth Whitworth-Lord, Dorothy Lee Sutton, 1982 |
the complete book of fingermath: Mind Performance Hacks Ron Hale-Evans, 2006-02-06 Tips & tools for overclocking your brain--Cover. |
the complete book of fingermath: Math through Children's Literature Kathryn Braddon, Nancy Hall, Dale Taylor, 1993-02-15 Use children's literature as a springboard to successful mathematical literacy. This book contains summaries of books, each related to the NCTM Standards, that will help children gain familiarity with and an understanding of mathematical concepts. Each chapter has classroom-tested activities and a bibliography of additional books to further expand student learning. |
the complete book of fingermath: Symbols and Meanings in School Mathematics David Pimm, 2002-11-01 Symbols and Meanings in School Mathematics explores the various uses and aspects of symbols in school mathematics and also examines the notion of mathematical meaning. It is concerned with the power of language which enables us to do mathematics, giving us the ability to name and rename, to transform names and to use names and descriptions to conjure, communicate and control our images. It is in the interplay between language, image and object that mathematics is created and can be communicated to others. The book also addresses a set of questions of particular relevance to the last decade of the twentieth century, which arise due to the proliferation of machines offering mathematical functioning. |
the complete book of fingermath: Adam's Navel Michael Sims, 2004-06-29 In this amusing and brilliantly conceived book, Michael Sims introduces you to your body. Moving from head to toe, Sims blends cultural history with evolutionary theory to produce a wonderfully original narrative in which he analyzes the visible parts of the body. In this fascinating brew of science and storytelling, readers encounter not only accessible explanations of the mechanics of their anatomy, but also the layers of mythology, religious lore, history, Darwinian theory, and popular culture that have helped to shape our understanding of any given body part. A titillating and unique book, Adam’s Navel is learned and entertaining, a marvelous lens through which to study the form we all inhabit—but may not really understand. |
the complete book of fingermath: Mathematical Magic Show Martin Gardner, 2020-10-06 Martin Gardner's Mathematical Games columns in Scientific American inspired and entertained several generations of mathematicians and scientists. Gardner in his crystal-clear prose illuminated corners of mathematics, especially recreational mathematics, that most people had no idea existed. His playful spirit and inquisitive nature invite the reader into an exploration of beautiful mathematical ideas along with him. These columns were both a revelation and a gift when he wrote them; no one--before Gardner--had written about mathematics like this. They continue to be a marvel. This volume, first published in 1977, contains columns published in the magazine from 1965-1968. This 1990 MAA edition contains a foreword by Persi Diaconis and Ron Graham and a postscript and extended bibliography added by Gardner for this edition. |
the complete book of fingermath: The Next Whole Earth Catalog Stewart Brand, 1980 |
the complete book of fingermath: The Publishers Weekly , 1982 |
the complete book of fingermath: Children's Book Review Index , 1983 |
the complete book of fingermath: Library Journal , 1981 Includes, beginning Sept. 15, 1954 (and on the 15th of each month, Sept.-May) a special section: School library journal, ISSN 0000-0035, (called Junior libraries, 1954-May 1961). Also issued separately. |
the complete book of fingermath: Content Area Literacy Robin Eanes, 1997 This text focuses on methods for helping teachers develop their students literacy skills to enhance learning of content subject matter across all disciplines. It pulls together some of the most current and popular strategies and techniques in content area literacy. These strategies and techniques have been carefully selected for their ease of application and adaptation by classroom teachers in any classroom at any level. |
the complete book of fingermath: Grandparent Catalog Charles S. Slaybaugh, 1986 |
the complete book of fingermath: Computer Education William E. Schall, Lowell Leake, Donald Ray Whitaker, 1986 |
the complete book of fingermath: How to Enjoy Your Retirement Tricia Wagner, Barbara Day, 2002 A book about retirement that leaves financial worries to other books and simply focuses on enjoyable ways to spend time. |
the complete book of fingermath: Special Education and Mathematics Alaine Lane, 1986 |
the complete book of fingermath: Teaching Kids with Learning Difficulties in the Regular Classroom Susan Winebrenner, 2006 Includes more than fifty reproducible forms and handouts. Provides forms in Microsoft Word and PDF formats. |
the complete book of fingermath: The Cumulative Book Index , 1980 A world list of books in the English language. |
the complete book of fingermath: Bring Your Baggage and Don't Pack Light Helen Ellis, 2021-07-13 The bestselling author of American Housewife and Southern Lady Code returns with an “inspiring, hilarious, straight-to-the-point” (Entertainment Weekly) collection of essays on friendship among grown-ass women. Ellis' prose is filled with so many laugh lines, you might want to go ahead and book the Botox.” —NPR When Helen Ellis and her lifelong friends arrive for a reunion on the Redneck Riviera, they unpack more than their suitcases: stories of husbands and kids, lost parents and lost jobs, powdered onion dip and photographs you have to hold by the edges, dirty jokes and sunscreen with SPF higher than they hair-sprayed their bangs senior year, and a bad mammogram. It's a diagnosis that scares them, but could never break their bond. Because women pushing fifty won't be pushed around. In these twelve gloriously comic and moving essays, Helen Ellis dishes on married middle-age sex, sobs with a theater full of women as a psychic exorcises their sorrows, gets twenty shots of stomach bile to the neck to get rid of her double chin, and gathers up the courage to ask, Are you there, Menopause? It's Me, Helen. A book that reads like the best cocktail party of your life, Bring Your Baggage and Don't Pack Light is alive with the sensational humor and ferocious love for her friends that won Helen Ellis legions of fans. This book has a raw vulnerability and an emotional generosity that takes this acclaimed author to a whole new level of accomplishment. |
the complete book of fingermath: Books for Public Libraries PLA Starter List Committee, 1981 Establishes a basic book list for public library collections in a wide range of subjects, arranged by broad Dewey classification, with indexes by subject and by author/title. |
COMPLETE Synonyms: 390 Similar and Opposite Words - Merriam-Webster
Synonyms for COMPLETE: finish, perfect, finalize, consummate, accomplish, get through, fulfill, fulfil; Antonyms of COMPLETE: drop, abandon, quit, discontinue, forsake, desert, begin, start
COMPLETE | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
COMPLETE definition: 1. to make whole or perfect: 2. to write all the details asked for on a form or other document…. Learn more.
COMPLETE Definition & Meaning | Dictionary.com
Complete definition: having all parts or elements; lacking nothing; whole; entire; full.. See examples of COMPLETE used in a sentence.
Complete - definition of complete by The Free Dictionary
complete implies that a unit has all its parts, fully developed or perfected; it may also mean that a process or purpose has been carried to fulfillment: a complete explanation; a complete …
Complete: Definition, Meaning, and Examples
Mar 16, 2025 · As an adjective, "complete" denotes something that contains all necessary or required components. This usage often describes physical objects, systems, or groups that …
Complete Definition & Meaning - YourDictionary
Complete definition: Having all necessary or normal parts, components, or steps; entire.
What does Complete mean? - Definitions.net
What does Complete mean? This dictionary definitions page includes all the possible meanings, example usage and translations of the word Complete. To finish; to make done; to reach the …
COMPLETE Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
The meaning of COMPLETE is having all necessary parts, elements, or steps. How to use complete in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Complete.
COMPLETE | definition in the Cambridge Learner’s Dictionary
COMPLETE meaning: 1. with all parts: 2. used to emphasize what you are saying: 3. finished: . Learn more.
Complete Adult & Family Care
We are a mental health practice located in the Hampton Roads area of Virginia. Are you feeling overwhelmed? Is your anxiety keeping you up at night? Has our current world left you feeling …
COMPLETE Synonyms: 390 Similar and Opposite Words
Synonyms for COMPLETE: finish, perfect, finalize, consummate, accomplish, get through, fulfill, fulfil; Antonyms of COMPLETE: drop, abandon, quit, discontinue, forsake, …
COMPLETE | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
COMPLETE definition: 1. to make whole or perfect: 2. to write all the details asked for on a form or other …
COMPLETE Definition & Meaning | Dictionary.com
Complete definition: having all parts or elements; lacking nothing; whole; entire; full.. See examples of …
Complete - definition of complete by The Free Diction…
complete implies that a unit has all its parts, fully developed or perfected; it may also mean that a process or purpose has been carried to fulfillment: a complete explanation; a complete …
Complete: Definition, Meaning, and Examples
Mar 16, 2025 · As an adjective, "complete" denotes something that contains all necessary or required components. This usage often describes physical objects, systems, …