OER

Active Calculus 2.1

Öffentlichkeit Deposited

Active Calculus is different from most existing calculus texts in at least the following ways: the text is freely readable online in HTML format and is also available for in PDF; in the electronic format, graphics are in full color and there are live links to java applets; there are live WeBWorK exercises in each chapter, which are fully interactive in the HTML format and included in print in the PDF; the text is open source, and interested users can gain access to the original source files on GitHub; the style of the text requires students to be active learners — there are very few worked examples in the text, with there instead being 3-4 activities per section that engage students in connecting ideas, solving problems, and developing understanding of key calculus concepts; each section begins with motivating questions, a brief introduction, and a preview activity, all of which are designed to be read and completed prior to class; following the WeBWorK exercises in each section, there are several challenging problems that require students to connect key ideas and write to communicate their understanding. Originally published at https://activecalculus.org/single/frontmatter.html.


MLA citation style (9th ed.)

Austin, David, Schlicker, and Boelkins, Matthew. Active Calculus 2.1. Grand Valley State University Libraries. palsave.hykucommons.org/concern/oers/2149d1ee-2103-4479-a735-b220aecd5244?locale=de.

APA citation style (7th ed.)

A. David, Schlicker, & B. Matthew. Active Calculus 2.1. https://palsave.hykucommons.org/concern/oers/2149d1ee-2103-4479-a735-b220aecd5244?locale=de

Chicago citation style (CMOS 17, author-date)

Austin, David, Schlicker, and Boelkins, Matthew. Active Calculus 2.1. Grand Valley State University Libraries. https://palsave.hykucommons.org/concern/oers/2149d1ee-2103-4479-a735-b220aecd5244?locale=de.

Note: These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.