1: Multiplying 2: Shapes 3: Adding up 4: Graphs 5: Dividing
Lara Alcock is a Reader in Mathematics Education. She earned a BSc
and MSc in Mathematics and a PhD in Mathematics Education at the
University of Warwick, then spent four years at Rutgers University
and two at Essex before taking up her present post in the
Mathematics Education Centre at Loughborough, where she is now Head
of Department. She conducts research in mathematical thinking and
learning, with a focus on the transition from school to
undergraduate
mathematics. She won the 2012 Mathematical Association of America
Selden Prize for research in undergraduate mathematics education,
and she has written two books for undergraduates, How to Study for
a
Mathematics Degree (OUP, 2012) and How to Think about Analysis
(OUP, 2014). She has won numerous Loughborough School of Science
teaching awards, and in 2015 was awarded a National Teaching
Fellowship by the Higher Education Academy.
Attempting to write a text which introduces a range of ideas that
build from arithmetic and go on to encompass number theory and
geometry, for a broad and diverse audience, is a bold move. Yet
this book does this rather well through an almost conversational
style of writing, and one that allows the personal perspectives,
experiences and opinions of the author to shine through...
Throughout, examples are very well used to make links between the
fundamental mathematical ideas and introduce the terminology that
is vital to understanding our discipline.
*Michael Gove, London Mathematical Society*
With her experience in teaching mathematics and her research in
mathematical education, Lara Alcock has composed this book
discussing some simple mathematics for the layperson or a fresh
university student. As she is not constrained by any curricular
prescription, she is freewheeling by association through the
mathematical topics. The content pays special attention to those
issues that she has experienced as stumbling stones for
students.
*EMS*
This is an interesting take on the popular math book... I think
this book is very well done.
*Allen Stenger, MAA Reviews*
A unique, accessible approach... Recommended.
*D. Z. Spicer, CHOICE*
This book is a delightful journey through a lot of stimulating
mathematics. Throughout the book, the pleasure of doing mathematics
comes through powerfully... If this book cannot help to bring a
lost soul back to mathematics, then nothing will.
*Colin Foster, Mathematics in School*
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