We use cookies to make your experience better. To comply with the new e-Privacy directive, we need to ask for your consent to set the cookies. Learn more.
Life of Fred: Calculus Expanded Edition
The story of the first
five years of Fred's life ...
• How Fred won 500 gallons of Siberian Bear Brand Beer for his father
• Fred's job application resume at the age 6 months
• Line integrals in a law library
All 15 or 16 units of college calculus including. . .
- Functions
- Limits
- Speed
- Slope
- Derivatives
- Concavity
- Trig
- Related Rates
- Curvature
- Integrals
- Area
- Work
- Centroids
- Logs
- Conics
- Infinite Series
- Solids of Revolution
- Polar Coordinates
- Hyperbolic Trig
- Vectors
- Partial Derivatives
- Double Integrals
- Vector Calculus
- Differential Equations
Unlike most other math
programs, this one also has:
• Multi-variable calculus
• Analytic geometry
• Vector calculus
• Differential equations
All answers are included in the textbook.
Life of Fred Calculus is a hardcover textbook containing 592 pages. This book is not consumable. All answers are written on separate paper or in a notebook.
Number of Lessons: Two years of College Calculus. This book is not broken up into lessons.
Life of Fred (LOF) is an unconventional series of math texts that seem accessible and friendly, especially for students who dislike traditional programs. According to Dr. Schmidt, the author, this series is designed to teach you the math you need to know without repetition, redundancy, and a multitude of problems to work. LOF follows the storyline of Fred's life while incorporating solid math concepts and skills. Motivated or independent students will appreciate this series, as well as gifted math students who might need a challenge. Written to the student and intended to be self-teaching, the author prefers that students use these with very little help from you, so they can learn to study and understand on their own. Even the solutions (found in the text) are addressed to the student. In fact, there's a lot of actual instruction in the solutions, which students should read after trying to solve problems on their own. Math in a story context can sometimes make more sense to students than stand-alone math concepts - especially if it's an entertaining story! Students do two books per year up through pre-algebra; beginning with algebra, one book per year.
We love Life of Fred and my son was ready for Calculus.
I want to brush up on Calculus before my kids take it. When they get close to calculus, they'll read this book.
My son is taking a college calculus class next semester.
My kids are anxious to read about Fred's childhood and do a little calculus.