Geometry: A Fresh Approach Textbook

SKU
047186
ISBN
9780984583249
Grade 8-12
Traditional
Neutral
Low Teacher Involvement
Visual
No other materials needed
Sequential
Teaching Method
Traditional
Teacher-centered curriculum commonly used in classrooms that may include a text, teacher manual, tests, etc.
Charlotte Mason
A methodology based on the work of a 19th century educator who maintained that children learn best from literature (Living Books), not textbooks.
Classical
A methodology based on the Latin Trivium (three stages of learning), including the grammar stage (memorization and facts), logic stage (critical thinking), and rhetoric stage (developing/defending ideas).
Unit Study
A thematic or topical approach centered around one topic that integrates multiple subject areas.
Montessori (Discovery)
A methodology based on the work of a 20th century educator that emphasizes student and sensory-driven discovery learning and real-life applications.
Other
Other methodologies
Religious Content
Secular
Contains content contrary to common Christian beliefs (i.e. evolution).
Neutral
Avoids religious or theoretical topics or presents multiple viewpoints without preference.
Christian/Religious
Faith-based or including instructional religious content.
Learning Modality
Auditory
Learns through listening, talking out loud or reading out loud.
Visual
Learns through seeing, prefers written instructions and visual materials.
Kinesthetic/Tactile (Hands-On)
Learns through moving, doing and touching.
Multi-Sensory
Curriculum that employ a variety of activities/components.
Presentation
Sequential
Curriculum progresses through well-defined learning objectives. Emphasizes mastery before moving to the next topic.
Spiral
Topics and concepts are repeated from level to level, adding more depth at each pass and connecting with review.
Conceptual/Topical
Focus is on the “why,” often with a unifying concept as well as specific skills; coverage may be broader.
Teacher Involvement
Low Teacher Involvement
Student-led materials; parent acts as a facilitator.
Medium Teacher Involvement
A mix of teacher-led time and independent student work.
High Teacher Involvement
Teacher-led lessons; may utilize discussions, hands-on activities and working together.
Additional Materials Required
No other materials needed
Everything you need is included.
Other Materials Required
There are additional required resources that are a separate purchase.
Other Materials Optional
There are additional resources mentioned or recommended but are not absolutely necessary.
Consumable
Consumable
Designed to be written in; not reusable.
Non-Consumable
Not designed to be written in; reusable.
Rated 4.33 out of 5
Read 3 Reviews|2 Questions, 6 Answersor
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Description
Another uncluttered, fresh-looking math course from author Christy Walters. Again, I love that the book is addressed to the student, has plenty of workspace for problem-solving, and uses a no-nonsense approach. There is nothing "cute" here; just a direct, front-on approach to learning math. If you are not familiar with the Algebra courses, PLEASE READ description of Algebra: A Fresh Approach, as all of the same applies here. If you have used the Algebra I course above, you will equally enjoy Geometry.

In the Geometry book, I like that she begins with a mini logic course (much like Jacobs). Instead of waiting until introducing geometric theorems to have the student begin doing proofs, she immediately introduces them in the context of what the student already knows (using algebraic principles). In this way, proofs are not a "new" thing used to prove just geometry theorems, but are familiar to the student as an extension and organization of logical thought. Although non-Euclidean geometry is an interesting topic in the Jacobs book, your math-reluctant student will appreciate not having to deal with such abstract concepts here. For a more complete idea of the scope and sequence of this course (and other geometry courses, for comparison), please visit our website to view the table of contents.

The thirteen chapters are broken into parts (lessons) with direct instruction followed by problems. Again, I like the self-discovery incorporated into the exercises as well as the short-answer questions, which require the student to put principles into words. The last part of each chapter is a mixed review including material from previous sections and chapters of the book. While the book is thick (730 pages before the answers to odd-problems section), the larger typeset font is easy on the eye and the less bulky text per page helps the instruction seem less intimidating and overwhelming. Since this book is intended for use between Algebra I and Algebra II, there is an Appendix devoted to a review of algebraic concepts. This is a great mini-refresher course and I am glad to see it all in one place at the end of the book rather than parceled out in the middle of the geometry course. I found the latter approach to be unnecessarily distracting in the Jacobs book.

Another notable feature of this series is the ability to work directly in the book or to photocopy the student problem pages rather than recopying the problems and working on a separate sheet of paper. In the geometry course, this goes a step further in the inclusion of blank coordinate graphs on problems that require them.

I really like this math series and would recommend it to any student, but particularly for children who seem confused by other math courses and for children who are working grade-levels ahead. It is a good text for the easily-distracted and math-phobic student as well who needs to see things organized clearly and appreciates the less-cluttered feel of the text. If your child has had difficulty using other math programs, don't throw in the towel until you've tried "A Fresh Approach".

Category Description for Geometry: A Fresh Approach

Another uncluttered, fresh-looking math course from author Christy Walters. Again, I love that the book is addressed to the student, has plenty of workspace for problem-solving, and uses a no-nonsense approach. There is nothing "cute" here; just a direct, front-on approach to learning math. PLEASE READ THE DESCRIPTION for Algebra, if you are not familiar with the Algebra courses, as they function similarly. If you have used the Algebra I course, you will equally enjoy Geometry.

In the Geometry book, I like that she begins with a mini logic course (much like Jacobs). Instead of waiting until introducing geometric theorems to have the student begin doing proofs, she immediately introduces them in the context of what the student already knows (using algebraic principles). In this way, proofs are not a "new" thing used to prove just geometry theorems, but are familiar to the student as an extension and organization of logical thought. Although non-Euclidean geometry is an interesting topic in the Jacobs book, your math-reluctant student will appreciate not having to deal with such abstract concepts here. For a more complete idea of the scope and sequence of this course (and other geometry courses, for comparison), please visit our website to view the table of contents.

The thirteen chapters are broken into parts (lessons) with direct instruction followed by problems. Again, I like the self-discovery incorporated into the exercises as well as the short-answer questions, which require the student to put principles into words. The last part of each chapter is a mixed review including material from previous sections and chapters of the book. While the book is thick (730 pages before the answers to odd-problems section), the larger typeset font is easy on the eye and the less bulky text per page helps the instruction seem less intimidating and overwhelming. Since this book is intended for use between Algebra I and Algebra II, there is an Appendix devoted to a review of algebraic concepts. This is a great mini-refresher course and I am glad to see it all in one place at the end of the book rather than parceled out in the middle of the geometry course. I found the latter approach to be unnecessarily distracting in the Jacobs book.

Another notable feature of this series is the ability to work directly in the book or photocopy the student problem pages rather than recopying the problems and working on a separate sheet of paper. In the geometry course, this goes a step further in the inclusion of blank coordinate graphs on problems that require them. A companion DVD is also now included in the back of the book that includes extra help for chapters 2, 3, 12 and 13. The additional guidance on using a protractor, drawing 3-D shapes and perimeter, area and volume will be an asset to most students.

I really like this math series and would recommend it to any student, but particularly for children who seem confused by other math courses and for children who are working grade-levels ahead. It is a good text for the easily-distracted and math-phobic student as well - who needs to see things organized clearly and appreciates the less-cluttered feel of the text. If your child has had difficulty using other math programs, don't throw in the towel until you've tried "A Fresh Approach".

Details
More Information
Product Format:Hardcover Book
Grades:8-12
Brand:A+ Education Services
ISBN:9780984583249
Length in Inches:11
Width in Inches:8.5
Height in Inches:2
Weight in Pounds:4.6
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3 Reviews
Rated 3 out of 5
Dec 4, 2019
Very heavy on proofs
This course is very thorough. It does contain too many proofs in my opinion. We found that breaking the lessons in half and then only doing half of the problems was a good amount of problems for each day. We loved the Algebra 1 book by the same author, but have not been as pleased with the Geometry course. The explanations are not quite as clear and there is no index, which makes looking up theorems to use for proofs very difficult. We did end up having my daughter make notecards to help with this, but there are now so many notecards we sometimes still have trouble finding the definition of a theorem.
Rated 5 out of 5
Jul 26, 2016
CHALLENGING!
My teen has found A Fresh Approach Algebra & Geometry to be better than other math curriculums we have tried. One was so bad (I forget the name of it) that we got a refund 6 MONTHS into it because we realized the ANSWER KEY was WRONG for several problems!! THAT was a HUGE disappointment to have spent 6 months only to have to start over again with a brand new curriculum because we didn't know which problems were right & which were wrong... and the publisher wasn't going to update that edition for several years (YES! With an INCORRECT answer key!) & someone else told us the next book in their series also had many errors in it, so we ditched it entirely... too bad they didn't tell us that before we spent 6 MONTHS on the curriculum.

Anyway, I then spent even more hours & hours researching again to find a new math curriculum that was not dumbed down AND had a correct answer key. I came upon this curriculum & the rest was history after I contacted the curriculum writer & she assured me there was not a large number of errors in the book (she said there may have been one... maybe two, but that if we brought any errors to her attention we would get PAID to do so...at that point I was very confident she KNEW her stuff & risked buying the curriculum... best math decision!).

A Fresh Approach can be VERY challenging, but WOW!, my daughter knows her stuff now. She may not LIKE math any more than she did, but it MAKES SENSE with THIS curriculum after treading water with two other curriculums she did NOT want to go back to.

This is DEFINITELY NOT for math challenged kids..it is high level math without a doubt, but how accomplished a student feels when they succeed at it!

We are back to order Algebra II. This is the FIRST math curriculum my daughter ASKED for when given the choice, even being harder than any of the others.

For kicks, she & I looked at the scope & sequence for one of the old math curriculums she had used. Everything in that math curriculum for Algebra II she had covered in Algebra I & Geometry with A Fresh Approach. I found that exciting as a parent to know how she is excelling in a subject that we used to cry in frustration about & she pretty much SELF teaches it now. She is far from being a dumb kid; the other curriculums just did NOT make sense & THIS one makes sense! My husband checks over her work & helps if she has a question (he's the math whiz in the family).

Words can't describe how awesome it is to have her do so well in such a high level math AND she GETS IT!!

I'm not sure if I will use this for my other kids, but I will at least start them out on it & see if they do just as well. It is not for the faint at heart when it comes to math. That said, there are NO MORE TEARS from her or me :).

LOVE this curriculum!

I hope Algebra II goes as well. I'll review that after we go through it.
Rated 5 out of 5
May 7, 2012
My daughter has done well in this course although the blank space on the pages translates into a daunting number of pages to cover per lesson It is very frustrating that there is no index and the table of contents is not detailed enough to find a particular topic: my daughter wastes too much time leafing through pages to find references Overall it's more workable than Jacobs more straightforward than Life of Fred but still not the answer to my prayers for higher level math
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2 Questions
Why did you choose this?

The Algebra I book gave very good explanations and had lots of practice problems. My daughter did well in Algebra I and we are looking forward to the same quality explanations for Geometry.

It looks like a friendly, but through geometry text. This kiddo is a few years ahead and being able to write directly in the text will be less daunting. We really liked the sample chapter from the website.

looking for a different style of geometry.

We chose A Fresh Approach Algebra I & the supplies to go along with it after MANY tears & trials with other math curriculums.

My boys have had algebra I. Should they begin with algebra II or do geometry next? Different curriculums recommend different sequences.

We really liked the Algebra 1 and 2 from this series, but did not like the Geometry. I would recommend picking a different curriculum. If you liked the Algebra 1, Algebra 2 is similar. It goes above and beyond Algebra 2 including some Pre-calculus as well. The Geometry is very proof heavy and even more complex than an introduction to proofs class at the college level. It would not matter however if you did the Geometry or Algebra 2 first.