Search Results: 10 of 15
Author(s): TICIANO ALEGRE
Years ago, based on the need for a source that incorporated the lecture and the lab portion of Anatomy and Physiology, a text was built that encompassed both as well as benefit the student financially. The title of the text is Anatomy and Physiology: All Coming Together. To further improve the anatomical details, it was decided to add “Visible Body” as a great ancillary product that includes an anatomy atlas, videos, quizzes, and more.
Author(s): Linda Strause
The Science of Nutrition and Wellness is an introductory nutrition textbook designed for non-Biology majors. It covers the fundamentals of the science of nutrition and major physiological systems, including the G.I. tract, cardiovascular system and excretory system.
Author(s): Laural L. Adams
Essentials of Business Communication for Emerging Professionals introduces students to today’s professional communication practices and helps them develop key tools and habits to refine their communication skills and cultivate their executive presence — bridging the transition from student to professional.
Author(s): Lisa Sticca-Conrod
New Edition Available Fall 2019!
A Note From the Author:
Author(s): Christian Goergen, Henny A Keuben
New 6th Edition Now Available!
Political science is important because it can help us to better understand and eventually solve or alleviate the problems we face as a society…
Featuring the most recently available real-world data, Politics in a Globalized World: A Problem-Based Introduction to Politics and Political Science provides the reader with a unique and innovative style to the dynamic world of politics by discussing the major political problems the world faces at the beginning of the twenty-first century.
Author(s): Kevin Salfen
Maybe you’ve noticed? Traditional music appreciation textbooks aren’t cutting it anymore. Conceived as streamlined, even “dumbed-down” chronological surveys of Euro-American music, they are increasingly distant from students whose literacy is more diverse. When these textbooks feature music from other cultures, it’s sidelined—often literally—a counterexample, a complement, reinforcing a hierarchy that today’s university students have every reason to challenge.