You can download it, get it through your department coordinator, or from the UCLA Course Readers Office located at A237 in A-Level, Ackerman Union (southwest corner of the textbooks store). Fill out one form for each book, compendium, manual or syllabus to be printed.
Course readers are paper-bound, custom-printed collections of materials that instructors can choose to prepare for classes. They can offer a flexible and curated alternative to traditional textbooks. However, they can also be exorbitantly expensive.
A course reader is a publication type used for teaching in universities and academia. A course reader is made up of a collection of existing texts, course slides, and notes. Common forms of course readers include photocopy packs or PDF documents.
Pearson Collections allows you to create your own materials for class. With an easy-to-use website, you can choose chapters from a variety of Pearson products and add in your own materials. Learn more about creating a custom eText through Pearson Collections.
There are two ways you can use Pearson eText in your class: as a digital version of the Pearson title you’re using that students purchase on their own, or as an assignable course that lets you interact with students directly in the eText.
Corequisite Support for Liberal Arts Mathematics/Quantitative Reasoning provides a complete set of prerequisite topics to promote student success in Liberal Arts Mathematics or Quantitative Reasoning by developing algebraic maturity and a solid foundation in percentages, measurement, geometry, probability, data analysis, and linear functions.
The LV courses provide extensive coverage of the elementary school math standards in arithmetic, algebra, geometry, measurement, probability, and statistics. The ALEKS calculator is available for selected topics.
Algebra Readiness also provides robust coverage of the basic concepts of algebra, algebra prerequisites, and related math curriculum standards. Algebra Readiness does not provide coverage of non-algebra middle school mathematics topics, such as probability, statistics, and geometry.