Schaum's Outline Study Guides: How Good Are They?

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The discussion highlights the effectiveness of certain study guide books, particularly the Schaum series, for students preparing for exams. While these books are praised for their practical approach and ability to enhance problem-solving skills, they are not recommended as primary texts for deep theoretical understanding. The series focuses on hands-on learning, presenting minimal theory alongside detailed worked-out problems and practice exercises. They serve best as a supplementary resource to theoretical courses or for students looking to refresh their practical skills after a period of study. Overall, they provide valuable support for exam preparation but should be used in conjunction with more comprehensive theoretical materials for a complete understanding of the subject matter.
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Generally how good are those books for a student to use as a study guide?
 
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Very good.
 
end3r7 said:
Generally how good are those books for a student to use as a study guide?

They are good for doing well in the exams, but not good enough if you want to get some deep understanding.
 
I've got the Applied physics. It's an easy read, and a good review, but I wouldn't want it as a primary text.
 
end3r7 said:
Generally how good are those books for a student to use as a study guide?

They are quite good "to get your hands dirty". I have almost the entire series of everything that has to do with physics, electronics, engineering and chemistry and they all work along the same principle: learning by doing. Theory is reduced to the bare minimum, just enough to make sense of the problem-solving algorithms that are presented, then a series of detailled worked-out problems ("case studies" if you like), and then a set of similar problems, but with only the final answer to check if you got it or not.

As said before, they don't give you deep insight in the theoretical aspect of the matter (and thus not a very deep understanding) - you better get that in parallel elsewhere. But they give you a very robust set of problem-solving skills in the matter. Don't think that these are "cheap tricks", no, you get a systematic education in problem solving which is really really useful.

The best use for the Schaum series is:
- as a practical complement to a theoretical course
- when you have learned some material long ago, remember that you understood it, but you've a bit lost your practical skills, to get you up and running again.
 
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I've gone through the Standard turbulence textbooks such as Pope's Turbulent Flows and Wilcox' Turbulent modelling for CFD which mostly Covers RANS and the closure models. I want to jump more into DNS but most of the work i've been able to come across is too "practical" and not much explanation of the theory behind it. I wonder if there is a book that takes a theoretical approach to Turbulence starting from the full Navier Stokes Equations and developing from there, instead of jumping from...

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