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Dr.D said:I suppose this works if you are satisfied with a "plug and chug" approach to mechanics. I always found it much more interesting to start with F = m*a, ask myself if a is constant or not, and then proceed to integrate accordingly. I'm not very big on "plug and chug," although I have known hundreds of mediocre students who thought this was the way to go.
I think of plug and chug as the method whereby you plug numbers into the equations at the earliest opportunity. The course material is then essentially the same few problems over and over again with different numbers. Even something like mass that always cancels out in gravitational problems is always included. Mechanics then becomes an exercise in arithmetic and the physics is lost, or remains hidden in the numbers.
By contrast, a mechanics book such as Kleppner and Kolenkov has almost exclusively more general algebraic problems. And that get you to think about the physics.
Whether you choose to remember all the SUVAT formulas (I find that ##v^2 - u^2 = 2as## is particularly useful) or derive them is more a matter of taste. The good problems require you to manipulate the basic equations in any case.