Do your students find maths challenging?
Would you like to be able to give your students more personalised support and feedback?
Would you like to provide more support for students with varying mathematical ability?
Since 2001, MyMathLab has helped over 5 million students succeed at maths at more than 1,850 colleges and universities Worldwide.
Numeracy in Nursing and Healthcare with MyMathLab is the perfect package to help your students prepare for their nursing program.
The text starts out with basic adding and subtracting and works up to more advanced principles like SI units, drug administration and common clinical measurements.
An online personalised MyMathLab study plan helps to diagnose individual student strengths and weaknesses and provides further interactive practice. MyMathLab also provides instant support at the click of a button, ensuring that students have help at their fingertips whatever the time of day, and never get left behind.
By illustrating how mathematical theory is relevant to clinical practice, Numeracy in Nursing and Healthcare is a great tool to help increase student confidence.
Your purchase of this text includes a Student Access Code in the back of the book you should use to register and begin using MyMathLab.
Visitwww.pearsoned.co.uk/shihab with your code to login or register for MyMathLab.
If you did not purchase a new textbook and your lecturer requires you to enrol in MyMathLab, you may purchase online access. Go to www.pearsoned.co.uk/shihab and follows the links to purchase online.
"Shihab draws on her 25 years of teaching experience to provide a text devoted specifically to competency in the often-dreaded area of maths for student nurses." - THES, Feb 2010
"MyMathLab is really good. I especially like the common clinical measurements and physiological measurement questions because I can really relate them to practice. I even take the book to practice with me because it is such an easy read for me as I have never worked in healthcare before. I feel like I have learnt a lot from the book."-Wayne Fleming, Nursing Student, Manchester Metropolitan University