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Textbooks in mathematics and physics?
I am still in high school (grades 5-9) and now I understand how superficial and primitive our program is. And everything is worsened by the fact that I live in the provinces and education here is even worse than in a mediocre school in any city with a population of over a million.
I'm sitting in algebra class and I'm bored, everything is simple to the point of impossibility. And geometry is a nightmare... As for physics, it's like algebra, it's not boring only when lectures are given. And the teacher is mediocre. Everyone who studied with him complained that they had to go to extra classes in order to catch up with the SCHOOL program, without any deepening.
I understand that nothing will shine for me at the Unified State Examination and Olympiads with such a base. There is no money for tutors, the only option is the Internet. A similar question has already been asked on answer mail... It was a bad idea. After thinking, I'm asking a question here, hoping for answers from sane people.
Could you recommend textbooks with IN-DEPTH knowledge in algebra, geometry and physics, so that everything is clear and fully described? So that there is literally everything , and signs of divisibility, and nodes with a knock, that's all, from and to (if there is such a textbook). And that textbooks, preferably, be Soviet . There is no need to recommend Russian textbooks, especially Polonsky. I know that Soviet textbooks were the best.
I will give a list of authors who are considered to be good. If you know anything about these tutorials, then please share your opinion (preferably constructive) about them.
algebra:
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Vygodsky is on the shelf - a good reference book for cases "I taught a long time ago, I already forgot."
I heard a lot about Kiselev from different people, as about a wonderful textbook, but I myself did not hold it in my hands.
I'm sitting in algebra class and I'm boredI highly recommend that you look not just for textbooks, but for books like "entertaining mathematics", "entertaining physics".
Kiselev - very dry and slightly incomprehensible.
So that there is literally everything, and signs of divisibility, and nodes with a knock, that's all, from and to (if there is such a textbook).
"Physics Course" Ershov and Kharitonov - it is school, but for schools with in-depth physics. In theory, easier than Landsberg. But it is more difficult than the base, with a swing to the Olympics.
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