Dictionary
the workbooks
noun
A book used by a student in which answers and workings may be entered besides questions and exercises.
Exact(25)
"The workbooks direct your learning, but you got a tutorial every month by video link.
A panel of five judges scrutinizes the workbooks and grills the restorers about how the work was done.
"The workbooks actually help us more than seeing the physical unit," said Dennis Rupert, one of the judges.
At Eastern Illinois University in Charleston, Ill., for example, students pay $7.95 per credit hour to rent basic texts, buying only the workbooks.
The students found the statistics depressing and the flowcharts in the workbooks unfathomable, but Pastor Young was neither of those things, and in three days of class only one student dozed off, briefly, following a Crock-Pot lunch.
The workbooks could accompany text materials, presented online, or simply provided by the teacher.
Similar(35)
The workbook is the oldest known Lincoln manuscript.
The workbook costs $13 and the video is $19, including shipping and handling.
Peg sat at the kitchen table, scribbling in the workbook that Arno, her German tutor, had given her.
All respondents found the workbook to be at least a little useful and thought the workbook could help facilitate family discussions.
Participants in the wait-list arm crossed over to the workbook following the 12-week assessment.
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