(Part 2) Best products from r/HomeworkHelp

We found 20 comments on r/HomeworkHelp discussing the most recommended products. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 86 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

Top comments mentioning products on r/HomeworkHelp:

u/Cosmic_Charlie · 1 pointr/HomeworkHelp

Two books that might help:

Odd Arne Westad, The Global Cold War Excellent analysis of US and USSR moves in smaller countries. Definitely gets into what I think you're looking for.

John Gaddis, We Now Know Gaddis is a bit heavy on the self-congratulations here, but this book is really good. Not quite as on point as Westad for your interest, but should still be helpful.

u/ContentiousRage · 1 pointr/HomeworkHelp

So are you saying you have to utilize two of the three mandatory texts and then you have to have a supplementary ("related") text in addition?

If so I would tailor around whichever two texts you decide upon. Maybe you could draw from The Bully Pulpit. Just look back to social and political leaders throughout history. Here are a list of MLK Jr.'s speeches with attached PDFs. Really, I'd need more info to help you further, so if this is insufficient and you reply I can try to help more.

Edit^1 : If you are looking for a movie, I'd suggest you watch the entirety of Charlie Chaplin's The Great Dictator (full movie link). You don't have to watch the whole movie, but I believe it helps give a greater respect for the speech Chaplin gives.

Edit^2 : Here's another version of the Charlie Chaplin speech with pictures and music, because why not

u/sjrsimac · 3 pointsr/HomeworkHelp

Your answer is sufficient.

I also blame the Republican Party starting with the Reagan administration. The Reagan administration was the first time the Republican Party started using culture war issues to win elections while their governance did little more than gut welfare programs and ignore labor unions.

Source: Conscience of a Liberal

Feel free to politicize your answer to best accommodate your teacher. Sociologists are pretty liberal, so s/he might appreciate the more partisan answer.

u/scurvybill · 1 pointr/HomeworkHelp

edit: Now I see that you're a first year mechanical engineering student. Good luck! If your professor assigned this to you... I wonder what they expect you to do :/

I now see that you've been posting this on /r/askengineers, /r/diy, and /r/engineeringstudents.

I think your overall question is the subject of several university courses and can't be covered in a single reddit thread.

I recommend the following textbooks:

  1. Design and Performance Evaluation of a Propeller

  2. Theory of Wing Sections

    You should be familiar with Calculus and Differential Equations.

    If you would like to study this in college, you need to take courses on Aircraft Propulsion, Fluid Dynamics, and Laminar Flow.

    Propellers have basically been designed ad nauseum since the 1930's. Creating your own propeller... while interesting... won't serve you well in the long run.

    If you really want to design your own propellers, at minimum you need what's called a "test cell." On your test cell, you have an engine or motor hooked up to thrust and torque sensors so you can put different propellers on them and test them out. Dropping the propeller won't provide you with much useful data at all.

    If you have a lot of money, you want your test cell to be in a wind tunnel. Static propeller tests usually stall the propeller, so you won't get much good data out of it.
u/book_moth · 1 pointr/HomeworkHelp

Thanks, it's been a while, and I was confused.

To show my thanks, I hereby recommend a book. To Be or Not to Be. It's a plot-your-own, choose-your-own-adventure kind of book. You can be the ghost of Laertes, Hamlet, or Ophelia (a science genius). You know how Hamlet basically makes every decision wrong and you want to slap him the entire time? Play Ophelia, and you can. Or play Hamlet, and get him to do the right things.

Fun, fun book. Here. No, I'm not getting money for it, and I don't know the author, but it is one of the best books I've read in the past year.

u/Meltz014 · 1 pointr/HomeworkHelp

What exactly is "IA"? If you're going to write about something, it's best to research it. The Golden Ratio by Mario Livio is a pretty good read for that matter.

u/capcom1116 · 1 pointr/HomeworkHelp

This is an excellent book I've used from high school to college now. Find a guide like this, if you can, to help you learn how to find these things in the text.

Giving you any more specific information would be akin to doing the assignment for you, I'm sorry to say.

u/[deleted] · 1 pointr/HomeworkHelp

if u want to read a fun book - check out "DNA" by James Watson.

he explains a lot of concepts in biology in easy terms. and its interesting.

http://www.amazon.com/DNA-Secret-James-D-Watson/dp/0099451840

u/Alphonse_Mocha · 1 pointr/HomeworkHelp

You may want to start with [this website] (http://www.josephcornellbox.com/). Also, try looking at what [MoMA] (http://www.moma.org/collection/artist.php?artist_id=1247) and [the Peabody Essex Museum] (http://www.pem.org/sites/cornell/checklist.pdf) say about him. Finally, if can track down copies, [these] (http://www.amazon.com/Dime-Store-Alchemy-Joseph-Cornell-Classics/dp/1590174860/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1395336836&sr=8-3&keywords=joseph+cornell+sculpture) two [books] (http://www.amazon.com/Joseph-Cornell-Master-Diane-Waldman/dp/0810992523/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1395336836&sr=8-1&keywords=joseph+cornell+sculpture) deal with his sculpture and its reception.

You might also want to look at artists both before and after him as a way to frame his work. Try looking at [Marcel Duchamp] (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duchamp), and pay particular attention to his use of found objects. Then, take a look at [Robert Rauschenberg] (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rauschenberg) and [Jasper Johns] (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jasper_Johns). You should be able to see how Cornell fits into that trajectory.

> Lastly, do you have any idea what I could do for a title page about arrangements?

You may want to ask your teacher for a bit of clarification on that--I'm not entirely sure what he/she means in terms of arrangements. If they mean the way that Cornell's sculptures are composed, I would suggest paying attention to the way the objects he used do (or don't) relate to each other. Again, though, I would talk to your teacher--I don't want to send you down the wrong path.

If you have any questions as you go, or if you need any help with anything, feel free to message me. Maybe you'll find something about art that you enjoy.

u/SwollenOstrich · 1 pointr/HomeworkHelp

This wasn't really an event that happened all at once, so while I'm sure there's books specifically about the Romans in Spain, it may be easier to look at the individual events. It really depends how in-depth you want to go. While there was native tribes the real base of power early on was the trading colonies on the southern and eastern coasts established by the Phoenicians and later the Carthaginians, this collection of essays discusses the culture and early settlement of Iberia. After their defeat in the First Punic War, mainly to recoup losses, Hannibal Barca of Carthage began the actual conquest of southern Spain. This is relevant because this was Hannibal's base of departure, which by that point had been extended farther north up the coast, in his campaigns against Rome, and probably Scipio Africanus's most important annexation after Hannibal's defeat. There are so many books on the Second Punic War, I'm sure an index search for Iberia would be helpful. There are many standard books for that, I would look for the cheapest, but maybe be sure that it is not emphasizing only Hannibal in its contents as many books will, if you want info on the actual campaigns in Iberia look up Scipio Africanus's Iberian Campaign, here's a book I know talks about it. Even the wikipedia article, while not a legitimate source to cite, has a massive description of it in this article so you'd get the gist.

After this point, it was essentially a many-centuries long process of resistance against Rome by initially the Carthaginians, and then the natives who were focused more inland, and gradual Roman conquest of the entire peninsula westward to Lusitania, or modern-day Portugal. This is the point where I don't really know any specific books, though you could search individually or simple for "Roman wars in iberia", because there were many many wars with individual tribes, and a continual strong Roman military presence in Iberia, or what we should really be calling Hispania as the romans would. This is all during the Roman republic though, and the final phase of the conquests at the beginning of the Empire is a bit more famous because it involved the fiercely independent, both culturally and politically to this day, peoples that populated the hills and forests of northern Spain, Asturia and Cantabria. It would be the same reasons that the Romans had such a hard time conquering this area, that the Muslims caliphates would later also have a hard time, and this area would actually become the birthplace of the reconquista. I also don't know any sources specific to this, but they are often included in sources about the reign and specifically military campaigns under Augustus, the first Emperor of Rome. Good luck, let me know if you need tips on source-searching

u/cooperjak · 1 pointr/HomeworkHelp

Here's a playlist of physics topics, including the ones you mentioned

https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL0o_zxa4K1BU6wPPLDsoTj1_wEf0LSNeR

However if youre willing to spend some money, I HIGHLY recommend the Head First Physics book. Helped me learn faster and more thoroughly than a text book ever could. Plus it's on sale right now!

https://www.amazon.com/Head-First-Physics-companion-mechanics/dp/0596102372/ref=mp_s_a_1_1?keywords=head+first+physics&qid=1569773739&s=gateway&sprefix=head+furst+ph&sr=8-1