Textbooks can get boring really quickly as they continue to spew out facts, numbers, and graphs. A hundred things to memorize and none seemed interesting or caught our attention at all. We think textbooks need to be worked on more to make them more relevant to students and easier to understand.
Well, on the other hand, the people who wrote or edited these books absolutely knew what they were doing. (Or maybe, not all of them.) One thing for sure is that the students won’t think of these books as completely boring!
Tiger wants out. Now.
Chemistry book. Moles.
Irreversible investments illustration in an economics textbook.
A red panda for refreshment in a web design textbook.
You’ve got to be prepared.
Should we take that seriously?
This psychology textbook speaks the simple truth of life.
This French textbooks explaining color in black and white.
Interesting question, my math textbook. Care to explain why?
You can travel on fire, safer than a car.
Yes, you can guess. It’s a sex-ed book.
First page of a statistic textbook.
These endangered kids.
A sighting of Michael Phelps.
The invisible man.
Nope!
The sound of ‘zzz’.
Should I be warned of this? An engineering book.
Four completely unexpected bonus pages because the book is expensive to make.
The four F’s. Such subtlety.
Joe from a biology textbook.
This cat in a physics textbook.
We all know someone who’s colorblind now.
Textbook level: Chernobyl.
Early motor skills.
Not sure if that’s how puberty works.
A break in a statistics textbook.
An American nuclear family, poor complexion kid not included.
Inside a chemistry book, Julie has a wish.
The gay theory by Stephen Colbert.
This Spanish textbook has a boy asking a girl for her phone number. By calling her.
This woman is saying ‘Hello’ to a man and woman in a bush.