Are these all the books you’ll ever need to teach computing? 🎓
Clearing out some old books, found these Bluffer's Guides® from the nineties via Ravette Publishing Limited.
BLUFF YOUR WAY IN COMPUTERS by Robert Ainsley & Alexander C. Rae: “Always sneer at every piece of software used by other people, Whatever they admit to using, it is already out of date. The newer version is shortly to be released and is much better, cheaper and faster.”
BLUFF YOUR WAY IN SCIENCE by Brian Malpass: “The trick in succeeding in science is simple really. You have to become the world's greatest living expert in some tiny facet of your chosen subject. The successful scientists motto could well be If you've got a niche, scratch it.”
BLUFF YOUR WAY IN TEACHING by Nick Yapp: “If none of the above appeals, there is always the last refuge of the scoundrel - Private Education. Private Education Schools range from trendy centres of excellence with prize-winning string quartets, electron microscopes and their own helicopters, to Dickensian hell holes which even OFSTED condemns.”
Are these all the books you’ll ever need to teach computing? 🎓
Clearing out some old books, found these Bluffer's Guides® from the nineties via Ravette Publishing Limited.
BLUFF YOUR WAY IN COMPUTERS by Robert Ainsley & Alexander C. Rae: “Always sneer at every piece of software used by other people, Whatever they admit to using, it is already out of date. The newer version is shortly to be released and is much better, cheaper and faster.”
BLUFF YOUR WAY IN SCIENCE by Brian Malpass: “The trick in succeeding in science is simple really. You have to become the world's greatest living expert in some tiny facet of your chosen subject. The successful scientists motto could well be If you've got a niche, scratch it.”
BLUFF YOUR WAY IN TEACHING by Nick Yapp: “If none of the above appeals, there is always the last refuge of the scoundrel - Private Education. Private Education Schools range from trendy centres of excellence with prize-winning string quartets, electron microscopes and their own helicopters, to Dickensian hell holes which even OFSTED condemns.”