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|||You don't need a teacher's manual to teach the students. You need to know physics. The teacher's manual is not going to teach a teacher physics if they don't know it already.
The teacher's manual doesn't even have a solutions manual, so if you don't know how to do the problems or know the concepts, you are out of luck. Probably not a good idea to teach something you don't know about either.
All the material is in the book, all the teacher's manual does is suggest examples and give notes to why the author does things a certain way instead of another.
For example, when teaching basic kinematics, equations of motions, some professors choose the ground to be 0 and going up is positive. Some choose the peak height to be zero and go down negatively. You get the same answers, but the method is different.|||You cannot. Holt only sells to schools. I cannot either and Im a 16 year teacher, Id have to get the school to order it for me.
Your other questions suggest that you are the high school student in the class. do your own work.|||Teachers manuals aren't sold, they are given free by the publisher to the instructors directly as a token for selecting the textbook to be required by their students. Hence, while you might be able to find an old version of a teacher's edition on a used book site, that wont hold true for a recent version unless it's been stolen.
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