Ti Student Software Crack
TI-Nspire Student
A single subscription (365 days) license for TI-Nspire and TI-Nspire CAS Student Software. This product will be a great fit for individual students who need access to the software for a fixed period of time.
TI-Nspire CAS Student Software: NSCSX/SP/KT/2L1/AThe Student Version of TINA is a powerful yet affordable software package for electronics students to simulate and analyze electronic circuits. It works with linear and nonlinear analog circuits as well as with digital and mixed circuits. Includes both TI-Nspire™ CX Teacher Software and TI-Nspire™ CX CAS Teacher Software. Includes TI-SmartView™ Emulator Software with key-press indicator. Calculate, graph, write notes, build spreadsheets and create self-check questions, all with TI-Nspire™ CX and TI-Nspire™ CX CAS Teacher Software.
TI-Nspire Student Software: NSSX/SP/KT/2L1/A
PC/Mac® Compatible
Single user licenses can be installed on school, institutional, educator or personal computers.
Single Subscription (365 days) (CD)
Ti Student Software Download
TI-Nspire Teacher
Single user licenses can be installed onschool, institutional, educator or personal computers.
Single User License Perpetual(CD) N2TX/SP/KT/2L1TI-SmartViewTM Emulator
TI-84 Plus Family Version 4.0
TI-SmartViewTM Emulator Software for theTI-84 Plus Family. Based on the TI-84 Plusfamily of graphing calculators, the TI-SmartView emulator software for the TI-84Plus family of graphing calculators is an easy-to-use demonstration tool for leading theclassroom instruction of Math and Science.The TI SmartView emulator complements classroom calculator use by using aprojection system or whiteboard to show an interactive representation of the calculator.
TI-SmartViewTM emulator software is compatible with the new TI-84 Plus C Silver Editiongraphing calculator. You can switch between graphing calculator models, utilize more whiteboardfunctionality and add images to illustrate math and science concepts.
Single User License Perpetual(CD) CE84SV/SP/KT/2L1/CTI-73 ExplorerTM
Ti Student Software Crack
Based on the TI-73 Explorer graphing calculator, theTI-SmartView emulator software for the TI-73 Explorer is an easy-to-use demonstrationtool for leading the classroom instruction of middle grades Math. The TI SmartViewemulator complements classroom calculator use by using a projection system orwhiteboard to show an interactive representation of the calculator.
Single User License Perpetual(CD) 73EMU/PWB/2L1TI-30X/TI-34 TI-SmartViewTM
Emulator Software for theTI-30X/TI-34 MultiViewTM Calculators. Designed to support the use of the TI-30XSMultiView and TI-34 MultiView scientific calculators, TI-SmartView emulator softwareprojects an interactive representation of the calculator and comes with uniqueinstructional capabilities. Switch back and forth between the TI-30XS and TI-34MultiView calculators to demonstrate different concepts and create powerfulteaching moments.
Single User License Perpetual(CD) MVEMU/SP/KT/2L1Student Software Dcps Login
All multi-user licenses require a minimum order of 5 or 10 seats depending on the software. There are various ways the seats can be distributed.
School-Managed licenses (SML)The software can be installed on many computers. When the software is run it checks out a license from a license server. If all licenses are checked out the software will not run. Computers may check out licenses and work independent of the network license server for up to 30 days. |
ConcurrantSimilar to SML except checked out licenses must remain in the network. |
Student Software Focus
Nspire Teacher LicensesMinimum 5 seat orders.N2TX/VP/ESW Volume Perpetual N2TX/NP/ESW SML | |
TI-SmartViewTM Emulator SoftwareMinimum 5 seat orders. | TI-SmartViewTM Emulator SoftwareMinimum 5 seat orders. |
It's a bit off the subject, but this has always struck me as a terrible scam. For the material it is used for (introductory calculus) and the way it is used, one of these TI calculators hurts student learning and understanding more than it helps, and there is no excuse for schools to force students to purchase a $100 piece of electronics without a damn good reason. That these devices are absurdly overpriced compared to the state of the art (~$100 multipurpose netbooks, for instance), and that the models required are made by a single company with monopolistic coordination with standardized tests and textbooks, only make things worse.
Learning how to use a calculator is perhaps a useful skill, but it's one that can be learned quickly if needed and should not be pervasively required: for most math done for math's sake (that is, as opposed to computations for some engineering problem), students would be better off if teachers instead made problems that could easily be worked with pen and paper.
(Personally, I made it through high school and then up through upper-level undergraduate mathematics, physics, econometrics, etc. courses without ever buying a graphing calculator, so it’s clearly not strictly mandatory for current curricula, but students and parents get the impression that it is essential, and the vast majority of students do buy them, so the effect is about the same.)