I'm a private tutor of High school & pre-engineering level mathematics. Obviously, only those people who have some trouble with maths take tuitions. Most of my students are actually good. I mean they are not dumb. Its just that they are "don't like", "hate", "scared of", "bored" (these are their own words) of mathematics. They feel maths is very abstract.
I don't blame them. Its their teachers and the books they follow. Most of the mathematics books just tell the mathematical concepts either bluntly or in an abstract way. I'm looking for some books which teach mathematics in "fun", "interesting", "intutive", "thought provoking" way. Of course, as a tutor I'm doing my best to make maths simple & intuitive but books also help me in getting new ideas. I really like http://betterexplained.com
These are the topics covered in my tutions
Set theory (Sets, Relations & Functions)
Trigonometry
Complex Numbers
Linear Algebra
Number theory
Geometry (st.lines, triangles, circles, parabola, hyperbola, 3D: spheres, cubes, etc.)
Calculus (Limits, Differential & Integral calculus)
Probability (permutations & combinations)
Statistics
I'm looking for any kind of resources books, papers, websites, videos, softwares, simulations or even suggestions. I need to cultivate interest at the same time make them good at mathematics.
It depends upon the student's motivation. When you are hired for high school, is it by the parents when the student has a problem? And in pre-engineering is it the student? This is a big difference. If the student isn't motivated, I have no ideas. If s/he is motivated, showing what math is good for, as problems in the area of interest is a good approach. I've done a bit of this and what worked there was just to take their text and work exercises. The one-on-one work seemed to help understanding. For the general high school situation, again assuming motivation, there are many problem books that require creativity. Martin Gardner and Peter Winkler are the names I would first think of, but there are many more. Also the first problems at projecteuler.org give you a lot to work with.