Book snapshot
Class Management
Ready to buy?
Affiliate disclosure: purchases made through links on this site may earn us a commission at no additional cost to you.
Best for readers who...
Good fit if you want...
Try this if you want a practical lane for work and decisions. Best fit when you want real tactics rather than generic advice. If you appreciate quiet emotion, the relationship develops slowly and realistically.
Maybe skip if...
Not the best pick if you need pure reference utility with no narrative flow. Probably a mismatch if you want a pure quick-hit format rather than this kind of read. You need the newest edition, freshest examples, or the most current framing.
Summary
Class Management by E.C. Wragg looks like a practical improvement title built around ideas you can test or apply from the record we have here. The copy on hand shows 1993 • Routledge • 57 pages, useful if you want to gauge size and reading commitment.
Edition on file: 1993 • Routledge • 57 pages • ISBN 9780415084222.
Why this book now
A reasonable choice if you like backlist books that still feel specific and usable.
Reader guide
Quick signals that help you decide faster.
Reading commitment
Quick Easy to move through
Quick commitment. Easy to finish in one or two sittings.
What stands out here
This one stands out as a usable business read, the kind of book readers buy because they want something to apply.
Best way to approach it
Most useful if you pause for the ideas that matter instead of rushing only for completion.
45-second preview
Three quick cards, fifteen seconds each.
Card 1 of 3
Was this page helpful?
Quick thumbs only. No login.
Loading feedback…
Similar books on UPB
Nearby picks ranked by author, shelf fit, publisher, era, and record quality.
Recommendation cards are not ready for this book yet.
Preview links
Optional external previews if you still want to check before buying.
The likely reading experience leans toward takeaways, frameworks, or prompts that aim to be usable in real life. Net effect: a compact read that should get to its point quickly. It also has the feel of a backlist title rather than a brand-new release.
Book overview built from edition details and related-book context.