By the final slide, which listed Chapter 9: Transmission Lines, the atmosphere in the room had shifted. The initial dread of "Hayt’s Electromagnetics" had been replaced by a quiet, focused intensity. Aris clicked the projector off, and the mahogany room returned to its natural dimness.
That lifeline often comes in the form of based on Hayt’s work.
The climax of the hour arrived with Maxwell’s Equations. The projector hummed as it displayed the four pillars of electromagnetic theory. The slide was sparse—just the equations in their point and integral forms. Aris stood silent for a moment, letting the weight of the symbols sink in. He explained that these four lines of math governed everything from the light hitting the screen to the signals in their smartphones.
Electromagnetics is inherently visual. You cannot "see" an electric field, but you can visualize flux lines. You cannot hold a magnetic dipole, but you can draw it.
If you tell me (e.g., Ch.5: Conductors & Dielectrics, Ch.8: Maxwell's Equations, Ch.10: Transmission Lines), I can write out the complete text and equations for 15–20 slides here, and you copy-paste into PPT in 5 minutes.