OhioLINK is joining the Open Textbook Network, a consortium working on controlling textbook costs by providing high-quality open access textbooks. Have you looked at the open textbooks in your field?
The productive (and appropriate) use of data about student use of online resources is going to be an interesting part of teaching in the future, and a difficult one.
An interesting analysis of the textbook market from the Planet Money podcast. It's worth listening all the way to the end for a brief discussion of why new editions come out so frequently - and whether they will continue to.
An episode of the Planet Money podcast relating to textbook costs and the second-hand market. Every summer, there's a surplus of textbooks, and every fall, there's a spike in demand. That's an opportunity for someone with a storage locker to make money. Getting your textbook orders in early helps fix that flaw in the market...
This is Paul Andersen, a high school teacher in Bozeman, MT. He was 2011 Montana Teacher of the Year, and he has delivered Ted talks and is a prolific web video producer. In this video he describes some of the trends in the evolution of educational text books, but, moreover, he touches upon some recurring deep problems in teaching modern students. These are problems for teachers, especially us at the higher end of education as the students coming our way will be more demanding of our product. I think this is a large driving force for pedagogical change.
I thought this was a tough one as far as tags are concerned; if you have better ideas for a tag, please send it my way.
A short open access textbook which presents main concepts of various kinds of information literacy to students. It includes case studies and hands-on exercises.
Many classes already use library materials (physical or online) as course readings. Have you looked, though, at the open textbooks and other instructional materials available in your field?