Skip to main content

Home/ HGSET561/ Group items tagged textbook

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Devon Dickau

The End of the Textbook as We Know It - Technology - The Chronicle of Higher Education - 3 views

  • For years observers have predicted a coming wave of e-textbooks. But so far it just hasn't happened. One explanation for the delay is that while music fans were eager to try a new, more portable form of entertainment, students tend to be more conservative when choosing required materials for their studies. For a real disruption in the textbook market, students may have to be forced to change.
  • saying that e-textbooks should be required reading and that colleges should be the ones charging for them
  • radical shift
  • ...6 more annotations...
  • Here's the new plan: Colleges require students to pay a course-materials fee, which would be used to buy e-books for all of them (whatever text the professor recommends, just as in the old model).
  • they're far cheaper to produce than printed texts
  • publishers could eliminate the used-book market and reduce incentives for students to illegally download copies as well
  • When students pay more for new textbooks than tuition in a year, then something's wrong
  • Tricky issues remain, though. What if a professor wrote the textbook assigned for his or her class? Is it ethical to force students to buy it, even at a reduced rate? And what if students feel they are better off on their own, where they have the option of sharing or borrowing a book at no cost?
  • In music, the Internet reduced album sales as more people bought only the individual songs they wanted. For textbooks, that may mean letting students (or brokers at colleges) buy only the chapters they want. Or only supplementary materials like instructional videos and interactive homework problems, all delivered online. And that really would be the end of the textbook as we know it.
  •  
    I would be for this. I could not believe a place so big on recycling (Harvard) murdered so many trees with the printing of course packs. I like this idea if you could get the material from other sources than just the school (say the author or publisher directly or something like Amazon). Otherwise, there is no opportunity for competition or bargaining.
Irina Uk

Education Week: Educators Craft Own Math E-Books for Common Core - 1 views

  •  
    This article describes the efforts that individual teachers in Utah are making to rewrite textbooks to be aligned to the standards that they are teaching in class. These teachers are writing eBooks and getting a lot of positive feedback from state officials because of the use of technology to meet student needs. They did not have a textbook that fit their integrated approach to teaching math, which they aligned to CCSS, so they took the matter of creating a textbook into their own hands. I think this is a prelude to how textbook creation is changing as a result of technology. Teachers are now able to construct books in a way that fit exactly the objectives they are covering and meeting there students where they are at.
Jennifer Hern

Education Week: Final Chapter for Texas Textbooks? - 1 views

  •  
    State legislation passed in the spring could put up-to-the-minute instructional content at students' fingertips-either online or in customized printed form-eliminating the mass-market hardback textbook.
  •  
    TX, CA, and FL markets drive the textbook industry. If TX leads the way, eliminating mass market textbooks, then they will undoubtedly revolutionize the publishing industry. Tablet textbooks may be the wave of the future, but let's just hope publishers don't think revolutionizing the textbook industry means reading textbooks on a screen.
Chris Dede

The Future of Education: Tablets vs. Textbooks - 0 views

  •  
    Key concerns about the sudden rush to dump textbooks for open source content
  •  
    This transition will happen relatively quickly given the current cost of textbooks and the low cost of tablets. Fortunately, I think we will find that the digital textbooks and other features on the tablets will be far more engaging and effective teaching tools than the traditional textbook. The ability of the digital text to read aloud (in several languages) and provide visual support including high def color diagrams, animation, and video, as well as create intuitive links to vocabulary and 'checking for understanding' will be a great support to students and teachers.
Lauren Gould

Inkling -- interactive textbooks - 1 views

  •  
    Inkling makes interactive textbooks and are really trying to raise the bar in this area. I'm interested in the  "Social Learning Network" inside the Inkling textbooks. In other words, you and your friends can highlight/annotate and collaborate inside the textbook much like you would, for example, on a google doc. 
Hannah Lesk

NY Times Op-Ed: Long Live Paper - 2 views

  •  
    A point of view challenging the rapid transition to digital textbooks. 
  •  
    These op-eds and blogs keep popping up, but I have yet to read one that is at all compelling. It was particularly entertaining when this author referenced how digital photography put Polaroid out of business. Hard to understand why one would use that reference when defending the textbook. The funny thing is that textbooks were never a fantastic learning tool to begin with. The real danger is that digital textbooks will not not make the dramatic improvements that they may be capable of when it comes to teaching the material.
Jason Hammon

Top Ed-Tech Trends of 2012: The Battle to Open Textbooks | Inside Higher Ed - 0 views

  •  
    Digital Textbooks
Adrian Melia

Free digital textbooks offered as Gov. Jerry Brown signs bills - latimes.com - 0 views

  •  
    California collage students to get free digital textbooks as early as next year.
Kasthuri Gopalaratnam

Apple Introduces Tools to (Someday) Supplant Print Textbooks - NYTimes.com - 1 views

  •  
    "Apple said electronic high school textbooks from its initial publishing partners, including Pearson, McGraw-Hill and Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, would cost $15 or less. That is much cheaper than print textbooks, some of which can cost over $100". woo hoo!
  •  
    I can explain the business model to you if you'd like that shows how the $15 price point is feasible in what turns out to be an almost $40 million dollar textbook investment! Just let me know!
  •  
    I would be definitely interested :-)
Bharat Battu

Apple announces Jan. 19 event at Guggenheim in NYC | TUAW - The Unofficial Apple Weblog - 0 views

  •  
    "The event is expected to focus on iTunes U and electronic textbooks/' iTunes U has been offering free educational videos and recorded lectures for years. I wonder what they'll unveil on Thursday the 19th re: e-textbooks
Yan Feng

Opportunities and Challenges in the E-textbook Industry - 1 views

As for me, I prefer traditional textbook to e-textbook. I do not like reading by Kindle or other digital reading devices. But it is a personal choice. The market for e-books is huge, especially e-t...

http:__blog.xplana.com_2011_08_opportunities-and-challenges-in-the-e-textbook-industry_ education learning t561 educational_technology

started by Yan Feng on 07 Nov 11 no follow-up yet
Britt Harris

The E-Textbook Experiment Turns A Page : NPR - 2 views

  •  
    The Ipad can help revolutionize how textbooks can be interactive.
Sabita Verma

Colleges Dream of Paperless, iPad-centric Education | Gadget Lab | Wired.com - 1 views

  •  
    Universities are planning on using iPad to replace textbooks by giving free iPads to students. If universities continue this, it could completely change the textbook market.
Stephen Bresnick

FCPS Leads the Region in Online Textbook Use - Burke, VA Patch - 0 views

  •  
    My Wife's friend is a principal in this district. I am still incredulous at the fact that schools can require students to use electronic textbooks without providing laptops or e-readers to each student. But then again, where would the money come from? On a related note, the federal government seems to be sinking an awful lot of money into solar energy, despite the fact that a lot of these companies are folding. Wouldn't education be a better investment?
  •  
    Stephen, In my opinion, the government is not sinking enough money into renewable energy. I am sure we have 'sunk' much more money into education over the last few decades and continue to do so. I don't think it is an either/ or.
Hongge Ren

College Textbook Industry Gets Disruptive Shock from Internet - 0 views

  •  
    Via Instapundit: In Technology Review, Michael Fitzgerald reports on an innovate approach to make digital versions of expensive textbooks available to cost-conscious students.
Jeffrey Siegel

In digital textbook transition, device availability is just the beginning - 0 views

  •  
    Discusses some funding and infrastructure hurdles (e.g.broadband services) in rolling-out digital textbooks
Heather French

KSU Professor develops Flexbooks - 2 views

  •  
    Online textbooks containing multimedia that are easy to update. Appears to be a combination of an E-textbook and wikipedia. (Link contains example Flexbook.)
Lin Pang

Textbooks Finally Take a Big Leap to Digital - 3 views

  •  
    For the first time, Amazon's digital books had outsold paper books. While many popular consumer books have successfully made the switch into the new format, textbooks are still widely read on paper. However, textbooks as e-books ought to be seen as a stepping stone to the future. And we need to design devices that are specifically made to support academic reading.
Kasthuri Gopalaratnam

Online Textbooks Aim to Make Science Leap From the Page - NYTimes.com - 2 views

  •  
    Digital only textbook. Students pay for permanent Internet access.
  •  
    Interesting -- and I like the direction, of course -- but one quote is a bit concerning: "but if the best way to learn is to see something moving" . . . that's a fairly big "if" and one that is not necessarily accurate
  •  
    Right! But he is saying that they if the best way is to see something moving they do it that way and if quiz is the best way to do it, they use a quiz. And I suppose, audio can be used when it is appropriate. The question though is 'who decides what is the best way?' and on what basis. And it will be great if there is also a simulation component, so the user can do some 'what-if' scenarios.
Stephen Bresnick

Free Technology for Teachers: Bookboon - More Than 500 Free eTextbooks - 3 views

  •  
    In Disrupting Class, one of the predictions that Clay Christenson makes is that classroom content in the future will not come from traditional textbooks, but from students and teachers who contribute user-generated content for learning. Here is an example of a site that allows users to download free textbooks. This is further proof that once the information is out there for all to see, it is going to be more and more difficult to prevent people from spreading ideas and circumventing the charge-for-information model that is currently out there.
1 - 20 of 87 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page