Posts tagged etextbook
Smug about OverDrive? A whopping 39 percent of U.S. public libraries don’t offer downloadable e-books.
February 13, 2012 | 7:58 am
Hundreds and hundreds of visitors have read LibraryCity‘sproposal for the sale of OverDrive to public libraries or a related nonprofit. The idea drew favorable reaction fromThad McIlroy, a prominent publishing consultant, and it even made an ALA newsletterand Reddit.
Still not convinced of the possibilities? Well, consider that 39 percent of U.S. public libraries don’t offer downloadable e-books. Check it out for yourself. Ironic, isn’t it? Rockford, Illinois, is ODing on e-books, while many U.S. communities are so cash-strapped or e-backwards that they lack any.
Or maybe not quite so backwards. Remember, with OverDrive as a middleman, many public librarians might not feel quite as comfortable with e-books as they would...
Rice University develops free peer-reviewed textbooks
February 7, 2012 | 9:50 am
From Inside Higher Ed:
Cost-conscious students can of course save money with used or online books and recoup some of their cash come buyback time. Still, it’s a steep price for most 18-year-olds.
But soon, introductory physics texts will have a new competitor, developed at Rice University. A free online physics book, peer-reviewed and designed to compete with major publishers’ offerings, will debut next month through the non-profit publisher OpenStax College.
Using Rice’s Connexions platform, OpenStax will offer free course materials for five common introductory classes. The textbooks are open to classes anywhere and organizers ...
How to create your own textbook – with or without Apple
February 7, 2012 | 9:00 am
That's the title of an article in KQED Mind/Shift. It contains a lot of information and links. Here's a snippet:
Apple’s announcement last week about its new iBooks2 and authoring app created big waves in education circles. But smart educators don’t necessarily need Apple’s slick devices and software to create their own books. How educators think of content curation in the classroom is enough to change their reliance on print textbooks.
As the open education movement continues to grow and become an even more rich trove of resources, teachers can use the content to make their own...
University of Rochester students prefer paper textbooks
February 3, 2012 | 9:47 am
From the University of Rochester's Campus Times:
… The UR bookstore boasts a new e-reader station where students can explore versions of Barnes and Nobles’ own e-reader, the Nook. Furthermore, the station highlights new, free software available online that allows students to easily access material from e-Textbook purchases.
e-Textbooks have been available at the bookstore since 2004 and students can rent or purchase them at prices similar to those of standard textbooks. They can also be purchased online at the University bookstore website.
Nevertheless, there are many practical problems surrounding the use of e-Textbooks on...
NYU student newspaper editorial – stick with paper textbooks
January 31, 2012 | 8:43 am
The editorial is titled, “College students will stick to paper books” and was published by Washington Square News today.
From the Editorial:
The benefits of these e-Textbooks include the ability to quickly search through large amounts of text, insert marginalia in electronic comment boxes and access hyperlinks. Yet the tactile quality of textbooks, something e-Books will never have, allows readers a certain intimacy with their academic material. It’s a lot easier to curl up in bed with a textbook than it is to go to bed with a hunk of heated metal by your side.
It is evident from the limited success of...
Apple’s new etextbooks – too big?
January 30, 2012 | 9:16 am
That's a point I never thought about. Storage space on iPads is limited, and the price of the iPad goes up a lot as you get units with more memory. Chris Maxcer makes this point in an article in MaNewsWorld:
E.O. Wilson's Life on Earth, however, is free -- at least, a preview and a sample chapter is free. Good enough for me. I downloaded all 965 MB of it, and this is only for a partial e-book. One of the other e-books, Pearson's Biology, boasts a print length of 1,791 pages and a digital size of 2.77...
Libraries borked by ebook forks, says Peter Brantley
January 24, 2012 | 10:02 am
That's the title of an article by Peter in Publishers Weekly. Here's an excerpt:
Any library fighting to preserve access to digital books faces an nearly impossible task when confronted with Author’s new ibooks. There’s no independent platform capable of hosting these books beyond the iBookstore, and no way to drive lending. Readers wishing to take advantage of ibooks must be Apple iPad users, and no library will be maintaining an inventory of iPad bling until iPad pricing drops far lower than it is now. Even then, the tying of the ibooks...
Apple e-textbook tools to jack up education and hardware costs ultimately?
January 19, 2012 | 3:42 pm
While the Digital Public Library of America has been fixated on arcane library-and-museum concerns, Apple is unveiling an e-format that might lock in millions of teachers and students in the U.S. and elsewhere
Very possibly the new multimedia book product may ultimately jack up costs in K-12 and elsewhere.
The new format will let students rotate and explore 3D objects, among other features. That’s good. But via hardware-related exclusives, Apple for now is locking up the new related to the hilt, playing up the ease of authoring for the format.
Probable result? Higher hardware prices for schools, students, businesses and consumers than otherwise,...
Roundup of Today’s Apple iBooks 2 News and Announcements
January 19, 2012 | 3:34 pm
Very Impressive Live Coverage of Apple Event from The Verge (each post with an image).
New: iBooks 2 for Education (iPad)
Apple’s iBooks Textbooks for the iPage Homepage (with Video)
Official News Release
Download AppNote: Apple is Making a Preview Release of E. O. Wilson’s Life on Earth. Free. Download here.
What’s New With Books 2 App? (via the App Store)
Experience gorgeous Multi-Touch textbooks designed for iPad
iBooks textbooks are filled with interactive features, diagrams, photos, and videos
Tap to dive into images with interactive captions, rotate 3D objects, swipe through image galleries, watch videos in full screen, and more
Use a finger as a highlighter when swiping over text in a...
5 colleges to test bulk purchases of etextbooks to cut costs
January 18, 2012 | 9:10 am
From the Indiana University press release:
As textbooks continue shifting to digital, Internet2, McGraw-Hill and Courseload today announced implementation of an eText Pilot Trial Pack to students and faculty at five universities for the Spring 2012 semester. The five institutions, also Internet2 members, include: University of California, Berkeley; Cornell University; University of Minnesota; University of Virginia; and the University of Wisconsin.
The pilot, which is based on Indiana University’s successful eText model (http://etexts.iu.edu), provides a timely and simple way for universities to quickly assess a new model for digital course materials. While an increasing number...
Etextbooks saved students little money, according to study
January 5, 2012 | 9:32 am
From The Chronicle of Higher Education. More in the article:
Despite the promise that digital textbooks can lead to huge cost savings for students, a new study at Daytona State College has found that many who tried e-textbooks saved only one dollar, compared with their counterparts who purchased traditional printed material.
The study, conducted over four semesters, compared four different means of textbook distribution: traditional print purchase, print rental, e-textbook rental, and e-textbook rental with an e-reader device. It found that e-textbooks still face several hurdles as universities mull the switch to a digital textbook distribution model.
Perhaps the most surprising finding was...
Etextbooks may not be the way to go – at least not yet
December 27, 2011 | 9:44 am
From Inside Higher Ed:
… a recently completed report on a yearlong pilot at Daytona State, comparing the satisfaction and success of students using all electronic texts with students using all print, has also complicated the picture.
...
“Avoid top-down mandates,” the study’s authors wrote as their top recommendation. “Institutions that require all instructors to simultaneously go e-text might be courting disaster.”
The majority of the students in the study who used exclusively e-texts came away dissatisfied. While they appreciated that there was no possibility of losing or forgetting their textbooks when they could be simply summoned to a device, the students told officials that...




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