Inside one librarian’s quest to provide free textbooks - Airing News

abernard102@gmail.com 2014-03-09

Summary:

"As the cost of higher education skyrockets, the price of textbooks has increased at an even faster clip. According to the American Enterprise Institute, the cost of textbooks in 2012 was 812 percent higher now than it was three decades ago while tuition rose 559 percent over the same time span. The average student spends roughly $1,000 a year on textbooks, often at the profit-making college bookstore, which doesn’t as a rule offer significant discounts. Some popular titles include 'Chemistry: A Molecular Approach' (hardcover: $205.98 / Kindle: $129.50), “Management: Leading & Collaborating in the Competitive World” (hardcover: $202.48), and  'A Writer’s Reference' (hardcover: $70.17).  Two hernia-inducing tomes, 'Encyclopedia of International Media and Communications' ($1,215) and “Acta Philosophorum: The First Journal of Philosophy” ($1,450) head a list of the highest priced  textbooks of all time, although I assume they don’t sell many of them. To meet this challenge, textbook rental services like Chegg and one operated by Amazon have popped up, and Barnes and Noble in New York City had, for years, allowed students to sell back (at a fraction of the sale price) new and used textbooks, although sometimes these books weren’t re-sellable because publishers continuously churn out new editions. But one project from a State University of New York (SUNY) library has come up with another way to tackle textbook sticker shock by using its network of teachers as authors. The SUNY Open Textbooks project sprouted from an idea by SUNY Geneseo’s library director Cyril Oberlander. He noticed waning sales of textbooks at his school, and how students were discovering new, cheaper ways to access the material. His library provided reserves for students to borrow required texts for a finite amount of hours, but many found this too restrictive. “We [didn't] have a solution that serves all of the needs,” Oberlander says. He talked with colleagues and formulated a grant application for a free textbook program funded by the SUNY library system. The idea was simple: The program would put out a call to professors to write their own textbooks that would  be peer-reviewed by other faculty. If a manuscript made the cut, it would be published by the school and students would get free access to it. Oberlander received a $25,000 grant to start the project and publish four textbooks. Other libraries in the SUNY system caught wind and donated an additional $40,000, which increased the number of textbooks to 15 ... In its first year the project has published four textbooks, and the rest are due to be released by June. The response, he says has been tremendous, and not just within the SUNY system. 'We’ve seen almost every country in the world download our textbooks,' he says.  He has received a second grant application for an additional $60,000 in funding,  and this latest call was even more popular with professors, with 46 manuscripts proposed. So many, in fact, that he’s had to delay the decision for which will be chosen so that he and others can evaluate the proposals ..."

Link:

http://www.airingnews.com/articles/819934/inside-one-librarians-quest-to-provide-free-textbooks/

From feeds:

Open Access Tracking Project (OATP) » abernard102@gmail.com

Tags:

oa.new oa.comment oa.universities oa.colleges oa.education oa.peer_review oa.students oa.textbooks oa.prices oa.advocacy oa.libraries oa.librarians oa.funders oa.suny_geneseo oa.suny_open_textbooks oa.books oa.hei

Date tagged:

03/09/2014, 15:27

Date published:

03/09/2014, 11:27