Brown Signs California Bill For Free Textbooks 201
bcrowell writes "California Governor Jerry Brown has signed SB 1052 and 1053, authored by state senator Darrell Steinberg, to create free textbooks for 50 core lower-division college courses. SB 1052 creates a California Open Education Resources Council, made up of faculty from the UC, Cal State, and community college systems. The council is supposed to pick 50 core courses. They are then to establish a 'competitive request-for-proposal process in which faculty members, publishers, and other interested parties would apply for funds to produce, in 2013, 50 high-quality, affordable, digital open source textbooks and related materials, meeting specified requirements.' The bill doesn't become operative unless the legislature funds it — a questionable process in California's current political situation. The books could be either newly produced (which seems unlikely, given the 1-year time frame stated) or existing ones that the state would buy or have free access to. Unlike former Gov. Schwarzenegger's failed K-12 free textbook program, this one specifically defines what it means by 'open source,' rather than using the term as a feel-good phrase; books have to be under a CC-BY (or CC-BY-SA?) license, in XML format. They're supposed to be modularized and conform to state and W3C accessibility guidelines. Faculty would not be required to use the free books."
..and... (Score:5, Informative)
"Faculty would not be required to use the free books"
With this one phrase, the entire idea is rendered useless. Why bother with free textbooks for college level classes if no college will offer classes that use them for coursework? The state will pay for the development, sure... like California can really pay for anything else...
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I'm sure lots of community colleges will love to use them, especially since the license allows them to tailor it for their own classes. That will likely translate into the textbooks used at larger schools, since faculty at a big Uni will sometimes moonlight at a community college. Also, the students can download the books for free, which makes it a lot more portable, and cheaper for the students.
All we need now is an inexpensive printing press so they can be produced on-demand for students that want a pap
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Only if someone is going to step up to the plate and start doing automated testing software based on these books as well. Last couple classes I took required that you take the tests/quizes on the publishers website (which btw if you bought a used book, you get to spend $40 for access) since it freed up the teacher from having to go over any of the work.
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Okay, so first off, you're saying the government should ban all college textbooks except the ones they write? No potential issues spring to mind?
And second, why WOULDN'T professors want to use the free texts? Believe it or not they actually don't get kickbacks for choosing a particular book (I say this as a college instructor who chooses textbooks regularly). Do you think they're making kids pay $200 out of spite? No, they're doing it because you need a textbook if you're going to teach something like Intro
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Open source -- which, not "free" in the sense of free-of-charge -- books don't stop the bookstore from selling printed copies, or even from doing so at a profit.
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Professors might want to use the free books but the colleges/universities might not. They can't get a cut from the bookstore if the bookstore doesn't sell any books.
College administrators don't make decisions on what textbook to adopt. Professors do.
Re:..and... (Score:5, Informative)
With this one phrase, the entire idea is rendered useless. Why bother with free textbooks for college level classes if no college will offer classes that use them for coursework?
I think this is a little too pessimistic. A lot of free books already exist, and a lot of faculty are already using them. See my sig for a catalog that includes several hundred examples. The books that are actively in use for instruction tend to highly "top-heavy," i.e., there's a ton of free graduate texts, not as many college ones, few high school ones, and almost no K-8 books.
The teacher's privilege of choosing what book to use is an important part of academic freedom in higher education. The lack of choice by teachers is part of what makes K-12 textbooks suck so much. K-12 books are written by a committee and sold to a commitee, based on criteria such as whether they show pictures of disabled kids doing math.
My own experience as the author of some free physics textbooks is that teachers' ability to choose the book they want is a huge positive factor in getting people to use my books. I currently have about 30-40 college adoptions and about 30-40 high school adoptions. (There's no way for me to know exact numbers, because the books are free.) Of those high school adoptions, nearly all are from private schools (mostly Catholic schools). The reason isn't hard to guess. K-12 textbook selection in public schools is highly political and bureaucratic. A high school physics teacher at a public school can't simply choose whatever book he wants.
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At the very least a please explain why should be mandated. So use the free book or provide substantive reasons why a high cost printed text book is required. Explanation to be made public and to be reviewed by an educators board. This to block greedy professors and of course to promote worthwhile updates to the free texts.
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Why should they be REQUIRED to use the free books?
Having the free books is a good idea (though having to sign a law for this seems extreme). What if one of the for pay books actually has better information/teaching methods?
I suspect they will gravitate to the free books _if they are sufficiently useful_. Probably more for "lower level" classes.
Way back in college, for elective classes, at least one class' book was one of the college printer's books filled with short sections of other books.. So it was mu
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I don't know that is true, something low level like Algebra or Calculus would be fairly standard even the honors version. My honors math classes used the same texts as the normal classes, but the professors had us doing lots of proofs etc beyond what would be expected from a normal level class.
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At Edinburgh University, in my day, there was 5 or 6 different first and second year maths streams. One for the maths students, one for the science students, one for the engineering students, one for the computer science students and one for the students of numerically-inclined social science (economics etc). The content was substantially different. A textbook that covered them all sufficiently would have been massive.
But then again, there was no compulsory set text -- our lecturers and tutors taught us
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I'm currently a college student, and many of my professors are sensitive to textbook prices. One in particular, for computer science, refused to make us buy a textbook (because they were a rip off), and instead provided his own materials on his website. For general physics, there were also modules online, and our professor said the textbook was optional, and suggested we buy and older edition if we wanted one, to save money. My differential equations professor provided homework assignments for both the curr
why does free have to be funded? (Score:3)
It doesn't become active until the legislature funds it? How free is that? Perhaps some experts on the subjects in question could volunteer time to write intro level textbooks (with the idea of writing advanced books for sale)? That would be "free". Seriously, the use of the word free is much abused lately, much like spending cuts have long since meant less increases in spending.
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Because "free" in the sense means "libre", not "gratis".
Actually, the new law doesn't say "free" at all, it says "open source" in general, and specifies the exact requirement as that the material be licensed under:
(Cal.Ed.Code, Sec. 66409(f)(1), as added by
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Sure there was a cost involved with creating the book. The cost was time and or money or other resources. But to the poor starving college student, the only thing that matters is the actual cost of the book... In other words free.
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It takes a lot of time to write a good textbook. Why would I, as an expert who's time is in demand, do it for free?
One would think that an expert would know the difference between who's and whose.
Bring on the non-experts, I say.
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It takes a lot of time to write a good textbook. Why would I, as an expert who's time is in demand, do it for free?
One would think that an expert would know the difference between who's and whose.
Bring on the non-experts, I say.
Obviously AC1 is not an academic expert. "Free" is what TA's and grad students are for.
A lot of professors accumulate a collection of teaching notes over their careers. Heck, I had a High School Physics teacher who did that. Handed them out with copyright notices on them.
Getting a collection of loose notes assembled into an actual usable textbook is not trivial, but one place you should expect to be able to find people with that kind of talent is an institution of higher learning. In some ways, it's better
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So experts can't be dyslexic, or foreign, or even just normal human beings who make normal performance errors when writing in an informal situation?
If a high-energy physicist accidentally says "I's" once instead of "I'm" while eating a burger, should we suspend his license to operate a particle accelerator?
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Tell it to the people running Khan Academy.
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And, even if you were, you probably wouldn't be able to verify that the books "conform to the most
current, ratified standards under Section 508 of the federal Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (29 U.S.C. Sec. 794d), as amended, and the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines adopted by the
World Wide Web Consortium for accessibility" without spending some money. Which the law at issue requir
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They should do studies on 200$ laptops (Score:2)
They should do studies with some kids to see if they learn as good on a computer as a book.
Once this data is compiled, throw in some educational aps too, and you're probably beating what you can get on just books alone.
Studying from a laptop? (Score:2)
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That's a bit of a far fetched idea. I've searched the earth far and wide, in every Nook and cranny, I've even searched deep in the Amazon and have yet to find anything similar to that which you desire.
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Noble ambition .. but (Score:2)
I have a feeling the committee may strangle it, unless they are very carefully chosen as people who can work together.
Countdown to lawsuit (Score:5, Interesting)
How long until the textbook industry sues California for unfair competition?
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How long until the textbook industry sues California for unfair competition?
I don't know - what time is it now?
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Exactly what do you think the SCO trial was?
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Funding not included, (Legislative) Assembly Rqd. (Score:2)
Sections 1 and 2 of this act shall become operative only if funding for the purposes of this act is provided in an appropriation in the annual Budget Act or another statute, or through federal or private funds, or through a combination of state, federal, and private funds.
Well, I had my hopes up for a second, anyway.
Free? (Score:2)
If these are "free textbooks," why does the legislature have to fund it?
How about we be honest, eh? No one is providing "free" textbooks. No one is volunteering to create these things and give them away. The taxpayers will be forced to pay for these books rather than their actual users.
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Actually, I would submit that shifting the burden does change something in this case. I don't know about the state of affairs in other states, but the California community college school system is over-booked for enrollment, and severely under capitalized from state funding. If the College were to shift to free books for the students, the school would lose out on the revenue stream that comes from all those students marc
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From what I've heard, that "revenue stream" generally goes to (1) pay publishers for the books, and (2) pay the operating costs of the book store, and doesn't actually return much of anything to the school.
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I don't know what is the situation with college bookstore in California, but many colleges nationwide are getting rid of their bookstores and outsourcing them to large booksellers. We outsourced ours two years ago, since we just couln't keep up with the cost. As far as I know, most colleges sink considerable amount of money into their bookstores every year, and the money is typically only partially offsett by selling college brand merchandise in the bookstores.
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It is the media (e.g., the L.A. Times in TFA) calling it "free". The government, in the actual law, calls it "open source", which, given the specific license requirements in the law, is entirely accurate.
If you are interested in textbook reform other than the move to acquire some open source textbooks (California SB 1052 and SB 1053 of this pa
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Open Source (Score:3)
As one might expect Slashdot users to know (well, maybe not) "free" is often used to refer to certain liberal licensing terms ("libre") rather than free-of-charge ("gratis").
Although -- no doubt much to Richard Stallman's chagrin -- the law itself actually uses the term "open source" rather than "free".
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Look around for introductory physics textbooks, for instance. I have seen some that are pretty good, but were made simply to say that a free textbook was available. There were none of the niceties one expects in a textbook
They could start with Wikibooks (Score:4, Interesting)
They could use the books already on Wikibooks ( http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Main_Page [wikibooks.org] ) as a starting point.
I wonder if the open-source books they will produce will break away from the paper textbook paradigm (linear text+static images)? The one I am writing ( http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Space_Transport_and_Engineering_Methods [wikibooks.org] ) is heavily hyperlinked, I've included a spreadsheet and expect to include other media, am working on a resource library ( http://www.mediafire.com/?y1ko8gj5rouob [mediafire.com] ), and the concept of "class projects" (design studies) which become part of the book.
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Hyperlinks break. Better to just create a supplementary "book" with recent material and trends and listings for further reading. That way readers aren't frustrated clicking on broken links in the main textbook after the book is a couple years old.
Never understood this business (Score:4, Insightful)
My two daughters have nearly useless textbooks year after year which their teachers just don't use. They will have questions like: "Write down all the ways 10 numbered marbles can be put into 5 lettered bags." Holy crap do these people even have a basic understanding of math.
It is not just ebooks that can replace these dinosaurs but cool online videos.
Bye bye massively commissioned textbook sales people.
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Nothing is free (Score:2)
Its still being paid for by tax dollars, but at least there is no additional fee to the parents, unless of course you have nothing to view them on.. so 'free' e-ink for all..
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Its still being paid for by tax dollars, but at least there is no additional fee to the parents, unless of course you have nothing to view them on.. so 'free' e-ink for all..
Kinda reminds me of the communist faction in Tropico> where he chants: Communism is upon us! Today free housing, tomorrow free EVERYTHING! Of course if you look at your budget details, everything on your island jumps in price by about 30%. Indeed...it's free... [wikipedia.org]
Why not elementary school textbooks? (Score:3)
Frankly, elementary school lessons don't change that much from one year to the next. The current textbooks my child uses are incredibly simple, and they contain pretty timeless lessons. If someone was to take a textbook from 50 or 70 years ago that was out of copyright, they could easily make it available to all schools to use, or they could copy relevant sections from many books to make a single "First Grade Math Book" or "Second Grade English Book".
Doing so would eliminate a HUGE amount of the cost of school. When you see how much a school spends on textbooks, you'll be bowled over. The latest textbooks I've seen have basically one sentence of text per page, accompanied with huge, two page spread art pictures - totally worthless and a waste of space. Even "See Spot Run" had more than one sentence per page.
Stop our schools from spending money on stuff that doesn't matter. The textbooks aren't going to make our kids smart. Time with a teacher will.
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Frankly, elementary school lessons don't change that much from one year to the next. The current textbooks my child uses are incredibly simple, and they contain pretty timeless lessons. If someone was to take a textbook from 50 or 70 years ago that was out of copyright, they could easily make it available to all schools to use
Somehow I think that a textbook from 50-70 years ago would be way too advanced [sensible-m...cation.com] for today's kids.
Here [dailymail.co.uk] are some test questions that 11-12 year old British kids would need to pass in the fifties to go to grammar school.
Hands up, anyone who thinks that kids born in 2001 would pass this test. Ever.
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I think it looks good too, but I still think it's sad that parents may have to resort to private tutoring to give kids a mathematical education comparable in quality to what children receive in other parts of the world.
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You mean like the ones that taught us how women are supposed to be serving in the kitchen, that children should never speak, especially when Father is present, and that Father should not tolerate any insolence from either? Cultural/societal values present themselves in the darnedest places.
It may seem that simple on the surface, but in fact it is not. The language and message carried in books needs to be updated to r
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Well, zero impact on elementary school textbooks, maybe, but since that initiative is limited to High School textbooks, that's perhaps unsurprising. So, not exactly the same thing GP was calling for, after all.
Wife had a teacher who wrote his own (Score:2)
XML format? (Score:2)
I'm not super well-versed in my eBook formats, but I was under the impression that the common formats, such as ePub and MOBI/AZW, use combinations of XML (such as ePub's manifest files) and HTML. From the summary, it sounds as if this is yet another eBook format we'll have to contend with, which won't be supported by the popular eReaders out there.
When I say I want an eBook, I mean I want to be able to read it on my Kindle or Nook. E-Ink, not LCD. It seems to me that the best option would be to follow th
Highlander Thesis (Score:3)
"Yes, since it's 'open source' we will probably be able to convert the books, but how many people are going to know how to do that?"
There need be only one!
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I've posted the actual format require from the law in a separate response to GP, but "DocBook XML" isn't what it calls for.
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Doesn't ePub uses a combination of XML and XML, requiring the "HTML" part to be XHTML.
Why would you trust a Slashdot summary of a short LA Times article to provid
What about the content? (Score:3)
California needs to get itself under control (Score:3, Interesting)
This is ridiculous.
I moved to California a year ago to be with my wife will she attends grad school and I have been appalled at the insanity that regularly occurs in this state as compared to anywhere the East coast.
1) Freely available educational material is fantastic.
2) Having the government pay for freely available educational material that will not necessarily be used by the college courses they are intended for is bad.
3) Forcing professors to use the state-sponsored books would be even worse. The Government can't get anything right, so I certainly wouldn't want some bureaucrat deciding what books were going to be used in a course I was taking.
4) This state doesn't need to spend any more money on anything. Period. They need to get their spending under control before trying to enhance things. 10%+ sales tax? Very bad! And I can hardly wait to see my income taxes for the past year.
Summary:
This is a terrible idea. The CA state government needs to start thinking about NOT defaulting rather than blowing money on ridiculous schemes with no payoff.
There are already some freely available texts anyway, from programs pioneered by top universities. Why not incentivize things like that rather than trying to take more under the government umbrella?
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I moved to California a year ago to be with my wife will she attends grad school and I have been appalled at the insanity that regularly occurs in this state as compared to anywhere the East coast.
Probably because most of those east coast states have anywhere from half (think New York) to 1/75 (Vermont) the population of California. It is much easier to achieve consensus and compromise with less people. What you end up with are a lot of great intentions that are picked apart until they either fail or become a shell of the actual intent. That being said, California still leads the nation on many issues and is probably best considered a testing ground of potential national ideas.
2) Having the government pay for freely available educational material that will not necessarily be used by the college courses they are intended for is bad.
No it is not. Open
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You've given no reason at all for your California-hate. If you don't like it, fine, feel free to leave, but don't pretend there's a lot wrong with the state, as oppsed to not aligning with your own biases.
California is in-debt, but many states are in far worse shape, and the debt is due to lots of public services and restrictions keeping property taxes low and predictable (so it's a good place to own a home, or property. Sales tax in California varies by County, and most places it's well below 10%. It's
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Actually, I have given reasons for why I hate California.
I hate it because everything here is completely nonsensical.
California is ranked 49 out of 51 for unemployment (not good at all): http://money.cnn.com/interactive/economy/state-unemployment-rates/ [cnn.com]
And at 7.25%, California has the great distinction of having the highest minimum sales tax in the US. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sales_and_use_taxes_in_California)
And no, my objection is not baseless. It's based on the fact that government spending on some
Next: Textbook Payola (Score:3)
Future Slashdot Story (Score:3)
Free open source California textbooks unavailable for download due to bogus DMCA takedown notices from Pearson, Cengage Learning, and Macmillan.
Funding dicey (Score:2)
The other thing (Score:2)
Have all states share one tree (Score:2)
But the course material is virtually identical for all states.
If all states got involved there would be 50 times the budget!
By using similar systems to those used by software development you could allow a teacher to download the source tree, edit as desired and let students download the nightly build.
You could even make a branch for the religious fanatic states, where they can add intelligent design or whatever, no reason to not take their money.
With some organization you could make it easy for any teacher
Re:Really? (Score:5, Insightful)
It will be a one-time cost for writing or converting the books, and a small yearly cost of updating them, instead of a yearly high cost for buying them from Texas. It is going to save quite a lot of money, but I'm sure the Book Mafia will successfully lobby this out of existence.
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They don't even need to lobby it, most professors simply won't switch to them for any of their classes. Publishers offer far too many incentives that make the professors job easier while also helping to tie them down to that publisher.
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Most professors don't write their own textbooks. A few do.
I think that in my entire time in college and graduate school, I only had two professors with their own books. One of these was a workbook and was cheap.
My wife is a college professor and constantly whinges about the high cost of textbooks. She would love to have free textbooks (and so would everyone in her department... none of them have written textbooks.
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Re:Really? (Score:4, Insightful)
You obviously don't think things through. Tea party?
First of all, the State of California buys an awful lot of those expensive textbooks, and would reap the savings almost immediately.
Secondly, if it makes education less expensive, it will likely lead to more educated people. People who can afford to pay taxes and your social security.
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But it makes things *appear* that way long enough to get (re)elected, especially when Peter hasn't been born yet and can't voice objections and Paul isn't bright enough or doesn't care enough to understand why any of it even matters or why they should care.
Strat
Re:Seriously? (Score:5, Interesting)
At least it should be cheaper and available sooner than the no-longer-bullet train we're supposedly getting in the next 30 years. Aw, who am I kidding?
Anyway, I'm currently attending a California city college, and I've attended state university before. In my experience, many professors (especially at the city college level, where average incomes are lower) are concerned about textbook prices. They put them in the library reserve for students to use, they allow you to use previous editions, and they'll even look for cheaper alternatives. My current professors also claim they do not receive commission for textbook sales, and that the school essentially breaks even on textbook sales once you consider the costs of running the bookstore.
In the past, many of my computer science courses had complimentary eBooks available online. This year, two of my classes have eBook versions available via CourseSmart which, while cheaper than physical textbooks, can't be used on dedicated eReaders (currently computer, iOS, and Android, with Android devices being limited somehow). They also have the issue of essentially being rentals instead of outright purchases--but still, it's better than nothing.
Finally, two professors I had a while back decided that the existing course books were too expensive, so they wrote their own books and sold them for $10 and $30. Yeah, they obviously get a commission there, but that's better than paying $150.
I imagine there are other schools that are much worse than my personal experiences, but it isn't all bad.
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Couple years ago, we outsourced our bookstore to Barnes and Noble, because we simply could not afford running it any more. We kept sinking money into it semester after semester. Large booksellers are better equipped to handle the "sell large amount of textbooks at the beginning of each semester and then keep the remaining copies around in a storage, sending the ones that will not be needed next semester back to the publisher, buying book back from students at the end of the semester, and getting ready for
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The next generation.
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Actually, over $617 billion as of August. And the same place the U.S. government gets money from, despite being $16 trillion dollars in debt.
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That is the usual line used by those promoting a major league sports stadium, but reality tells a different story. Pro sports hardly ever deliver the benefits that their backers promise, and in any case most cities just give any economic benefits right back to the team owners in the form of free stadiums and huge tax breaks.
Additionally, no NFL team has ever been successful in the LA area and none ever will be. What few NFL fans there are in LA are already die-hard fans of other teams. LA douchebags have La
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Don't all colleges now include wifi access in the tuition price?
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Glad you admit you're dumb. You have internet access at school. And you don't even need it - the teacher will surely have it available for direct download, to ensure that the students all get the book and the right one.
That is, if this would ever take off. It won't, because the Texan Book Mafia will never allow this to happen.
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Thought process #1: The cost of the average college textbook is closer to $200 than it is to $20.
Thought process #2: Lots of places these days offer this new-fangled thing called "Free Wifi". Ask your local Starbucks or McDonalds about it.
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That, and the going rate for a 4GB flash drive(from somebody you've heard of, even, is about $6, less if you catch a sale). If you don't want the convenience of rewriteable media, an optical disk costs maybe a nickel or two.
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if I cant afford a $20 textbook, how can I afford a $60 internet bill for the e-books? Another Brown thought process.
I've heard tales, from the very oldest days, of people transferring bits between computers on various forms of 'removable media'. Apparently, this curious custom does not require internet access!
What open source textbooks mean (Score:2)
Nothing requires the textbooks to be provided to students exclusively electronically or, even when electronically, exclusively over the internet. And core textbooks are rarely $20 -- more like $60+.
Open source licensing means that the institutions (individually or together) can customize the books, and provide them free electronically and, if they want, have them printed and sell them to students at a cost that covers the
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such as the impact on the quality of the resulting textbooks
Yes, we definitely should stop this insanity right now! There is a chance that the textbooks thus produced will be of low quality! The humankind would definitely not be able to survive that!
Actually, I think we will survive just fine, considering that we are currently surviving a huge ammount of incredibly shitty textbooks from our major publishers.
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Not even a blip. Its 'optional' to use them. Publishers and professors will continue the scam they are running for the foreseeable future.
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Re:Craigslist for textbooks? (Score:4, Informative)
Law is about "open source" content (Score:2)
While the LA Times uses the word "free", the actual law in question uses the term "open source".
Of course, once the State acquires open source textbooks, its pretty easy to also make copies available free-of-charge.