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Education United States

Maryland Awards 21 Grants To Prepare 'Open Source' Textbooks (usmd.edu) 98

"The University System of Maryland has awarded 21 "mini grants" to university faculty to "help them expand open education resources," reports OpenSource.com. Recipients of the grants are also given time off to prepare courses that use open textbooks, and will receive personalized support and training on effective course design. An anonymous reader writes: "Although our faculty view textbooks as essential, some of our students see them as a luxury they cannot afford," said Community College of Baltimore County President Sandra Kurtinitis. "Having access to open educational resources will provide some financial relief for our students as well as contribute to their academic success." The cost of textbooks has risen 812% since 1978, the school system said in an announcement, "outpacing even the cost of medical services and new housing. Nationally, students spend an average of $1,200 a year on textbooks."

The Maryland Open Source Textbook initiative started in 2013 "to provide a state-wide opportunity for faculty to explore the promise of open education resources to reduce students' cost of attendance while maintaining, or perhaps even improving, learning outcomes." Since then it's helped replace traditional textbooks in over 60 different courses at 14 public institutions across the state, resulting in a cumulative cost savings of over $1 million for 3,500 students. "In addition to saving students money, faculty have gained the ability to adapt and customize their instructional materials to ensure they are aligned with their pedagogical methods to best meet their students' needs," the school system reports. "In follow up surveys with students participating in the MOST initiative, 93% reported that the open educational resource content they used was the same or better quality than traditional textbooks."

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Maryland Awards 21 Grants To Prepare 'Open Source' Textbooks

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  • This is an idea I've been in favor of for years. Thumbs up!
    • by thesupraman ( 179040 ) on Sunday April 16, 2017 @11:42PM (#54247337)

      While this is a good step, the REAL solution is to stop requiring a new edition of the textbook almost annually.

      THIS is the huge scam that has created this trap for students. There is almost zero reason for these new additions, however courses often REQUIRE and actually check for them (and often have included coursework, its own scam..).

      The problem? This means there is no market for the books second hand!
      By allowing a collusion between publishers and courses to effectively kill second hand use of the books, we end up in this situation.

      So, just REQUIRE textbooks to have a minimum 5 year life (could easily be 10 years in many subjects).
      Refuse any textbooks that are 'licensed' (including non-transferable electronic versions).
      Problem solved!

      Wont ever happen, people are making too much money screwing over the students, who are too young and green to avoid it.

      • Or start the Occupy Textbooks movement and produce excellent written material that will replace the incumbent literature. Math would be a good start. Even better, designing a PROPER e-book platform would be the best start - build something that will be so good that you wouldn't ever want to return to an expensive paper textbook even if someone gave it to you for free. I cry when I see the shitware people use, and e-books are an especially atrocious case. We had TeX in the 1980s already, and thirty years lat
      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by El Cubano ( 631386 )

        I fear that: a) you don't have any experience teaching at the university level; and, b) you don't actually understand the problem. Let me try to educate you.

        First, I teach a course at a large public university. I work full time as consultant/developer and I teach a single course as an adjunct. My motivation for doing it, you ask? I thought it would be fun and my fondest memories of my undergraduate education were three adjunct professors who were experienced industry professionals and taught only a sing

        • Programming is different than, say, general chemistry. The classes I took in fast moving fields moved so fast they printed up spiral bound texts for a relatively low fee instead of having a professionally made textbook. For general curriculum stuff like calculus, a yearly revision is unneeded.
          • For calculus a revision every 20 years would probably be far too frequent. The main valid reason for a rewrite would be to improve the teaching style, more likely this would result in a whole new book. So outside of a whole new book, new calculus, chemistry, math, logic books are probably not needed once good ones are written. Every 20 years, add some new examples, to make it so not everyone is a blonde, blue eyed male who wants to become a nuclear engineer. Publish errata that can be easily added and c

      • by Salgak1 ( 20136 )

        Back in my undergrad days, the Engineering-track Physics I and II courses had textbooks that were huge stacks of punched stencilled pages ( required a 4-inch binder. . .). Cost, between 12 and 14 dollars, plus a 6 dollar binder.

        Junior Year, both volumes came out as a textbook. 80 bucks. And, of course, enough minor changes in the exercises that the old paper editions were useless.

        Oddly enough, the professor who taught the course bought a new car that year.

        Funny how that works. . .

        • I used a physics textbook that was the same one (same fucking exact one) that my Dad had used when learning physics. Of course I'd bought my own recently published copy of a 40 year old physics book. Our professors at community college created spiral bound lab books that were probably around $20. These were fantastic as they expanded on topics and had nice hand-drawn illustrations, etc... Ah, the good-old days.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Textbooks probably wouldn't be viewed as a luxury if the U.S universities and colleges didn't work out how the absolute maximum they could squeeze out of students and their families in tuition and fees and then charge them that.

    • Textbooks probably wouldn't be viewed as a luxury if the U.S universities and colleges didn't work out how the absolute maximum they could squeeze out of students and their families in tuition and fees and then charge them that.

      What incentive do they have to do that? My old school took the profits from bookstore sales and funded all the student center stuff from it, so they'd never have cut their prices If this open textbook idea catches on, both the schools and publishers will have to reduce prices or they'll lose a ton of business, if not all of it.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Here's an idea. Instead of commissioning brand new textbooks, why not form a buyer's collective with other universities (particularly state university systems) looking for value-priced textbooks (but not Dover Books, I hope). Don't go after the top 3-4 titles in any subject; instead, go after some of the laggards so their publishers will be open to cutting deals instead of demanding $100+. You can ask for paperback or cut-rate editions, like the International Editions sold in India.

    That's where the depar

    • I know one issue about textbooks,least here in Canada is that the bookstore selling the books is an independent company not affiliated with the school. Of course they're going to try and make a profit from a monopolized situation.
    • Places of higher learning (including community colleges) should just band together nationally or state level and go after all the primary subjects (that dont change much anyway) first and tackle the higher stuff with a fund each one pays a nominal fee towards. If each college paid 1 semester tuition (community college level, not harvard) toward such an endeavor, we'd have 90% of the books tackled in no time.

      • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday April 16, 2017 @08:21PM (#54246741)

        Places of higher learning (including community colleges) should just band together nationally or state level and go after all the primary subjects ...

        They are doing exactly that. I give you the Open Education Consortium [oeconsortium.org].

        But there are lots of others. The University of Minnesota runs the Open Textbook Network [umn.edu].
        Of course Openstax [openstax.org] is producing lots of curriculum.

        There are so many free textbook programs out there that the real challenge is paring down the list. Openstax seems to be emerging as the big, reliable repository.

        My news site [freetextbooks.org], for lack of a better word, about free textbooks.

        • I think the limiting factor here isn’t a lack of available open source materials. Too many schools have gotten bed with the publishers and are getting a nice cut of the way over priced books. The schools for example could have gone with cheaper publishers without much trouble. They could have told their publishers to not rearrange the same text every year to make it hard on people using used books. Yet, they don’t. Simple fact is that at the end of the day it isn’t in their interests to m

        • Nice info, thanks!

    • Used book store.

    • Why? There are two things that can be improved from the perspective of a textbook author. The first is that your income is contingent on sales, so you're taking a big risk when you write a book. The publisher gives you an advance, but that's just an income free loan and if you read the contract carefully then you'll see that you can be required to pay it back if the book doesn't sell (not happened to me yet, but it could). The second is that the publisher takes the vast majority of the revenue. When th
  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Sunday April 16, 2017 @06:28PM (#54246409)
    in Maryland. Seriously textbook industry F-. See me after class.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday April 16, 2017 @06:29PM (#54246413)

    Here's the actual article in the diamondback - TFS links to a news aggregator that links to this:

    http://www.dbknews.com/2017/04... [dbknews.com]

  • by gwolf ( 26339 ) <gwolf@NosPAm.gwolf.org> on Sunday April 16, 2017 @06:58PM (#54246487) Homepage

    I published in 2015 a textbook about operating systems (http://sistop.org/). Besides working for a university full time, I got a grant from the LATIn Initiative from the European commission. They required me to join other authors (a requisite for participation was having at least threee coauthors, located in three different countries in Latin America), and paid each of us a very decent amount (€1200, particularly good given the wages in our region). There was, of course, a quality requirement - But the second requirement was for the licensing to be CC-BY.
    I won on all fronts due to this.

    • by fard69 ( 589805 )
      I have no karma to give, but thank you all the same for an informative post. Good luck.
    • I published in 2015 a textbook about operating systems (http://sistop.org/).

      Thanks! I had a look and began reading it last night (when I should have been sleeping). The book is very well written, thorough, and also accessible to students who are still in the early stages of learning about the field.

      I am in the process of redesigning a course which I teach on Java and business IT systems and this has inspired me to seek out new materials from the open textbook ecosystem. The current book I use is now quite outdated (the students complain about it and I don't like it) and the new

  • "Nationally, students spend an average of $1,200 a year on textbooks" - this claim is extremely difficult to believe. Given the 'ready' availability of most common textbooks as PDFs or ePubs via the internet, and even their solutions manuals, where are all these honest fools spending over $1000/yr on textbooks? There's certainly not seen in classrooms.
    • Graduate school, definitely $1000+, and junior and senior year especially in comp sci and engineering, more so in niche sub-specialties in those fields. Generally, you are correct though, see http://www.uspirg.org/news/usp... [uspirg.org]
    • by Anonymous Coward

      The new model is to have the "free" online homework require the $120-$180 texbook "subscription". Taht way the professor doesn't have to write questions or grade homework, and you get assraped without the chance of buying a used textbook.

    • 5 courses/term * 2 terms/year * 1 book / course * $100/book = $1000/year. Simple Stoichiometry.

  • They are scared this set the precedent for government providing low cost broadband.
  • by StandardCell ( 589682 ) on Sunday April 16, 2017 @07:19PM (#54246565)
    I think this is generally a fantastic idea. Nothing has really changed in subjects such as calculus, linear algebra, chemistry and biology in decades if not centuries for some subjects. Heck, I used my dad's control systems textbook from the 60s to learn. My fear is that publishers will start charging people on the back end of this for more specialized textbooks that are more typical in third and fourth year courses or specialized graduate courses. So, free textbooks for the two-year community college crowd, but $500 textbooks for process control of chemical reactors and digital signal processing.

    The real underlying problem here is that student loans are the only type of debt that can't be discharged under bankruptcy, and that has created a moral hazard for post-secondary institutions to accelerate their costs. Tuition has also greatly and disproportionately increased in cost because students can get mortgage-like terms for their student debt, but institutions don't have any responsibility to make sure they graduate or make money. Meanwhile, endowments, perks and expensive buildings keep going up on campuses with little marginal benefit to students. The cherry on top is the IMO bizarre cultural support in this country for post-secondary institutions from alumni and through college sports.

    If you really want to solve the textbook crisis, solve the debt crisis in education and allow discharge of student debt in bankruptcy at the same time as you investigate the publishers for any type of RICO or antitrust activity. The system will take a few years to clean out, but the issue will eventually be solved. The best part will be that tuitions will eventually come down to sane levels again, although that will be at the expense of the administrators and faculty who are more concerned about pretty buildings and social justice than they are about academic and human progress.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Unfortunately you may be correct. I work at a university that I graduated from many years ago. Costs have gone through the roof. There are fancy expensive study areas everywhere. The paint is barely dry on renovations when they are renovating again. The administration went from a small area in one building to their own four story building. Classroom space has tripled, but student population is only up by 70%. Nobody wants to take a class before 10AM or after 2PM so we need more faculty and classrooms

      • In part, government intervention has disconnected costs from results.
      • by swb ( 14022 )

        Easy student loans drive this. Administrators feel free to increase spending because they feel free to increase costs because lenders feel free to lend because there is low risk to student loans due to the lack of a default mechanism.

        Politically, I think they appease Democratic state legislatures by increasing aid and scholarships to protected class students, knowing that these costs can be shifted to students who pay with loans, as the loan amounts can go up easily. The added spending by Universities is

    • Sorry, but you are completely wrong about student loans.

      I know its very 'fashionable' to harp on that you should be able to drop them like a hot potato the week you graduate, but that would be a disaster, and in no way addresses the root problem.
      Why a disaster? Because graduates are graduates. A large number of them would see this as a free lunch, and jump on it, declaring bankrupcy just to clear the debt (after all, they have almost nothing to lose here..), and THEN starting building their carreer with a p

      • by swb ( 14022 ) on Monday April 17, 2017 @05:58AM (#54247833)

        I think you're pretty much dead on. I'd only differ in that I think student loan debt should be dischargeable, but inversely proportional to the time since the education was obtained. All assets depreciate in value and an education isn't really all that different, and inverse proportion depreciation prevents short-term discharge after graduation without the punishment that would be inflicted on someone whose finances otherwise allow them to declare bankruptcy. I think part of the escalating college cost/loan cycle needs some negative feedback loop -- lending should have risk, without it they lend irresponsibly and all it ends up being is inflationary.

        But you're absolutely right about the "everyone doesn't need a degree" stuff. Most people go to college because they don't know better and are only in it for the signaling value that a degree supposedly has to employers.

        College loans are basically a subsidy to corporations who would otherwise have to provide training and education to their employees and even if it provides some vocational value, it's a horribly inefficient -- the overlap between what's learned in school and what has vocational value to employers is really small.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Community colleges are an option, but society looks down upon the CC 'graduate'. There should be a one year program (12 months full time) that give students the basic business and technical backgrounds for their chosen path.

      • by Tvingo ( 229109 )

        The 'fix' for student loans if for the schools to 'co-sign' the loan with the student. The student can only discharge the dept back to the school after X number of years of paying Y% of their salaries towards the loan. You figure out the X and Y with some negotiations but the end result is if you go into a field where there is no way to pay off the loan in X years paying Y% of the salary then the school should never have loaded you the money in the first place. One of two things happen, schools either don't

      • Since society benefits from an educated population, be it very intellectual or very vocational (who doesn't want a great plumber?). Why not implement what you propose and boost it with free education? That way everyone is educated appropriate to their desires and abilities, society benefits, and no one has to worry about paying off some stupid loan.
        I disagree that the loan situation is not a contributor to the problem, in fact it might even exacerbate the situation you are concerned about. Since universi

    • If you really want to solve the textbook crisis, solve the debt crisis in education and allow discharge of student debt in bankruptcy at the same time as you investigate the publishers for any type of RICO or antitrust activity.

      Neither of these solutions work. If you can discharge a student loan through bankruptcy then no lender will offer them without a guarantee from the government and that will be really expensive. So if you go this way why not just have the government cover the tuition costs with grants which it recoups by charging a higher tax rate on higher incomes? It worked this way in the UK for decades before the government got stupid and massively increased enrolment beyond what society needed and taxes could support.

    • ...solve the debt crisis in education and allow discharge of student debt in bankruptcy...

      There's one simple scenario that prevents this from happening: 1. Go to expensive college.
      2. Graduate.
      3. File for bankruptcy immediately.
      4. Profit.
      Most college students have no assets and poor credit. There is no downside to filing for bankruptcy. An established adult with a house and a car are a different story. Creditors can go after that persons house, car, retirement savings, etc.

  • by Beeftopia ( 1846720 ) on Sunday April 16, 2017 @09:10PM (#54246889)

    To get a real feel for the sudden growth since 2000, note that the first two data points span a couple of decades. The rest of the points are year by year:

    https://nces.ed.gov/fastfacts/display.asp?id=76 [ed.gov]

    The article says an 812% increase since 1978. They could have easily cut down the start point to the year 2000 and still produced a startling, and more meaningful result.

  • Writing textbooks sucks as much as writing documentation. There isn't any real payoff for anyone in writing textbooks in terms of reputation (other than having the opportunity to write more textbooks). At least with open source software there is more of a structure to the intangible benefits one gets out of contributing to such projects (such as being able to show contributions when applying for jobs).
    • Your analogy couldn't have been more perfectly bad.
      In an open source software project, the product is the software, not the documentation.
      In an open textbook project, the product is the book, not the documentation of how it works.

      So all of the intangible benefits you elucidated belong to the people who created the content of the book. There are also tangible benefits, such as grants to create the work etc. No doubt it is a strong resume builder and with a proper community in place around the book, it woul

  • I welcome the existence of free-of-charge textbooks. But it seems to me that much of what is available on various textbook repositories does not meet the "open source" definition. For example, it is common for textbooks to have a copyright licence that does not grant people the right to use a book commercially. That is against the open-source definition. Likewise, it is common for the textbooks to be provided only in a read-only format, such as PDF or as HTML that can be browsed on a website. It is very rar
    • I'm totally cool with the license not granting people the right to use a text-book commercially. The information is given freely, it should be passed on freely? Don't like the license? Don't use the work. It is basic true-capitalism. It gives freedom-of-choice. What's not to like?

      • You have misunderstood the point I was trying to make. The problem I have is with the misuse of the term "open source" to refer to stuff that is more accurately called "freeware".
        • Yes. I didn't read your full comment. We are in agreement.
          I too would like "libre" books and not just free-of-charge textbooks, though I also think they are a great start!

          I disagree though that disallowing commercial use is what makes them bad. I'm good with a license that allows academic use and even research use, however, it would seem somewhat unfair for some publisher to take a "libre" book, rewrite it a bit throw it in a printing press , mark it up %500 and give nothing back. There could be licensin

  • by CrankyOldEngineer ( 3853953 ) on Monday April 17, 2017 @05:11AM (#54247765)
    The problem is not availability of economical textbooks. It's publishers paying off administrators. Our local community college uses nearly 100% Pearson textbooks. Many of them are custom printed in binders specifically for that school and are required. Supposedly they are custom designed for the requirements of that school. But there is nothing unique about them and in fact they are practically identical to other community college textbooks except for numbering and questions/problems. They cost around $200, and they change every year so students can't buy&sell or borrow. I would love to meet the the asshat responsible.
  • Smoke and Mirrors (Score:5, Insightful)

    by chill ( 34294 ) on Monday April 17, 2017 @06:53AM (#54247929) Journal

    Open source textbooks, reference material, and study guides are plentiful. Used textbooks are cheap. Amazon has a great service providing them.

    Colleges and Universities frequently require the use of online, "digital learning systems", like Cengage [wikipedia.org]. Access to that site, where the homework is, requires a subscription code that can be hundreds of dollars. A textbook without the "online access code" is a doorstop.

    If schools are serious about this, they need to start pushing the use of Moodle [moodle.org] instead of Blackboard [wikipedia.org], and providing high quality open source content including lesson plans, homework, and textbooks.

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