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Education

When Digital Textbooks Make College Students Pay to Turn In Their Homework (edsurge.com) 205

Slashdot reader jyosim writes: A professor at Arizona State U says he was let go from his teaching job in the economics department because he wouldn't embrace assigning homework software that he says "requires students to pay just to turn in homework." His students rushed to his defense on social media, saying that many of their courses now require them to pay for online systems if they want to submit homework. The university says the professor is spreading misinformation and is the villain.

Details of the ASU situation are messy, but the broader issue of homework software is one that students around the country have been complaining about, while textbook companies see them as the future because they eliminate the used textbook market and lead to more sales as more students are forced to buy directly from publishers. Publishers argue their software is sophisticated, expensive to build, and improves student grades because it is integrated with helpful bells and whistles. They want colleges to buy in bulk so all students have access.

Is the move to digital homework systems creating a new kind of digital divide at colleges?

From the article: For professors, one benefit of using digital homework systems is that it can save them time in grading, and it also gives professors analytics on how much each student has accessed and for how long.
But the article also notes that that doesn't always happen. One student just submitted every homework assignment for the semester during the software's free two-week trial period -- skipping all of its related digital reading materials and just doing free research on the internet. "It's right there on Google for free, or you can find videos on how to do it. I'm so tired of spending just pointless money." (Their ultimate grade in the course was an A.) And a few years ago a student told Buzzfeed that instead they just didn't turn in their first homework assignments -- hoping to bring up their grades later when they could afford to pay their system's $100 fee.

The article also points out that student government leaders unearthed a revenue-sharing business relationship between the university and its digital textbook publisher.
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When Digital Textbooks Make College Students Pay to Turn In Their Homework

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  • by weilawei ( 897823 ) on Saturday April 27, 2019 @07:44PM (#58502696)

    You're charged money...to be taxed.

    You pay to turn in homework and study materials you already pay tuition for.

    You go the the hospital and get billed for the room three times over in various ways.

    There is something fundamentally wrong with our system.

    • by easyTree ( 1042254 ) on Saturday April 27, 2019 @08:27PM (#58502822)

      Why can't they just fund the turning-in of homework assignments with ad-revenue? :D :D :D

      Lol, I'm j/k if that's what starts happening, it's not my fault :D

    • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday April 27, 2019 @08:38PM (#58502872)

      There is something fundamentally wrong with our system.

      Yeah, it's not making enough money!

      Some are expecting sarcasm tags here, but the truth of the matter is: That is how people think. If it doesn't benefit them to their satisfaction immediately, it's not enough. Doesn't matter what the consequences of reaching that goal is.

      The US for generations has said "Companies have no responsibility except to their own shareholders." The US continues to say that, and wonders why societal outrage articles like TFA, ones about the price of epipens being jacked up, amongst others keep popping up. Answer: The US doesn't actually care about it's fellow citizens. The citizens give the luxury of empathy to themselves only and to their fellow citizens nothing but apathy. Of course with "Nobody cares!" being the current societal norm you're going to have problems like these. The real question is why do you think enough of them are going to suddenly care to change that fact?

      Note: I agree with you. There absolutely is something fundamentally wrong with our system. But short of ripping everyone a new one, I don't see how you or anyone is going to fix that.

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        There is something fundamentally wrong with our system.

        Yeah, it's not making enough money!

        Some are expecting sarcasm tags here, but the truth of the matter is: That is how people think. If it doesn't benefit them to their satisfaction immediately, it's not enough. Doesn't matter what the consequences of reaching that goal is.

        That is the thing that kills capitalism: Short-term greed, complete ignorance as to long-term effects.

    • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) *
      Homework..... at university? lol America. At university absolutely no one should give a fuck if you do your homework or not. By that time it is entirely up to you if you want to waste your/your parent's money or not. Certainly I don't remember any homework being "required", just like attendance was never "required". Of course not completing assignments and never going to class correlated surprisingly well with dropouts and flunk-outs, too. But pretty much everyone is an adult at university.
      • At university absolutely no one should give a fuck if you do your homework or not

        Nobody does, as long as you don't give a fuck about your grades or whether or not you flunk out.

    • There is something fundamentally wrong with our system.

      These systems all suffer from captured "accreditation" agencies, which are granted monopolies by the government(s).

      Several colleges want to build medical schools but the AMA (an organization run by surgeons and anesthesiologists) do not want the supply of physicians to increase to the point that salaries start to level out.

      So people face long waits for medical care, and salaries stay high.

      Any government-granted monopoly is a thumb on the scale of the fr

  • FOSS Solutions. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by 0100010001010011 ( 652467 ) on Saturday April 27, 2019 @07:48PM (#58502704)

    The reason these schools have this BS is the same reason we still use ClearCase and IBM Jazz. "Corporate" believes the marketing team more than their own users.

    Running a school sized IT system sounds like a damned good learning experience for students.

    • Re:FOSS Solutions. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 ) on Saturday April 27, 2019 @07:58PM (#58502732)

      No IT system is needed other than an email server or hosting.

      Grades should only be composed of term papers and exams. Weekly homework assignments can be distributed via PDF emails and be purely optional, as an exam review aid. In fact, answers should be distributed the following week after they're discussed at optional office hours.

      College students are adults and should be treated as such, not given participation points for working through learning exercises (which they should be doing on their own).

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        by AHuxley ( 892839 )
        The "participation points for working through learning exercises" shows a student can manage their time and further allows sorting between people who can't manage time.
        People who can turn up on time, have the given work ready. Can show they are ready to talk about topics they are learning.
        Thats the different between people who cant keep time, cant have work ready each week. People who cant/wont study/never learned to study.
        Who cant talk about the work given each week.
        Who did not have the set work
        • Re:FOSS Solutions. (Score:4, Insightful)

          by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 ) on Saturday April 27, 2019 @08:30PM (#58502834)
          The purpose of a class is to teach students the material. Whether they actually show up is irrelevant as long as they can pass the exams and turn in papers/projects on time a few times during the term. If they can successfully study for the exams and turn in the projects on time, they have the time-management skills required. If not, then they fail and get to retake the class. College shouldn't be Asshole Boss Micromanagement 101. (OK, I'll make an exception for business majors, since MBAs are the bane of humanity.)
          • by j-beda ( 85386 )

            The purpose of a class is to teach students the material. Whether they actually show up is irrelevant as long as they can pass the exams and turn in papers/projects on time a few times during the term. If they can successfully study for the exams and turn in the projects on time, they have the time-management skills required.

            There is a pretty strong argument that part of any good class is to recognize the place where the students are starting from. We have long recognized that swimming classes shouldn't really just dump the students into the deep end to start. It makes sense to try to design course content and activities to promote behaviour that is thought to encourage learning. Ideally, the program is helping the students to learn and embrace effective work/study practices.

            Of course, this can become very challenging when the

        • Re:FOSS Solutions. (Score:5, Insightful)

          by sjames ( 1099 ) on Saturday April 27, 2019 @08:37PM (#58502858) Homepage Journal

          I would think that how they do on their exams would tell all of that. If someone can do none of the homework, yet maintains a good grade, they obviously managed their time and their learning process just fine.

          OTOH, if they do all of the homework and study religiously but flunk, they obviously didn't do enough.

          • Re:FOSS Solutions. (Score:5, Interesting)

            by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 ) on Saturday April 27, 2019 @08:39PM (#58502876)
            It's the busywork mentality that infects US school as well as workplace unculture. You have to put in your hours like a good little slave instead of just working towards specific goals.
          • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
            Re "If someone can do none of the homework, yet maintains a good grade, they obviously managed their time and their learning process just fine."

            Yet other better students could find the time to turn up as required and found the time to do the set work.
            They could talk about the work given and could show they understand new topics.
            Every week and some could ask question that showed an ability to learn more.
            That is the good sorting. That set work and the ability to talk to a group is something they can d
            • Blah, Blah, Blah. If you want to test people's ability to discuss a topic, ask questions in class or give oral exams, and give points for participation. Most of the CEngage stuff is just busywork. We should be training thinkers and academics, not just people who mindlessly follow what the boss-man tells them.
              • These are the people that make it to the real world unable to actually do anything. Sure they're a great brain in a vat, but if you need anything actually done they're useless. They just memorized something, never applied it other than on a test, and forgot it.

                • Then make the problems on the test such that they need to apply knowledge, not just regurgitate it. Not really that hard to do in the sciences.
          • I would think that how they do on their exams would tell all of that. If someone can do none of the homework, yet maintains a good grade, they obviously managed their time and their learning process just fine.

            OTOH, if they do all of the homework and study religiously but flunk, they obviously didn't do enough.

            If someone can do none of the homework, yet maintains a good grade, they obviously managed their time and their learning process just fine.

            Exams can not discriminate between short term and long term retention. It is quite possible for an intelligent student to get enough data into their mental cache to figure out most things on the exam and then have lost all of it as soon as they finish the course. As someone who often chose to lean on that instead of studiousness, I now regret thinking it was just about passing the test and not getting as good of an education as I could have. As an educator, I have also often seen these students fall behin

            • Here's the issue with the online homework: it's generally not difficult or terribly comprehensive. Where a free-form solution is required, it's also sometimes an issue getting the solution to a form where the grading system understands it and grades it correctly. Students can also STILL do it and not learn much -- the questions tend to be trite enough so they can be looked up online.

              I'd argue that a well-written exam could be cumulative and test long-term retention. Say you're in the 2nd semester of intr

            • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) *

              Exams can not discriminate between short term and long term retention.

              Yes they can. They can even distinguish between dominating a subject and rote memory. You just have to design the exam properly. The last part - the design - is where most exams fail; this is what gives rise to your erroneous claim.

              You can't represent all the material of a semester on an exam.

              You don't need to. Just like a customs agent doesn't need to go through every single bag in your luggage to prove you're a drug trafficker. They just have to find the cocaine in one bag. Likewise with exams. You don't fail a test with a single wrong answer or lack of knowledge of

            • by sjames ( 1099 )

              The retention will be tested when they take the next class that has the current class as a pre-requisite. If they memorized and forgot, they'll do poorly in that next class. At that point, they can either put in the needed effort (manage their learning process) to catch up, or they will flunk THAT exam. You can't memorize what you can't even understand.

              The best exams allow plenty of time and open books. If they're done right, the book won't help you if you don't fundamentally understand the material, and al

      • by Potor ( 658520 )

        I studied in Europe and the only grade I ever received from any class was a final exam, which was oral. 100% of my grade hanging on 15 minutes.

        Now I teach in the USA, and I have 5 assignments making up my students' grades.

        And I get hammered on student reviews for "grading on too few things."

        • Entitled shits. 5 exams or assignments should be enough to make up a grade -- 3-4 exams are pretty normal in science courses in the US.
    • The reason these schools have this BS is the same reason we still use ClearCase and IBM Jazz. "Corporate" believes the marketing team more than their own users.

      Running a school sized IT system sounds like a damned good learning experience for students.

      Depends on what the students are willing to pay for the experience. /s

      I was an assistant SA at school working up to 40 hours a week.

      I learned a lot about operations and managing the other students.

      I also worked with instructors installing (and fixing) software for their classes.

    • The reason these schools have this BS is the same reason we still use ClearCase and IBM Jazz. "Corporate" believes the marketing team more than their own users.

      This is absolutely wrong: you do not understand how the system works. The university IT system is irrelevant: the publisher hosts and runs their own homework system (or is associated with a company that does it for them) which they charge the students to connect to. The university does not host the system nor does it have any control over it: the publisher runs it all. This actually raises privacy concerns in many countries.

      Secondly, the decision on which online homework to use is not taken by some cent

  • by vinn01 ( 178295 ) on Saturday April 27, 2019 @07:52PM (#58502714)

    This is all about killing the used textbook market that publishers hate.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Good thing open source textbooks are a thing. Microsoft couldn't kill open source. Publishers can't either.

      https://open.umn.edu/opentextbooks/

      https://openstax.org/subjects

      https://www.teachthought.com/technology/5-sources-of-open-source-textbooks/

      • Same with us. We had the entire Finance, MIS & Accounting groups using material that they made over the years. And updates were discussed in a small teacher & senior student committee. They charged $30 for the print, binder, and "thank you" payment for the volunteers. Any left over funds resulted in a pizza day for the classes. Publishers hated them, but they had tenure and good management support.

        The CS & CompE guys made their own homework grading system that was also used by the basic math

    • This is why we should support open-source textbooks. That's a thing at Open Stax https://openstax.org/subjects [openstax.org], at the Open Textbook Library https://open.umn.edu/opentextb... [umn.edu] and elsewhere. These are open-access textbooks like open-source software, distributed free on the internet without charge to students.
    • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Sunday April 28, 2019 @12:03AM (#58503600)
      One of my professors called up his friend (who was the author and copyright holder of the textbook he wanted to use for his class), and got permission to have the school's copy center make copies of the textbook for his course. Final cost to me was $1.25 for a textbook which retails for over $100. I might have actually bought the textbook since it had some very nice tables for different shapes and their moments of Inertia in the back. But I really appreciated that the professor went through that effort to try to save us some money.

      Nowadays, a professor could just ask the author to provide them the PDF of the book for distribution in his class.

      Also, this may be a bias from my own experience (engineering program). But I'd seriously question the usefulness of homework problems which can be auto-graded. The homework and test problems I got were ridiculously difficult. Average grade on homework problems were like 50%. Average test scores were like 35/100 (there was one test where the high score was 18/100). My school didn't believe in cookie-cutter problems with one Right Answer. Our homework and test problems were tough and really tested the limits of your understanding of the material. Consequently, you had to show all your work, and the professor (and his TAs) had to go through it with a fine-toothed comb to see if you really understood the material. There was one test problem I got nearly full credit for, even though I'd messed up on one of the early steps so nearly all my numbers were wrong. My solution setup and the rest of my calculations were right, and that's what mattered.
      • by jwdb ( 526327 )

        Also, this may be a bias from my own experience (engineering program). But I'd seriously question the usefulness of homework problems which can be auto-graded. The homework and test problems I got were ridiculously difficult. Average grade on homework problems were like 50%. Average test scores were like 35/100 (there was one test where the high score was 18/100). My school didn't believe in cookie-cutter problems with one Right Answer. Our homework and test problems were tough and really tested the limits

    • It used to be about that but not any more: the switch over to electronic textbooks is probably having much more of an effect on the second-hand market than online homework. The homework systems are just a way to force every student to purchase access: it prevents students from sharing one textbook between several of them.
  • by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 ) on Saturday April 27, 2019 @07:55PM (#58502718)

    That's right. Don't assign mandatory weekly homework. The only components of a grade should be written assignments/term papers (which can be turned in for free via email) and exams.

    Homework can still exist as optional review questions to be discussed at a professor's office hours and distributed by .pdf. This isn't high school -- treat students like adults who are responsible for learning the material, or not. Their level of learning will show up on term papers and exams.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Re "' treat students like adults who are responsible for learning the material"
      Thats the idea.
      Did the person have the skill set to find the work set. Could the person do the set questions. Later talk about the set work with other people.
      Get the set work in on time. Get the work in on time over weeks and months?
      Thats what sort people who cant manage time, who cant study.
      From people who can do set work every week on time and then talk about what they had to do.
      Who have the skills to manage time ever
    • The only components of a grade should be written assignments/term papers.

      That doesn’t really work very well for subjects like mathematics, science, or engineering. For those subjects incremental checks are good as topics build on each other: solving partial differential equations requires the ability to solve differential equations.

      • Why did you cut the "and exams" part of my quote out? 3-4 written exams during a term work just fine as a check on students learning. Students who do poorly on the first exam tend to either seek help or drop the class with a W (i.e. get weeded out). Also, homework can still be given -- it just doesn't need to be automatically graded. Students can ask about questions that are troubling them during office hours. If students don't do the homework, they either know the material or don't care. Either way,
        • Because that part wasn’t important. If you read the second part of my response I clearly said that incremental checks are important. Again, you can’t really solve partial differentials before learning differentials.
          • Incremental checks exist anyway if you test > 1 time per semester and there are weekly non-mandatory problem sets.
            • If you think having 2 tests per semester is enough to check on incremental progress, I suggest you attend a college mathematics class and talk to the professors and TAs. As for non-mandatory problem sets, they won’t be done. It’s thst simple.
              • Bullshit. I'm TA'ing an upper-level science class right now with non-mandatory problem sets -- students come to me every week with questions about the sets, even though they're not required. Why? Because they're actually relevant to the material being tested, and they want to do well. Of course, this isn't in a fratball school like ASU and we're not dealing with econ majors here.
    • by deKernel ( 65640 )

      May I ask just what your major was in college because there is no way in heck that any type of engineering program that could be run with this approach. Learning is typically an iterative approach.

      • Engineering. Problems were assigned. Professors had office hours and were happy to go over any problems that students had trouble with, but homework wasn't mandatory. No silly digital system required.
        • by Uberbah ( 647458 )

          Uh huh. Homework is like sports practice - it sucks and it's boring, but it serves a purpose. You are given a lot of homework calculating derivatives etc not until you can do it right, but until (hopefully) you can't do it wrong as long as you double-check your work. And so you still remember how to do it when you come back that that type of problem two months or two years later.

    • The only components of a grade should be written assignments/term papers

      Unfortunately, if you have a lecture with 300-400 students in it there are logistical and financial problems with grading that many assignments each week with TAs. It also is a waste of the TA's time - many questions can be graded extremely well by computers and students provided with feedback. This frees the TAs to spend time teaching in tutorials and grading only questions which cannot be easily handled by computer. This is better for the students and the TAs.

      However, I hate the publisher homework sys

    • Don't assign mandatory weekly homework. The only components of a grade should be written assignments/term papers (which can be turned in for free via email) and exams.

      Those two things do not contradict each other and you can have both.

      When I was a lad (walking uphill both ways through the snow), we got weekly mandatory question sheets about the lecture courses we were currently having. We'd then meet with tutors (two on one) and go over our answers which would generally be illuminating since no one ever ma

  • Surprised? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by I75BJC ( 4590021 ) on Saturday April 27, 2019 @07:56PM (#58502724)
    College/Uni expenses go up faster than the inflation rate.
    The public has bought the idea that a young person needs a college degree to get a good job. Once the American Public has accepted this falsehood, the Academic Industry (public and private schools of all sorts; especially public Unis, IMHO) fleeces the parents of students and now even the students through student loans and increasing fees. I do know a US Uni that does not raise tuition but does really raise the price of all the fees. They can advertise "low tuition" and not mention the exorbitant fees (that will always continue to rise).

    So charging student to turn-in their homework is the latest scam from the Education Industry. Surprised? I'm disappointed. Disappointed especially to read that the textbook/software companies kickback money to the Unis so that the Unis will use their products that create a great and stable income stream. Don't we expect our Uni admins and bureaucrats to be more ethical (and honest) than that?

    Pink Floyd sang it best,
    "We don't need no education
    We don't need no thought control"

    The Academic/Educational Industry is just as greedy and demanding as the worst Capitalist! Praise Solcialism! /sarc
    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 )
      HOMEWORK itself is a scam. Grading it is stupid - it should be provided as a learning tool that students can use to study for exams, if they choose to. Grades should be composed strictly of exam scores and maybe a few written papers (in a lab or humanities class). That's the way it works in most of the non-US world -- no hand-holding or participation points for studying.
      • Umm... maybe for "traditional" classes.

        But for lots of stuff, whether it is system admin or programming, or nursing, etc. project based and "demonstration of skills" based evaluation is even better.

        • Did you actually read my post or are you trolling? I accounted for this by mentioning written papers (or programming projects in CS classes). You don't need to be doing busywork problems on a paid platform like CEngage daily to demonstrate your skills. Practical exams, exams, and projects/presentations/papers should be enough.
    • The public has bought the idea that a young person needs a college degree to get a good job.

      Times seem to have changed a bit since I got my degree; but in the 1990's and early 2000's, a 4-year degree was required by almost all employers hiring computer programmers. When I was looking for my first programming job in the 1990's, I had been writing software for nearly ten years already. I knew languages ranging from several dialects of BASIC to C to two dialects of assembly (on Motorola and Intel CPU's), and had written a diversity of software in those languages.

      I had submitted job applications t

      • Did you try making up a degree from the Autonomous University of Hogwarts (or Chisinau) and hoping no one checked too closely? :D
  • by The Evil Atheist ( 2484676 ) on Saturday April 27, 2019 @07:58PM (#58502734)
    More free than the Scandis to screw over your own people.
  • Those things are terrible across the board. The publishers should be put out of business anyway, switch to open source textbooks if it's going to be digital anyway. Any university that doesn't just lacks the desire to see students succeed.
    • Post lecture notes and review questions online as PDFs or email them weekly. Allow students to use any version of the textbook from the last 10 years (assuming a class that's not cutting-edge IT). They'll be able to find it either on EBay for $10 or as a bootleg PDF.
  • Nothing new (Score:4, Insightful)

    by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Saturday April 27, 2019 @08:25PM (#58502816)
    bud of mine had a French teacher who didn't make the students buy the textbook because it was crap. At the end of the year the dean withheld their grades until the books were bought. Turns out he wrote a chunk of the book himself.

    If you don't like this the only real solution is to pass laws.
    • Buy book, show proof of purchase. Book "arrived damaged." Return book after the rotten choad of a dean releases grades. If returns not allowed, stop credit card payment. Nothing morally wrong with being dishonest with dishonest pricks.
  • I'm old fart and I don't want to die without passing-on the knowledge I've accumulated in my lifetime. I don't know if this is a common feeling among old people but it should be. For the first time in human history we have the technology for the common folk like you and I to send print/audio/video messages into the future. Digital technology allows us to create a permanent record of human mistakes, triumphs, insights, and experiences. Will anyone access, use, or learn from our accumulated knowledge? Th
  • There is a big junk of economy which still can be gobbled up by large corporations: and this is higher education. And universities, obviously happy to go on a suicide trip, bite on: ``enhanced textbooks" which require subscription to some external service is only one aspect. It used to be that universities were the front runner of technology and content innovation. Now, they sell out to the cloud, let their services be run by external companies: email , planning, calendar, websites, testing etc. Oh, and we
  • What else do you expect from a country where you're literally handed a bill after you see a doctor?
  • Why do humans have to ruin every good thing by trying to squeeze every single penny they can out of it?
    Digital textbooks should have been a solution to a problem: expensive textbooks, that may go obsolete in a year or less because they decided to 'revise' them (maybe only one page), creating not only unnecessary expense for students and/or schools, but all sorts of unnecessary waste. 'Revised' textbooks could be delivered digitally, wirelessly, directly to e-book readers. So what do they do instead? Turn i
    • Printed textbooks were actually preferable to e-books. Why? The interface was better -- easier to bookmark, flip between several sets of pages, and typically larger than an e-reader, so you can view more text at once.
      • For the most part I actually prefer printed books; I do not now own or plan to ever buy an e-book reader. But for things like textbooks, magazines, newspapers, and similar, I always thought e-book readers would be perfect, would eliminate so much paper waste, reduce production costs, and so on. But these baboons have of course screwed all that up in this case.
  • by morethanapapercert ( 749527 ) on Saturday April 27, 2019 @10:29PM (#58503262) Homepage
    I think there is an underlying issue at work here. Namely, when your revenue stream is fairly constant and predictable, there is a tendency to see the people who provide that revenue not as customers who deserve to be served as such, but a renewable resource to be exploited as fully as possible. You see this sort of thing any time a company has a monopoly or near monopoly on something, when the product or service is in high demand relative to supply or both.

    Higher education is highly sought after, but the available number of seats at any given college or university is somewhat inelastic. A school CAN expand to meet demand, but doing so is slow and expensive. No school will invest the many millions in expanding the physical plant and staff numbers unless they foresee a lengthy duration for that increased demand. Since increasing the number of students is slow, difficult and expensive, the board is always going to be looking for ways to increase the revenue they get per student.

    I encountered this particular story a few days ago and there is a few pieces of crucial info missing:

    1) that the software vendor has a deal with the dean to give a sizeable grant to the school, contingent on the school mandating their homework submission solution. On the student end, this amounts to double dipping by the school, with the software vendor getting a rake off as the money goes past them. On the Vendor end, it amounts to naked corruption.

    2) That the teaching staff manipulate things so that 30% of their current non-homework software users FAIL, so that the dean can show to the board that the project provides real value to the students. I consider this to be an outright betrayal and economic exploitation of the student body. It's hard to imagine any academic chicanery that would be worse than sending students into what amounts to a rigged fight.

    Given the high moral tone higher education claims to aspire to, this really should merit the firing of the dean and any other salaried professional who agreed to this arrangement, regardless of tenure.

  • student loans need bankruptcy and then the banks will help push to end BS like this.

  • Richard Stallman's short story the The Right to Read comes to pass.

    For Dan Halbert, the road to Tycho began in collegeÃ"when Lissa Lenz asked to borrow his computer. Hers had broken down, and unless she could borrow another, she would fail her midterm project. There was no one she dared ask, except Dan. This put Dan in a dilemma. He had to help herÃ"but if he lent her his computer, she might read his books. Aside from the fact that you could go to prison for many years for letting someone else read your books, the very idea shocked him at first. Like everyone, he had been taught since elementary school that sharing books was nasty and wrongÃ"something that only pirates would do. ...

    https://www.gnu.org/philosophy... [gnu.org]

  • Paying money to a corporate to submit assignments? That sounds ridiculous. This kind of stuff simply wouldn't fly in the Europe. May be it won't fly any where else in the world too, except US. May be people in US have been brain washed to not protest and simply accept things that corporates send their way. How come the students at the University didn't protest? Because protests and strikes are considered bad? Is it because of the fear of being labeled a commie? Are students scared that they may not get any

  • A couple of years ago I went back to school to get my masters degree. What appalled me most was the use of Smartschool.

    If you take all universities and schools together, shouldn't they be able to write standard software for all schools, giving students and teachers insight in how such software works, needs to be maintained, needs to be administrated, etc?

    Instead of paying a parasitic company.

  • For those suggesting homework is archaic and students are adults who should be responsible for their own learning, I point you to Western Governors University. Competency based learning model, flat rate tuition, self paced learning... They don't offer every course of study available at some brick and mortar institutions but the price and learning style might work for a lot of people who are discouraged by the traditional paths to a degree.
  • I remember having the same argument when I was in university, about five years ago, with a professor whom demanded I use an online submission system, which I had to pay to use and which could not be audited, or inspected to calm reasonable privacy and data concerns.

    The solution is that you refuse to use the system, until it can be shown, with a public audit, that it doesn't violate or take advantage of your privacy / data, and that any work submitted to the system can be fully erased at the will of the su
  • Used book market (Score:3, Interesting)

    by ebvwfbw ( 864834 ) on Sunday April 28, 2019 @07:46PM (#58506988)

    I used to love the bookstore's used book bin. For statistics it was indispensable. They'd have books from other schools and the keys. I'm not talking the low level BS stats class, I'm into the 400 levels. Engineering type. The way to master those is to do problems, problems, problems. I lent out my books to the other students. I still have them today, 30+ years later.

    I'm sorry to see that go. This is sort of like the library at Alexandria burning. Need to keep it written down on paper.

"Ninety percent of baseball is half mental." -- Yogi Berra

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