Is the traditional college textbook on its way to becoming obsolete? While most
observers are unwilling to go so far as to predict their demise, this much is
clear: Concerns about textbooks' rising costs, coupled with advantages inherent
to digital technology, are leading students and instructors to seek electronic
alternatives -- and encouraging publishers, online marketers, and enterprising
campuses and faculty to create them.
In July, the U.S. Government
Accountability Office (GAO) reported that textbook prices have increased at
twice the rate of inflation since 1986. The federal study concluded that the
average student pays nearly $900 a year for textbooks and supplies almost
triple the cost two decades ago. Publishers dispute the statistic, saying that
it unfairly includes expensive supplies such as computers, and that textbook
costs are actually in the $600 range. Moreover, they argue, and the GAO
acknowledges, that the rising cost of the texts is driven in part by increased
investments in new products to enhance learning.
But it's difficult to
dispute that many students are feeling the financial crunch. In Virginia, a
survey by the State Council of Higher Education found that more than 40 percent
of undergraduates have passed up buying at least one textbook because they
couldn't afford it. Closer to home, Lindsay Hopkins, a UC Irvine undergraduate
majoring in political science, says she knows classmates who struggle
academically because they are forced by economics to forego purchasing
textbooks, instead seeking them out in the library or photocopying pages from
them -- or, when that fails, passing up the required reading. "At a time when
financial aid is being cut and our tuition fees are going up, these costs are on
everyone's mind," Hopkins says. Legislation has been introduced in Washington,
D.C. and Sacramento to address these concerns.
What's behind the high cost?
Publishers argue that textbooks are expensive to produce, and have a relatively
small market. But the government report was critical of the increasingly common
practice of packaging CD-ROMs and other instructional supplements with the
books, driving up the prices. A separate report by the California Public
Interest Research Group (CALPIRG) concluded that half of all textbooks now come
"bundled" with extras, in most cases without the option of purchasing the
textbook without the additional materials. CALPIRG found that nearly two-thirds
of the faculty it surveyed said they "rarely" or "never" used the bundled
materials in their courses.
CALPIRG is also critical of what it believes to
be too-frequent replacements of textbooks with new editions, particularly in
subjects where there are few fresh developments and the new versions are only
mildly different from the previous ones. The GAO report found that the average
textbook is updated every 3-4 years, as opposed to the average of 4-5 two
decades ago. By rendering the previous versions obsolete, the frequent updates
diminish the used-book market -- an alternative that makes the books more
affordable to students, both by enabling them to buy lower-cost used books and
by allowing them to sell their books once the course is complete.
When they
can't find used books at their campus bookstores or online, a growing number of
students are either sharing or renting their textbooks. CALPIRG, which has
student chapters on eight UC campuses, has encouraged textbook-rental programs,
in which institutions lease the books to students for the term. So far, few of
the nation's campuses have embraced the idea.
The CALPIRG survey found
widespread faculty support for alternatives that lower students' costs while
maintaining quality. Hopkins, who serves as the CALPIRG student coordinator at
UC Irvine, says many of her professors now undertake cost-benefit analyses
before deciding to assign expensive books.
Many are also looking at digital
alternatives. According to the Association of American Publishers and National
Association of College Stores, printing and editorial costs account for an
average of 32.3 cents of every dollar in textbook costs, indicating that online
textbooks could be sold for a substantially lower price. Companies such as
Ebrary and NetLibrary offer online books, and Amazon.com recently announced an
initiative to enable consumers to purchase electronic versions of parts of books
sold on its site, as permitted by the publishers. The viability of the e-book
option was tested this fall at 10 colleges and universities around the country
whose bookstores began selling electronic versions of approximately 200
textbooks, downloaded directly into students' computers, at 33 percent below the
price of the hard-cover books. Various restrictions on viewing and printing were
designed to discourage mass piracy. The pilot program, coordinated by five
academic publishers and a wholesale distributor, MBS Textbook Exchange, has
yielded mixed results. MBS Textbook Exchange recently reported that e-books were
accounting for 5.7 percent of the textbook sales at the participating
institutions.
Those who run bookstores on the UC campuses are watching the
e-book experiments with great interest. "It's still very early," says Neil
Yamaguchi, academic support director for the UCLA Store. "There's so much up in
the air right now in terms of the distribution and other logistics. We want to
be part of this movement, but it's not clear how it's going to work and the
migration to this format may be very slow."
So far, the traditional print
textbook does not appear to be endangered by technology, says Lynne Withey,
director of the UC Press. "We all experiment with digital books, but so far,
they are not what most people want to buy," she notes.
Digitization offers
publishers the potential for additional revenue, Withey says; in recent years,
UC Press has licensed digital editions to vendors such as NetLibrary and Ebrary,
without any resulting erosion in print sales. However, a trend toward increased
availability of digital books raises many questions. "Libraries are certainly
interested in buying books in digital form, but the question is, will they
eventually stop buying print, as we're seeing with journals?" Withey says. "How
will the digital books be packaged? If they are much easier to share, that could
significantly erode the market." So far, these issues remain a concern, not a
reality. "We aren't seeing diminishing text sales or diminishing revenue from
income coming in through payments for permission to reuse material" Withey says.
"But we're waiting to see if that changes."
For now print still appears to
hold inherent advantages for both users and authors. In its usage studies, UC
Press has found that the average number of pages consumers visit when they go to
one of the publisher's books online is five. "People don't want to read huge
numbers of pages on their screen, and they don't want to print out piles and
piles of paper," Withey says. "If it's a book that they really want and would
like to keep, they opt for print." Authors, too, have been resistant to making
the transition to e-books, perceiving that print versions are more prestigious,
Withey adds.
While the electronic textbook market struggles to gain a
foothold, other alternatives are being explored. MIT's OpenCourseWare, in which
the university makes all of its course materials available online for free use,
is now several years old and has been emulated by other campuses. Along similar
lines, Rice University has developed a model with the potential to at least
partly replace textbooks. Rice's Connexions, like OpenCourseWare, can be
accessed by anyone with an Internet connection. But unlike the MIT program,
Connexions assembles materials from instructors everywhere to create a
repository of course content, and offers free software that facilitates
interactive systems and graphics to help students grasp concepts, as well as the
flexibility to constantly update content.
"This has the potential to reshape
both academic peer review and publishing by putting the material out there for
people and letting them decide what's worth using," says Jeff Wright, dean of
engineering at UC Merced. More than 350,000 individuals are using the Connexions
site each month, roughly half on return visits. Wright has introduced Connexions
to UC Merced colleagues in the hopes of creating an open-source culture at the
campus.
Creative Commons
Connexions uses an open-source licensing
framework, Creative Commons, that enables authors to dictate the terms of usage
for their materials. A non-profit organization founded in 2001 with the goal of
providing a flexible alternative to traditional copyright laws, Creative Commons
grants copyright licenses that say, in effect, "some rights reserved" --
preventing use of the material for commercial ventures, for example, while
allowing it to be freely distributed, with proper attribution, for educational
purposes.
At UC Irvine, Hopkins and other members of the campus' CALPIRG
chapter are promoting digital "Creative Commons Textbooks." "The Creative
Commons license grants all baseline license rights to the material, including
the right to freely distribute the work," says Hopkins. "A Creative Commons
textbook would have the Creative Commons license source code embedded in it.
This would be perfect for an academic setting, where the electronic material
could easily be printed by the school publisher, and distributed at the cost of
printing. A solution such as this would provide an efficient way for both
professors and students to access academic material, and could be the most cost
effective. The bottom line is that base knowledge in any academic field should
not be economically exploited to the detriment of college students."
Hopkins
and her fellow UCI students aren't alone in pushing for a Creative Commons
textbook initiative. Fred Beshears, a senior strategist for UC Berkeley's
Educational Technology Services, argues that universities could significantly
reduce textbook costs by creating a coalition that would acquire and distribute
electronic textbooks under a Creative Commons licensing arrangement. Beshears
says he was inspired by a vision advanced by Ira Fuchs, vice president for
research at the Mellon Foundation, for the creation of Educore, which would be
dedicated to the development of open-source educational software, funded by
members of a worldwide consortium of 1,000 colleges and universities. Beshears
envisions an approach he calls OpenTextbook in which such a consortium would
acquire and distribute high-quality Creative Commons content for use either as
online courses, electronic textbooks, or customized printed
textbooks.
Beshears explains that content for large introductory courses
would be purchased in bulk from an institution such as the British Open
University (UKOU), which spends an average of $3 million per online course on
content development, with more than 200 undergraduate courses in its inventory
and regular updates that mean replacing each course after eight years. Given the
UKOU's annual investment of approximately $75 million in content development,
Beshears notes, members of an OpenTextbook coalition of 1,000 members could fund
such an investment for an average of $75,000 a year per campus -- or just a few
dollars per enrolled student.
"I did some quick mental arithmetic and
realized there is a huge discrepancy between how much students are paying for
textbooks and the amount they would have to pay to fund the development of
high-level content such as that provided by the British Open University,"
Beshears says. "And I thought, there's a business model in here
somewhere."
OpenTextbook remains in the exploratory phase, with Beshears
gauging interest. Beshears says his discussions with faculty indicate that many
who teach large introductory courses would be willing to replace commercial
textbooks with quality open-source content, particularly if the university
supported their efforts to customize the content. "A Creative Commons textbook
initiative may not only save students money, it could also give faculty more
freedom to customize the content of their courses," Beshears says.
While the
extent to which digital textbooks or courses based on open-source material will
take hold remains in question, UC's Hopkins is among those who is convinced that
instructors, who play a key role in driving the market by selecting the material
for their courses, are open to the idea of new models. "A lot of them say
they're fed up," she says. "They're looking for alternatives."