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Pearson's Digital-First Strategy Will Change How Students Get Textbooks; College Textbooks Fast Becoming Obsolete
Forbes ^
| Bill Rosenblatt
Posted on 02/18/2020 12:31:26 PM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: ml/nj; GingisK
I sold the liberal arts crap back.
I kept all of my Engineering and Math books.
21
posted on
02/18/2020 12:58:49 PM PST
by
EEGator
To: SeekAndFind
Remove physical textbooks, fill space with bigger margins!
That first year of college back in the last century, I spent damn near 600 dollars on books.
I didn’t buy all the ones I was supposed to. Had no desire to go completely broke.
To: EEGator
Whew! Thanks for that. I was getting worried about you. ;-D
23
posted on
02/18/2020 1:02:08 PM PST
by
GingisK
To: EEGator
Me too. Actually ended up with a calculus text that none of my classes ever used. I’m not sure where that came from.
24
posted on
02/18/2020 1:08:15 PM PST
by
IronJack
To: SeekAndFind
So now you’ll be forced to pay $250 for a digital file with a license that will expire after the term and it will just go fffffffffttttt
...not even to be resold to the bookstore at 5 cents on the dollar.
25
posted on
02/18/2020 1:26:14 PM PST
by
Buckeye McFrog
(Patrick Henry would have been an anti-vaxxer)
To: SeekAndFind
Online textbooks are nearly useless. As difficult as it is to teach students to use print textbooks, even when they use e- or online books, they learn next to nothing.
I’m an academic coach. Have watched this w/ 1000s of kids.
I even approached Pearson to put together a program to teach teachers to teach students how to use textbooks. Pearson does not care, as they sell textbooks whether kids use them or not, and digital is far more profitable.
26
posted on
02/18/2020 1:29:04 PM PST
by
nicollo
(I said no!)
To: nicollo
RE:
I even approached Pearson to put together a program to teach teachers to teach students how to use textbooks. Pearson does not care, as they sell textbooks whether kids use them or not, and digital is far more profitable.
I think Pearson is also into pedagogical materials. They recently acquired:
SMART SPARROW , a company that develops ADAPTIVE LEARNING TECHNOLOGY.
They are developing educational methods using computers as interactive teaching devices, adapting educational material according to students' learning needs. The technology incorporates the interactivity previously only afforded by an actual human teacher, and integrates ideas from various fields, including computer science, education, and psychology.
May I ask your opinion of such technology? Will it work with current students? Can a teacher like you use this?
27
posted on
02/18/2020 1:35:39 PM PST
by
SeekAndFind
(look at Michigan, it will)
To: cgbg
It’s still a scam. Do you think the digital editions of the books are any cheaper? They’re not.
28
posted on
02/18/2020 1:42:27 PM PST
by
Trailerpark Badass
(There should be a whole lot more going no than throwing bleach, said one w)
To: GingisK
I’m only partially crazy, not AOC bat guano crazy. :)
29
posted on
02/18/2020 1:55:14 PM PST
by
EEGator
To: SeekAndFind
I sure hope they weren’t planning on having those’textbooks’ used on Chinese made computers or computers made with Chinese components...not many to be had for a while.
30
posted on
02/18/2020 1:55:31 PM PST
by
BobL
(I eat at McDonald's and shop at Walmart - I just don't tell anyone.)
To: brownsfan
They would change a few sentences here and there, then reorder the chapters to render older editions barely usable. Buy a new book, $150, but it used, $90, sell it back, $25.
Actually, the main thing they did to make old editions unusable was to completely redo all the check-on-learning / homework questions. It's easy enough to use a textbook with mixed-up chapters, but if the homework doesn't line up with the assignment, that's the difficult part.
To: Trailerpark Badass
RE: Do you think the digital editions of the books are any cheaper? Theyre not.
OK, I am not writing this to be a devil’s advocate, but I simply want suggestions — if digital is not going to make textbooks any cheaper, what can we do to make these books ( the knowledge content ) CHEAPER? ( and please, no advocating of content piracy. LOL ).
32
posted on
02/18/2020 1:58:16 PM PST
by
SeekAndFind
(look at Michigan, it will)
To: VanDeKoik; SeekAndFind
"Remove physical textbooks, fill space with bigger margins!" I recently attended a meeting at an east coast medical university. During some down time I decided to visit the, "book store". Nothing but hoodies and other assorted branded trinkets. In the few minutes I spent, I found nothing that would have aided learning.
33
posted on
02/18/2020 2:01:05 PM PST
by
outofsalt
(If history teaches us anything, it's that history rarely teaches anything.)
To: nicollo
Online textbooks are nearly useless. As difficult as it is to teach students to use print textbooks, even when they use e- or online books, they learn next to nothing.
I hate using digital textbooks, and am not really a fan of reading books online. You can't go back and reference certain stuff, you can;t flip through to find info you need, it's much harder to flip through to a certain page. The experience of using a physical textbook is much more conducive to learning than a computer screen. They're also much easier on the eyes, can be used anytime without annoying the wife in bed, are much more mobile, and so on. Hopefully most of the math, science, and civics courses keep using normal books instead of stupid online crap.
To: Svartalfiar
I was just about to post the same comment. Paper textbook allows you to associate info to a location in book. You can also scan at least 2 to 4 pages worth of “screen” pages. Very good if you are following a derivation of information. Put a marker in the index...much easier than pulling up new screen to look something else up. Best IMHO is a textbook with digital updates till new textbook....larger pages would give less expensive books with easy back and forth reading..
35
posted on
02/18/2020 2:37:36 PM PST
by
Getready
(Wisdom is more valuable than gold and diamonds, and harder to find.)
To: Svartalfiar
And aside from all that, the students will ruin their computers with all that yellow highlighting marker on the screen.
To: SeekAndFind
Textbook PDFs are space hog users so I shrink them by converting them to DJVU.
You dont even need to buy the print edition in a college bookstore anymore.
College textbooks are going digital for the same as encyclopedias. Its easier to keep content current online.
37
posted on
02/18/2020 2:58:07 PM PST
by
goldstategop
(In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives In My Heart Forever)
To: toast
I only referred to them twice in the last 30 years. Big waste of time and space. Gee. I was just thinking of finding my General Psych text to see what it might have to say about the LGBTQXYZZY crowd.
ML/NJ
38
posted on
02/18/2020 3:07:48 PM PST
by
ml/nj
To: SeekAndFind
In the late 1960’s Samuelson’s Economics sold more books than any other college textbook in any major.
To: brownsfan
That is why I always recommend my students do not buy the most recent edition of a textbook; I assign the edition published just before the newest.
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