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posted by janrinok on Monday October 24 2016, @09:18PM   Printer-friendly
from the open-is-better dept.

Quartz reports

Seven Rhode Island universities, including Brown and Rhode Island College, will move to open-license textbooks [1] in a bid to save students $5 million over the next five years, the governor announced [September 27].

The initiative is meant to put a dent in the exorbitant cost of college and, more specifically, college textbooks. Mark Perry, a professor of economics and finance at the University of Michigan Flint, and a writer at the American Enterprise Institute, estimated last year [Cloudflare protected] that college textbook prices rose 945% between 1978 and 2014, compared to an overall inflation rate of 262% and a 604% rise in the cost of medical care.

That is not the result of a general trend of higher costs in publishing, he notes: the consumer price index for recreational books has been falling relative to overall inflation since 1998.

[...] Open textbooks are defined as "faculty-written, peer-reviewed textbooks that are published under an open license--meaning that they are available free online, they are free to download, and print copies are available at $10-40, or approximately the cost of printing", according to a report by the Student Public Interest Research Groups (PIRGs) (pdf). They are part of the move toward Open Educational Resources, which has roots in the open-source software movement, it says.

Open licenses allow for content to be shared, unlike traditional textbooks which limit the use of their materials. [Richard Culatta, the chief innovation officer for Rhode Island] remembers teaching and replacing a section of a textbook with more relevant information for his class, only to be informed that he was infringing on international copyright law.

[1] A very bloated (webfonts) all-script-driven page.

Note: If you are thinking of using "begs the question" in the same way the state official did, that is a bad idea.

Our previous discussions of student materials and adoption of openness.


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  • (Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday October 25 2016, @12:54AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday October 25 2016, @12:54AM (#418334)

    We get students; the intellectual cream of the crop fresh out of school

    What? That doesn't even remotely describe 99% of the people in universities and colleges (or people in general). Only in a delusional paper-worshiping society could this possibly be seen as true.

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  • (Score: 2) by Thexalon on Tuesday October 25 2016, @02:18PM

    by Thexalon (636) on Tuesday October 25 2016, @02:18PM (#418552)

    What? That doesn't even remotely describe 99% of the people in universities and colleges

    Some sort of approximation of the top half of people graduating high school then. I've spent time working in academia, and you can be absolutely sure that good colleges are looking for the smartest people they can get their grubby paws on. I'm not saying that all smart people manage to go to an Ivy League school, but if you got into Brown odds are you're pretty darn good at academics.

    --
    The only thing that stops a bad guy with a compiler is a good guy with a compiler.