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posted by Fnord666 on Tuesday March 14 2017, @11:33AM   Printer-friendly
from the information-wants-to-be-libre dept.

The Diamondback student-run newspaper at the University of Maryland reports:

The Textbook Cost Savings Act of 2017, sponsored by Maryland state Sen. Jim Rosapepe, could help students save a lot of [...] money.

The bill would provide a $100,000 grant to the University System of Maryland's William E. Kirwan Center for Academic Innovation to promote the use of open [knowledge] materials in place of traditional textbooks. The money would be used to foster the use of open education resources, or OERs, among the system's 12 institutions, said MJ Bishop, director of the Kirwan Center.

[...] If passed, the act would provide funding for the center to scale up the Maryland Open Source Textbook Initiative, a project that began in 2013 to promote OER use in classrooms. Between spring 2014 and fall 2016, the initiative has involved faculty teaching more than 60 courses at 14 public institutions in Maryland, saving students an estimated $1 million since the project's inception, according to the system website.

[...] Bishop said the grant will be used to create a central OER repository to share with all system institutions, as well as provide mini grants to universities to promote adoption of OERs in classrooms. The grant will also help to fund project management and instructional design staff, allowing faculty to create their own open source textbooks and design their courses around OERs.

[...] Some professors at this university have already made the switch to OERs. Lecturer Scott Roberts made an online textbook for PSYC100: Introduction to Psychology in 2010 after he became annoyed with new editions of the published textbook--which he said essentially contained the same content with different page numbers.

[...] Bishop admitted the $100,000 grant is not enough to accomplish all the center's goals at such a large scale; however, she said the act would be a sign of support from the Maryland legislature and be helpful when the initiative tries to get funding from national foundations, such as the Hewlett Foundation or the Gates Foundation.

Nonprofit MarylandReporter adds:

Open [Knowledge] Textbooks Could Save Students a Bundle

"The state is moving rapidly towards free textbooks online", said the bill's sponsor Sen. Jim Rosapepe (D-Prince George's) in an interview. "If the bill passes, it will be state policy that we want to move in that direction as much as possible."

The bill, SB424,[1] passed the Senate in an overwhelming 44-2 vote [March 9], with only two Republicans voting against it. The House version, HB967, cleared the Appropriations Committee, 23-2 [March 9], and heads to the full chamber for a vote.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported in 2015 that textbooks prices had jumped over 1000% since 1977.

[1] Incorrect link in TFA corrected.


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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 14 2017, @06:56PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 14 2017, @06:56PM (#479065)

    Maybe some controversies have made it in to satisfy people who don't like history glossing over the negatives, but make no mistake: big education companies are shaping curriculum for the worse.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 14 2017, @07:57PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 14 2017, @07:57PM (#479106)

    Howard Zinn is best known for his 1980 book "A People's History of the United States". [historyisaweapon.com]
    In writing it, he used references not normally used.
    He mentions e.g. how Europeans invaded (not "discovered") the Western Hemisphere and immediately started enslaving, abusing, and murdering the indigenous peoples.
    (His works are a major contribution to the movement to stop celebrating Columbus Day.)

    In Arkansas, there is currently a bill to ban his works from the libraries of public schools.

    -- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]