Textbook-Free, Not Free Textbooks

Last week Director of the U.S. Office of Management and Budget Mick Mulvaney reported that student debt now exceeds $1.53 trillion—a burden that millennial’s carry. There are no silver bullets. Hope for many lies in loan forgiveness. In all likelihood, it will not happen. For me, it is a moral issue:  People borrowed the money, and they should repay it. They gave their word. Another potential panacea is discharging student loan debt through bankruptcy. Again, unlikely. There is no tangible product. It is not a car or a house. As much as many try to make education a piece of property or a property right, there is nothing to repossess. You cannot take exercised opportunity back. Opportunity paid for by the individual who holds the certificate of completion is a personal benefit.

There are no silver bullets.

Instead, a kind of frugality practiced by depression era adults and their families is typically unknown to college students today, except through textbooks they can no longer afford to buy. Institutions must find many ways to reduce educational costs to students. Offering discounted housing, for example, is one such means—pay for three years and get one free. There are others, but organizational stubbornness is persistent. In the case of textbooks, actions and ideas to try new things that focus on reducing costs traditions may get in the way. Combining seemingly small cost-saving actions transparently and understandably, while maintaining or increasing quality, could be of great benefit to students and support institutional effectiveness. A 2013 report by the United States Government Accountability Office, determined that the costs of textbooks has risen by 82% between 2002 and 2012. If the total costs to purchase texts are borrowed and financed for 20 years at 7%, the student pays $11,166—$6,000 for the books and $5,166 in interest.

This is hurtful to students and universities alike.

Open Educational Resources (OER) are one way of reducing the costs of classroom texts. These online licensing agreements allow students to access course materials freely and legally. New Jersey Institute of Technology reports significant savings occur.

The variety of substitutions for classroom texts are dizzying. According to the College Board, textbook costs average $1,240 per year. Digital materials are not always cheaper, and do not always yield better learning results than traditional textbooks, according to Educause.

The impacts of these rising costs are manifold, and textbooks are up 1,041% since 1977, three times the rate of inflation, according to NBC News. Inflated costs compromise a student’s ability to take a particular course or the selection of elective courses; they support a publishing enterprise that does not put the needs of the student first. For all the hype, new technology has only marginally reduced costs and effectiveness for students.

It is possible to teach courses at every level with absolutely no bundled OER, no purchased paper textbooks, no coded access to digital files that expire six months after purchase, and no real benefits or improvements to student learning.

Open access resources, publicly available, allow a faculty member to organize a series of free intellectual resources and into an effective syllabus. Rather than an editor in New York, Los Angeles or Chicago determining what the course content should be, the person teaching the course decides exactly what to use. Academic freedom.

For example, if the War of 1812 is included as a component of American History 101, one Google search reveals 47 million citations. If .001% of those have any value, that leaves 47,000. Let’s say only half of those are readable content, the others are references to books for sale, advertisements, or insights useless to a faculty member and student who want to teach and learn respectively about the War of 1812 directly from open source material on the internet. Now 23,500 references are available that students could read. If half of those are objectionable to the faculty member through the exercise of intellectual insight and academic freedom, that leaves about 10,000. If it is important to cover six or seven aspects of the War of 1812, a diligent historian might find significant resources to assist in teaching key issues in relatively short order—freed from the shackles of textbooks altogether.

Similarly, just a one-half a millennia ago, freedom from hand-copied texts by the printing press changed the nature of knowing. Who knew?

“In our time, thanks to the talent and industry of those from the Rhine, books have emerged in lavish numbers. A book that once would’ve belonged only to the richnay, to a kingcan now be seen under a modest roof. … There is nothing nowadays that our children … fail to know.” [sic] Sebastian Brant, Medieval educator, commenting on Guttenberg’s press and the books it produced circa 1500.

Textbook-free, not free textbooks.

2 thoughts on “Textbook-Free, Not Free Textbooks

  1. Dr. Wendler: While trying to find ways to reduce costs of secondary education at the margins (such as reducing the cost of materials) is laudable, it really misses the true culprit in the ongoing reality of the escalating cost of a university education. Mostly responsible for the ever escalating cost is the false belief that (nearly) everyone should get a college degree and that we, as a society, should actively intervene to make that happen!. As you have written previously, huge numbers of people begin college (typically using borrowed money) and after a few semesters find it is not for them nor needed by them) and they leave being only slightly wiser, much more cynical and seriously in debt. Encouraging those who really should not waste their time attending University to do so by subsidizing the costs (with loans, grants, etc). seriously distorts the realities of how to be successful in life and increases the cost of college attendance markedly!. Under the last Federal Administration (BHO) a modicum of sanity was removed when (by executive order, I think) the Federal government removed the last breath of rationality in subsidizing education by eliminating banks and giving money directly to would-be students. Thereby removing the banker from between the money and the subsidized school allowing him/her — in watching out for the bank’s best interest — by having him/her look at the student/loan applicant and be able to say, “wow, Johnny/Jill you really lack the educational potential to succeed in school” and therefore not allowing the would–be student to get into debt they do not need and may never be able to pay back. Maybe even guiding the would-be scholar into technical or trade schools to learn skills that would serve him/her well in making a financially (and hopefully emotionally) fulfilling life for him/herself and adding to society.
    To repair the problem, I suggest the government remove itself from the student loan industry. Thus, encouraging students to postpone entering college until they have worked a couple of years and saved up for tuition. This would have the effect of separating the wheat from the chaff. Those who eventually did matriculate would have a maturity few colleges see today and we would know (as a society) they truly do want to “advance”” in those areas colleges/universities assist with.
    It would be great if individual professors created their own support materials from the public domain on the internet, though personally I like books I can hold, read, write in, highlight etc, but reducing the cost of supplying learning materials is a worthy goal; is not on the scale to actually save the system of higher education we continue to need in our culture.

    • I rarely, a few times in over a decade, respond to comments. However, I can’t help myself.

      BTW I like holding a book in my hand too, but too frequently textbooks are an exception to that general rule.

      WW

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