StateUniversity.com / College and University Blog / August 12 2010
Thanks to the ability to purchase used books online and the relatively new textbook rental services, the hefty price tag associated with college textbooks may finally be decreasing. The rising popularity of ebook readers such as the Amazon Kindle, the Barnes and Noble nook and the Apple iPad is also expected to change the way college students purchase and “read” textbooks.
College Textbook Prices Continue to Soar
The rising cost of a college education has been a huge concern of students and parents across the country, but the price of college textbooks has also been in the spotlight. [snip]
A new federal law that is part of the Higher Education Opportunity Act of 2008 went into effect this past July, and it requires textbook publishers to provide college professors with textbook price information. [snip]
Ebook Readers Gaining Popularity Among Students
Despite the benefits of the new federal law, some college students are opting to purchase electronic versions of their necessary textbooks instead of relying on the old standby. Data released this past April by the Student Monitor, a research firm that studies lifestyle trends among college students, found that the Apple iPad tablet is already more popular than the Amazon Kindle among students who do not already own a wireless ebook reader but are interested in purchasing one.
Questions are rising as to whether or not students can learn as well with digital ebook readers as they can with traditional textbooks. [snip]
Will iPads Take The Place of Traditional Textbooks?
Even so, USA Today reports that North Carolina State University is loaning iPads to students through its library, the University of Maryland at College Park is planning to give iPads to students in its Digital Cultures and Creativity program, George Fox University has announced it will offer iPads to first-year students in the fall as an alternative to its laptop giveaway, and Seton Hill University says it will give all its students free iPads.
[snip]
Downside Of Ebook Readers
Some students simply feel that they can read and comprehend material better with a traditional textbook. Ebook readers have definitely taken off, but college textbooks typically contain information that is much more complicated than a novel that someone would read for enjoyment.
“Textbooks are the most complex e-book that there is out there, with everything from pagination, notation, searching and indexing, copy/paste, the ability to post to social media, and then multimedia like video, audio, pictures, and slideshows… an e-textbook has to put them all in one package and do them well,” Josh Koppel of ScrollMotion, a company that is working with publishers to bring texts to the iPad, told PC World.
Are You In The Kno?