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The All E-Book Diet

September 3, 2010

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When it comes to saving money on textbooks, students can help themselves by renting their books or buying them used. Professors can help students by only upgrading to new editions when they have to. Federal regulators can help both groups make well-informed choices by requiring textbook publishers to give their customers the information they need to be frugal. But what can the colleges themselves do?

Daytona State College thinks it has the answer: eliminate the used-book and rental markets on campus and have all students buy e-books.

By doing so, the college could save its students as much as 80 percent on course materials, says Rand S. Spiwak, its chief financial officer.

Here is how it will work at Daytona State, beginning in January: Instead of having professors tell students what books to buy and then letting them try to find the cheapest option regardless of medium, Daytona State will buy a license from publishers to grant students access to electronic versions of the texts and charge them a “digital materials” fee. The college would require publishers to provide e-books that can be read by multiple types of e-reader, including regular computers; students would have to buy a device if they do not already have one, but the college says even then the new system would save them so much on course materials that they would still be paying 50 to 70 percent less than before (the college also owns 4,000 computers that students can use).

Since Daytona State is essentially guaranteeing the equivalent of one e-book sale per student, per course, per semester — and thus no more used textbook market, a perennial drag for publishers, which only see money on new book sales — the college has been able to negotiate huge discounts from the publishers; Spiwak says the digital materials fee will probably end up being less than $30 per textbook ("very few" courses at Daytona State use more than one, Spiwak says). That is less than half the retail price of many e-textbooks, and about quarter the price of many new print textbooks.

If the model seems familiar, it is because it is one the University of Phoenix and other for-profit institutions have been using for a while; buying licenses to digital content from publishers at a discounted price, then transferring the cost, and the savings, to every student as part of the price of the course. But nonprofits have been slower to adopt this model, perhaps reluctant to push students to use e-books instead of waiting for them to come around on their own terms.

It is easy to imagine why institutions, facing criticism for rising tuition fees, might feel pressure to intervene on the rising cost of textbooks. Despite being minimal compared to the tuition at most campuses, the average amount a student spends on books and supplies — $1,100 at four-year colleges, according to the College Board — has gotten a lot of attention in recent years. A 2004 report by the Student Public Interest Research Group found that textbook prices rose at four times the inflation rate between 1994 and 2004. Congress responded by passing a provision to the Higher Education Opportunity Act requiring greater transparency among textbook publishers.

Textbook costs actually make up about a third of the total cost of going to Daytona State, a former community college that several years ago began offering "workforce-centered" four-year degrees. Indeed, access-oriented colleges, where textbook costs make up a significant proportion of the total cost, have been particularly willing to experiment with new ways of helping students save on course materials. The Rio Salado Community College system has sought to cut the costs of print textbooks by buying them at a discount from a single publisher, Pearson. The college has cut the amount most students spend on texts in half, but its professors have no choice but to use Pearson textbooks (granted, Pearson's custom textbook program lets professors pipe in some content from other sources, and there has been no audible faculty outcry).

At Daytona State, the choice of what publisher to adopt, and for how long, would remain in the hands of each academic department, which is how the college currently does it. On top of that, the e-book licensing model is so much more favorable to the publishers that almost none of them mind sharing the territory, Spiwak says. In other words, the academic departments can still choose among multiple publishers. That answers the general concern in higher ed that the only way for a college to significantly reduce the textbook cost burden on students is to totally centralize buying decisions and remove book choice from faculty.

Nor does it force students to use e-books. The idea would be that students would want to use e-books, since they are the cheapest option under the new model (this has not always been true of e-books in general, which some experts say is a key reason they have not caught on yet). But students who prefer a bound textbook would be able to either print out their e-textbook as a PDF and put it in a three-ring binder or use the digital materials fee as a credit toward buying a new print version from the publisher, says Spiwak.

The only party that stands to lose in this model, Spiwak say, is Daytona State's campus bookstore — and Follett Higher Education, which operates it. Since there is no such thing as a used e-book, the bookstore would no longer be buying back or re-selling used copies — a very profitable practice for the bookstore and for the college, which takes a commission from Follett. But Spiwak says the college is prepared to take that hit (it makes about $1 million per year from the bookstore, though not all from textbook sales) in order to save students what it figures will be several thousand dollars each over the course of their college career. “The simplest conclusion would be we’ll have no bookstore,” he says. “What we’ll have is a store that sells t-shirts and backpacks, and things that go with e-readers.”

Elio Distaola, a Follett spokesman, said he applauds Daytona State for aiming to save its students money. But Distaola said he wonders how the college will be able to get buy-in from students for a universal changeover, since by every measure college students still overwhelmingly prefer print books over digital. E-books will eventually find their way into the mainstream, he says, but that change will be driven by student demand, not institutional mandates.

Still, Daytona State is not the only nonprofit exploring the idea of reducing textbook prices by going all digital. The California State University system announced this week that it is embarking on a pilot program that would have 32 courses switch to e-books, which would be licensed through the college at a substantial discount to students. It plans to survey the students in those courses extensively. Officials would not speculate about what the future could bring as far as broader deployment, but the fact that a major public university system is considering having courses that only use e-textbooks as a viable way to bring down college costs could prove portentous.

“The promise is that for the buy-in on the content you get the best price,” says Jack Gunther, manager of the digital marketplace project in the California State University chancellor’s office. “And if the pilot suggests that it is going to be viewed favorably within CSU, then that’s a business model that we’d want to keep developing.”

For the latest technology news from Inside Higher Ed, follow IHEtech on Twitter.

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Comments on The All E-Book Diet

  • Fears
  • Posted by Buckley on September 3, 2010 at 9:00am EDT
  • My fear is that in the very near future if all paper books are eliminated at the collegiate level, that the cost for ebooks will increase over time to be the same as it is today for a hard copy of the book. The cost is much lower for many reasons, but without a choice (Hard v. Ebook) what would prevent a publisher over time raising the cost to equal the cost of before? People, like me, are drawn to the ebook because of its ease and lower cost v. traditional books. But if you're hanging on to the notion that it will cost less into the future, think again, it's still a business.

  • E-Books won't raise costs of textbooks
  • Posted by Carol on September 3, 2010 at 9:45am EDT
  • Buckley need not fear that e-books will rise in cost if/when they become universal. E-books are win-win for everyone EXCEPT the middlemen (like Amazon, campus bookstores) who buy back books and mark them up 40 to 75% for resale. Publishers LOVE e-books because there's no printing cost and students can't sell them back, so although they cost far less to purchase, the profits for publishers are much, much greater.

  • Think again
  • Posted by Debra Rollins on September 3, 2010 at 10:00am EDT
  • Buckley's cautions are right on target. Don't discount cost incurred by software version changes and new "editions" for every minor change in the text. Each of these might require students to purchase something different.

    With all its limitations, the traditional book still offers the most flexibility and utility.

  • Amazon doesn't like ebooks?
  • Posted by Philip Laughlin , Acquisitions at MIT Press on September 3, 2010 at 10:30am EDT
  • Didn't they essentially create the ebook market with the Kindle? I think Amazon likes ebooks very much.

  • Are We Ready for All E-textbooks
  • Posted by StevenB on September 3, 2010 at 11:00am EDT
  • Not knowing well the curriculum at this institution, I have to raise the question of how exactly they will get along without print textbooks in disciplines for which print textbooks might still make the most sense. That might be a field like art history or design. I suppose students could make do with ebooks, but in a survey conducted just a few months ago students indicated they still prefer print textbooks, and even the lower costs would not encourage them. So I'd expect many would still want to print out the pages - and what impact is that going to have on the institution's costs for paper and toner? I'm all for going with e-texts to save students money, but I question the wisdom of making it a requirement for all disciplines.

  • etextbooks
  • Posted by Candace Broughton , High School Library Media Specialist at Cattaraugus-Little Valley CSD on September 3, 2010 at 11:00am EDT
  • As a librarian I've been pondering the pros and cons of ebooks/ebook readers for some time. My new Kindle 3 with 3G arrived this week. It seems that this ebook reader is preferred by many gadget gurus who review such items online. I do like the convenience of not having to always carry a book with me; but I miss color. I was surprised also to find that the Kindle is not backlit but after some research I discovered that the Kindle uses a different e-ink technology than the Nook and Sony readers. Kindle supporters say that its "pages" more closely resemble the traditional printed page and, as such, do not create the same kind of eye strain we get from reading a backlit screen. I can certainly understand the economic appeal of etextbooks, but I do wonder how much printing students and professors will still need to do. We have had reference ebooks in our school library for years, but they seem to hold little appeal for our population. When our users are offered a choice between print and electronic versions, print wins hands down. For me, the best case scenario is to have a choice. I anticipate that increased opportunities for more federated searching may change preferences. I wonder too if "used" etextbooks can be re-sold?

  • Debra's point
  • Posted by Carol on September 3, 2010 at 12:15pm EDT
  • E-books only last for a semester or one year, and afterward turn off, so students already are required to "purchase something different" every semester (or year).

  • decreased learning
  • Posted by Gay Gullickson , Professor/History at University of Maryland on September 3, 2010 at 2:15pm EDT
  • My students now can do much of their course reading electronically. I urge them to print everything out so they can underline and annotate the readings. Those who do not do this, i.e., those who read everything from a computer screen, are less prepared for class, do poorly in discussions, and learn less in the course than students who work with the readings on paper. I wish this were not the case, but it is.

    from a history professor

  • Vital Source
  • Posted by Jean on September 3, 2010 at 3:15pm EDT
  • Actually if the university works out a contract with a vendor, an etext can be downloaded to the computer and is good for years (at our university 5 years). In addition, in the Vital Source software to which they bookshelf their texts, they are able to highlight and add comments (that are legible). Obviously the text is easily searchable also. They can even "share" this information with the instructor or others. I have predicted that the use of eBooks would increase with the introduction of the IPad and even the professors who are not "digital natives" are talking about the convenience of traveling with an eBook. I think the future that Isaac Asimov predicted is close at hand.

  • Print can be less expensive
  • Posted by Hannah , Ex-Adjunked on September 4, 2010 at 6:45am EDT
  • The thing that keeps me from purchasing a Kindle, besides lack of color, is that once I buy a book, it's mine forever. Few readers, whether for personal enjoyment or for academic use, read a text more than once. The personal user can read books for free by borrowing from a local library. Several rental programs have been set up for academic texts; renting seems to save students the most money, in the holistic picture, than having to "keep" an e-text forever. Unless students could also "rent" e-texts too.

  • More details needed.
  • Posted by Frank Lowney , Digital Innovation Group at Georgia College & State University on September 4, 2010 at 10:15am EDT
  • An interesting piece but I was left wanting more details such as the names of some of the participating publishers, the format of these eBooks (EPUB with or without DRM) and what kinds of eReaders will work. Does this solution ask students to purchase one or several eReaders? Is it possible for students to retain the textbook after the course is over or do they expire as one reader suggested?

    What about adopting open textbooks that are free and unencumbered? Since that would reduce student textbooks much further (approaching zero), why was that not considered or, if it was considered, why was it rejected?

  • E-books
  • Posted by marie on September 5, 2010 at 6:30pm EDT
  • Interesting. My question is the following:
    How would you handle the books the faculty uses in their classes which are not textbooks? I know there are a lot of ebooks out there... but how will you handle such books as French. German or Italian literary texts which are not in the public domain? Will the university in question make a deal with foreign publishers too?

  • Daytona's experiment noteworthy, but. . .
  • Posted by Bill , Exec. Dir., Auxiliary Services Corp. at Cal State Fullerton on September 6, 2010 at 1:30pm EDT
  • . . . It will be EVEN MORE SUCCESSFUL if they involve their campus bookstore as the "facilitator" for each of the transactions. Who better than the bookstore to handle cash transactions, delayed transactions for students on scholarship and of course those who drop the class within a matter of days. Bookstores do all this now -- and are the simplest solution to going forward with a smooth transition to ebooks.

  • A student's take
  • Posted by Keith , Student at Daytona State on September 7, 2010 at 6:00pm EDT
  • From the information given to the students and the faculty so far, the plan to incorporate eBooks into the curriculum sounds amazing. Currently my book costs are about 25% of my total cost of attending college. Much of the time, the books can not be sold back at all due to minor changes in the text requiring new editions to be released. Even if they can be sold back you are lucky to get 1/2 of your original price back. I would much rather pay a smaller initial cost for the eBook and not have to worry about trying to sell it back.

    I am personally in a technical degree program and I keep most of the textbooks required for future reference material, so lowering my cost to purchase the books electronically would save even more money. I have also understood that we will continue to have access to the eBook indefinitely after the class is over, similar to a license agreement for a software program like Windows.