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The E-Book Sector

June 8, 2010

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E-textbooks might be the most-talked about and least-used learning tools in traditional higher education. Campus libraries and e-reader manufacturers are betting on electronic learning materials to overtake traditional textbooks in the foreseeable future, but very few students at traditional institutions are currently using e-textbooks, according to recent surveys.

Not so in the world of for-profit online education. Online for-profits such as American Public University System and the University of Phoenix have for years strategically steered students toward e-textbooks in an attempt to shave costs and ensure a more reliable delivery method that, in the context of online education, might seem to make more sense. At Kaplan University's School of Legal Studies, digital texts account for around 80 percent of assigned reading. At Capella University, e-textbooks are an available and accepted option in nearly all 1,250 courses. In for-profit higher education, more than any other sector, the traditional book is becoming obsolete.

Phoenix actually mandates that instructors assign digital materials “whenever feasible” -- a strategic turn the company started to take back in 2003, but which has come to fruition more recently, with so many more materials now available in digital format. At this point, roughly 90 percent of Phoenix’s course content is delivered via e-books or other electronic means -- the only exceptions coming in courses such as art history, where copyright issues surrounding digital renderings of images such as paintings remain a hurdle for e-book publishers, says David Bickford, the vice president of academic affairs at Phoenix.

The American Public University System -- which is a private, for-profit university, despite its name -- has also been consciously promoting the use of e-textbooks, resulting in widespread adoption of the new format among students.

Of the company’s 400 fully online courses, about 300 assign e-textbooks as the default delivery method (with exceptions for overseas military personnel, who make up a significant proportion of the institution’s enrollment and tend to have irregular Web access). While the institution allows stateside students the option of buying print books, more than 90 percent of students opt for the e-textbook, says Fred Stielow, dean of libraries.

Those are staggering adoption rates compared to those at nonprofit online programs and on traditional campuses. Among the respondents to a 2009 Campus Computing Project survey of 182 online programs at nonprofit universities, only 9 percent said e-textbooks were “widely used” at their institutions, while nearly half said electronic versions were “rarely used.” Even fewer brick-and-mortar institutions are deploying e-books in lieu of hard copies, with fewer than 5 percent citing e-book deployment as a key IT priority in the short term, according to another Campus Computing Project survey. And according to data from the Student Monitor, e-textbooks accounted for only 2 percent of all textbook sales last fall.

One reason American Public University System students have adopted e-textbooks so enthusiastically might be because of the company’s unusual practice of including course materials such as books in the cost of tuition. Historically, it has bought students their textbooks. Now, it only buys e-textbooks; if students want to keep using print volumes, they have to pay for them out of their own pockets. “Given textbook inflation… it’s the only way we can continue to underwrite the materials cost for our undergrad students,” says Stielow.

For-profit institutions in general are moving toward wider e-textbook use than other sectors of higher education, Stielow says. “I think a great many [for-profits] are certainly trying to move toward this model,” agrees Bickford. And the ones that have appear to be succeeding.

Why is that?

John Bourne, executive director of the Sloan Consortium, which studies online learning, posits that it might be a function of the more centralized administrative structures at for-profit institutions. “For-profits do things like provide lesson plans for instructors, provide you with what you’re supposed to do; they hire all these adjuncts to deliver all these things that have been sculpted by instructional designers,” says Bourne. Being able to dictate to the faculty what text format they should assign to their students probably makes it easier to implement e-textbook adoption across the institution, he says.

It is more difficult to engineer change at such scale at nonprofits, because of their more distributed governance models. At those colleges, faculty control of curricular texts — including mode of delivery — is “sacred,” Bourne says.

Manny Rivera, a spokesman for Phoenix, says that the online giant’s centralized administration does indeed allow it to make sweeping changes without many hang-ups. “The university is set up to be more nimble to confront market forces,” Rivera says. “So we’re able to innovate more quickly.”

The wide adoption of e-textbooks has also allowed the University of Phoenix to reduce the price it pays for licensing rights to e-textbook material from publishers. “In return for predictable revenue stream, the publishers can generally give best-in-class pricing on digital textbooks and material,” says Bickford. That’s a financial windfall for Phoenix, which pays a licensing fee to publishers and then sells access to its students at a mark-up, investing the revenue in "the development of other multimedia resources."

APUS also gets “deep discounts” -- 30 to 35 percent, usually -- for being able to purchase e-textbooks across the board and sparing the publishers from having to convert individual professors, according to Stielow.

Officials at the for-profits also said that using e-textbooks eliminated issues related to online students sending away by mail for hard-copy textbooks. “I can remember in my first decade of employment here, dealing with panicky student phone calls saying, ‘The UPS driver ate my textbook,’ ” Bickford says.

So switching to e-textbooks seems to be a prudent financial and logistical move. But is it a good educational one?

The jury appears to be out on that question. At APUS, Stielow says an internal survey last year revealed that 90 percent of students opted for the free e-textbooks in the courses where they were assigned. But price was evidently a factor in many cases, since about 42 percent of those said they strongly preferred print texts.

At Phoenix and Kaplan University, officials insist that internal research of e-textbook use has revealed that learning outcomes do not suffer as a result of switching from print texts to digital versions, although both declined to share specific data on proprietary grounds.

“Economics are not a primary driver at all,” says Stephen Burnett, the vice president for auxiliary business at Kaplan Legal Education, where he says digital materials are assigned by default for most classes. “What’s been driving us in a lot of this is we’re an innovative institution.”

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

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Comments on The E-Book Sector

  • Brick-and-mortor slow in the uptake of eText books
  • Posted by Bill Dixon , Principle at CMA Houston on June 8, 2010 at 10:15am EDT
  • The reluctance to replace traditional text books with electronic media reflects the lag time it takes for traditional higher education to adapt to social change. A constant pressure on industry is to reduce the cost of doing business. In contrast, cost containment has not traditionally been a high priority in higher education. Few university systems have a mechanism to combine or reduce programs. Accreditation bodies don’t evaluate institutions or programs on their efficiency. Instead the focus is on the availability of sufficient resources to provide consistency in the manner in which their services are delivered.

    Industry Advisory Board members substantiate graduates of our programs who become employees receive guidance on key business processes and reference materials from intranet sites and are no longer published in hardcopy procedure manuals. Are students best served transiting from printed to electronic media only after they graduate from college? It is just a question of time before the Academy will catches up.

     

  • e-Textbooks do NOT necessarily save money
  • Posted by James Luke , Professor Economics at Lansing Community College on June 8, 2010 at 11:30am EDT
  • Contrary to the PR blitz of big publishers and the author of this article, e-Textbooks are NOT necessarily cheaper. Open textbooks and books from alternative publishers (textbookmedia.com or flatworldknowledge) are cheaper. But e-textbooks from the big textbook publishers are actually more expensive for students since they:
    1. eliminate the option to sell the book after the semester,
    2. eliminate the option to buy a used book in the first place
    3. eliminate the option of keeping the book as a useable reference for more than a year after the course.
    When considered on a total cost of usage basis, e-textbooks from the big publishers are not a good deal for students. They are simply attempts by the big publishers to kill the used book market and extract more $ from students.
    BTW: I use one of the alternative publisher books ($31 new vs. $180 from the big publishers), students can buy used, they can also get online version, and in over 2yrs of usage, absolutely no decline or drop in test scores compared to the big pubs.

  • Remember the Students
  • Posted by ML , Assistant Professor of Sociology on June 8, 2010 at 12:30pm EDT
  • Note that this article itself says 42% of students would prefer a hard-copy textbook--and this is of students enrolled in online degree programs! I have offered e-textbook options in several courses and I don't think I've had ANY students take me up on them; in fact, students complain on teaching evaluations when I assign electronic readings as supplements because they are "too hard to get to" or "cost too much to print." A lot of commentators seem to forget that
    a) not all of our students are members of the "digital generation" and many DON'T have reliable internet access on a device bigger than a phone, and
    b) even for traditional-aged students with at-home internet access, the screen may not be the preferred way to read.

  • rebutal to: e-Textbooks do NOT necessarily save money
  • Posted by Candace Skipper on June 8, 2010 at 1:30pm EDT
  • Mr. Luke must be the rare professor that uses the same textbook two or more semesters in row. When I was in college:
    1. Oftentimes I could not re-sell the book as the professor had opted for the next addition of the book. Other times, I was offered pennies on the dollar from the purchase price, thus making it not worth it to sell the book back.
    2. Many times the option to buy a used book was not available because the professor was not using the same edition or opted for a different book all together.
    3. I have been out of college for nearly 10 years, and I have never once referred back to my textbooks as references. In fact, my box of old books sits in the back of my attic and is too heavy to move. I have spoken to many college graduates and they can attest to the same thing.

  • Candace Skipper
  • Posted by Jed Leland on June 8, 2010 at 2:30pm EDT
  • You don't have a personal library? No book-lined walls? Although I did occasionally sell back some books in college, I kept many for my personal, growing library.

  • e-books - Significantly Less Expensive
  • Posted by ...Just and Adjunct , Assoc. Director at Northeast Liberal Arts on June 8, 2010 at 3:00pm EDT
  • I disagree with Mr. Luke.

    When was the last time you required students to read every chapter of a $200 text book?

    e-text books are significantly less expensive because only the Chapters the syllabus requires to effectively deliver the content are included. Most have audio, video or both. e-texts come to life and enhance learning for all types of learners.

    Campus bookstores rarely carry more then a few used textbooks (hmm, I wonder why?). When a student returns a clean, $200 textbook for cash, they'll walk-away with $75; if they are lucky.

    Leave it to the innovative, for-profit world to do things better, faster and at a lower cost than traditional colleges and universities.

  • Small disciplines (heart) online texts
  • Posted by Polemarchus , Obscure languages at small place on June 8, 2010 at 4:30pm EDT
  • In reply to the comment about the stodginess of brick-and-mortar institutions, I offer the observation that some of us brick-and-mortar types have been forced to embrace online texts because of scarcity. The obscure languages I teach do not have many textbooks worth digitizing but do have lots of good material online at such sites as the Perseus Project or stoa.org. With these sites, any faculty member can easily cobble together a syllabus of primary texts, and students can custom-edit them to whatever spacing and font size they prefer. For-profit institutions will doubtless find no use for obscure languages, but primary translated texts on open access sites might be a double win for faculty and students. Polemarchus

  • NOT cheaper
  • Posted by Faculty Person on June 9, 2010 at 5:00am EDT
  • @Just and Adjunct
    "e-text books are significantly less expensive because only the Chapters the syllabus requires to effectively deliver the content are included. Most have audio, video or both. e-texts come to life and enhance learning for all types of learners."

    I have not seen any such e-text books. The ones that I've seen include the whole book. Most also do not have audio, video or both, They are typically identical to the dead tree text though less convenient to read.

    If one buys and sells used books via the Internet rather than just the college bookstore they are no more expensive.

  • If they offered them, we'd buy...
  • Posted by Kathleen , Librarian on June 9, 2010 at 5:00am EDT
  • We keep asking the publishers about the availability of texts as ebooks (I'm in Australia), and they just aren't interested in offering them to us. The only way we could get set texts as ebooks is if the University mandated that academics could only choose materials from the lists of (mainly) foreign content books or slightly unrelated topics.

  • Posted by Dan on June 9, 2010 at 9:15am EDT
  • It isn't a coincidence that the colleges using the ebooks are for-profit. This is a way to assure them of being able to capture the profit from selling books to students. They essentially have a monopoly on where students can obtain their books. If they only used paper books, many students would go elsewhere for their books. These colleges' decisions are not necessarily mainly based on what is best for students, but what might bring in the most money. They are for for-profit after all.