Showing posts with label electronic texts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label electronic texts. Show all posts

Friday, February 3, 2012

Obama wants all students using digital textbooks - I ask where the $$ are coming from


"Obama administration wants all students using digital textbooks in five years" - headline from the Verge. Read the comments as they are very interesting. 

My reaction: " we don't even have money for the basics, like paper textbooks, computers, lab equipment, paper, teachers!, etc. So where does the money come from for 1:1 computing devices for every student, the digital textbooks (which have to be purchased again every year), support for the devices, replacement devices for damage, loss, and theft, etc." Many of my students don't even have a computer at home, let alone a portable device like a smartphone, laptop or tablet. How are they going to access the digital textbooks without a digital device? Will they really all have a device in 5 years? Paper textbooks offer an option for students and districts without digital resources. 

It's a lofty idea that will cost hundreds of millions of dollars. Education budgets are being cut left and right and then this. Not sure how this idea can work.

I've already discussed my reaction to Apple's iBooks announcement and how I don't use textbooks with my physics students anyway, but this article got me going again. Are digital textbooks really a worthwhile use of shrinking education budgets? I don't think so. Let's look more at project based learning, free online digital resources and teacher created resources instead. 


What do you think?



Related:




The How's, Why's and Value of Educational Technology

10 Important Skills Students need for the Future 





Friday, April 23, 2010

Science Books Online



Science Books Online is exactly what it's name says. It is a listing of different, free, online science books.

The list is sorted by topic: astronomy, biology, chemistry, physics, math, medicine, etc. and there is a recently added section on the main page so you can see what's new.

There are free e-books, textbooks, lecture notes and other science documents. The texts are either available online or for downloading. I have used quite a few of the physics ones in my classes. They are very well written and designed.

This is a great resource for schools to either supplement their current textbooks, or maybe even replace the traditional, expensive, paper textbook with a free electronic one.


Friday, May 29, 2009

Free E-Books



The E-Books Directory is a great resource for teachers and students. It contains links to thousands of free e-books, including textbooks, that can save schools money. Instead of purchasing textbooks, and then worrying about damage and loss, schools could use e-books instead. I have only reviewed the science books and there are a lot of really good e-textbooks listed here.

Give it a look. Even if you don't use an e-text as your primary book, your students could use them as references and for extra help.

Monday, May 11, 2009

Digital Textbooks



(image from THEJournal.com)

I just read an interesting post by Ryan Bretag on his Metanoia site. Ryan is a fellow TL Advisor and Blogger and is an Instructional Technology Coordinator in Illinois. 

Ryan has a student advisory group that gives him feedback on educational technology and one of the things they mentioned is that schools need to be more green and stop using so much paper. They also feel that printed textbooks are outdated and a waste. They feel that eTexts are a better idea and that schools should look at laptops for each student with the curriculum loaded on. When Ryan told them that not every textbook is available in e-form, they stated that it didn't matter because "everything they need is on the internet." The students do acknowledge the limitation since not all students have a computer at home.

I have to agree that textbooks are becoming obselete. I have a huge number of physics textbooks in great condition. The problem is that the books are 17 years old and outdated.

I have found many great online resources and share them with my students. They use these resources to help them study and understand concepts. It would be very easy for me to switch to e-texts only. Next year I will be working to limit how many handouts students receive alos and try to do more and more electronically.

Here is the list of Physics e-resources:

1. The Physics Classroom - great online resource with lessons and examples - http://www.physicsclassroom.com 

2. Physics Lessons - interactive virtual labs and demos - http://www.physicslessons.com/iphysics.htm

3. Free Physics Textbook - downloadable physics text in pdf format - http://www.motionmountain.net/

4. FHSST Physics - online high school physics text - http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/FHSST_Physics


6. Online Physics Study Guide - http://www.wiley.com/college/cutnell/mod1/


Here are two great resources I use with my EMT-B class:
EMT-B online - http://www.emtb.com/9e/

All of the students also have access to my class website. This site has links, study guides, lesson presentation notes, and much more for them. This site is their starting site for their online work.

These are great resources that my students use. I truly feel that they could replace the printed textbook with these resources. And, there are many more resources out there for them.