August 12, 2008
Rice U. Acquires Rights to Popular Textbook to Offer It Free Online
Students taking statistics at some community colleges won’t need to shell out $50 for the textbook Collaborative Statistics anymore. Rice University is making the book available free online after buying the rights from a commercial textbook publisher.
“We’re hoping that this is the first of many,” said Joel Thierstein, executive director of Connexions, an open-education effort at Rice that organized the giveaway. He said that even if only a few popular textbooks could be made available in the same way, it would cut costs for thousands of students. “The top 10 books alone would be enough to ease the burden of most community-college students significantly,” he said.
The Maxfield Foundation, which supports scientific research and education, provided the money to buy the rights to the book, though Rice officials would not say how much they had cost.
Not everyone wants to read books online, of course. So the Connexions project is offering a printed version for $31.95. Users of the book are also free to adapt the book to their own needs, and the hope is that professors will voluntarily update the book over time, given that its former publisher will no longer issue periodic revisions of it.
The project is affiliated with a broader effort to offer free learning materials, called the Community College Consortium for Open Educational Resources. —Jeffrey R. Young
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Yay for people everywhere. Doing good for good’s sake is good.
— Timmy Aug 12, 06:18 PM #
Hey, Timmy — do you play the ukulele?
— June Dania Quayle Aug 13, 05:12 AM #
This is absolutely a step in the right direction! Well done, Rice and the Community College Consortium.
— BobP Aug 13, 06:33 AM #
$50 book? That’s it? Most new hardcover textbooks hover around $130 these days. Rice is a great example for the rest of the community.
— Student Aug 13, 09:53 AM #
Awesome job Rice, glad to see more colleges addressing the problem high priced books.
— C Aug 13, 04:08 PM #
GREAT WORK, Rice!
Now if you could only buy rights to about 3,000 more books, both publishing AND students would be happy.
Maybe the Gates or Mellon Foundation can help fund it too.
Keep going!
— Rob Aug 13, 04:14 PM #