In a Digital Future, Textbooks Are History (2)
(2009-09-25 19:00:57)
标签:
文化digitalpublishingeducation教育出版数字出版 |
分类: 数字出版 |
And given that students already get so much information from the
Internet, iPods andTwitter feeds, he said, digital texts could save
them from lugging around “antiquated, heavy, expensive
textbooks.”
The initiative, the first such statewide effort, has attracted
widespread attention, since California, together with Texas,
dominates the nation’s textbook market.
Many superintendents are enthusiastic.
“In five years, I think the majority of students will be using
digital textbooks,” said William M. Habermehl, superintendent of
the 500,000-student Orange County schools. “They can be better than
traditional textbooks.”
Schools that do not make the switch, Mr. Habermehl said, could lose
their constituency.
“We’re still in a brick-and-mortar, 30-students-to-1-teacher
paradigm,” Mr. Habermehl said, “but we need to get out of that
framework to having 200 or 300 kids taking courses online, at
night, 24/7, whenever they want.”
“I don’t believe that charters and vouchers are the threat to
schools in Orange County,” he said. “What’s a threat is the digital
world — that someone’s going to put together brilliant $200 courses
in French, in geometry by the best teachers in the world.”
But the digital future is not quite on the horizon in most
classrooms. For one thing, there is still a large digital divide.
Not every student has access to a computer, a Kindle electronic
reader device or a smartphone, and few districts are wealthy enough
to provide them. So digital textbooks could widen the gap between
rich and poor.
“A large portion of our kids don’t have computers at home, and it
would be way too costly to print out the digital textbooks,” said
Tim Ward, assistant superintendent for instruction in California’s
24,000-student Chaffey Joint Union High School District, where
almost half the students are from low-income families.
Many educators expect that digital textbooks and online courses
will start small, perhaps for those who want to study a subject
they cannot fit into their school schedule or for those who need a
few more credits to graduate.
Although California education authorities are reviewing 20
open-source high school math and science texts to make sure they
meet California’s exacting academic standards in time for use this
fall — and will announce this week which ones meet state standards
— quick adoption is unlikely.
“I want our teachers to have the best materials available, and with
digital textbooks, we could see the best lessons taught by the most
dynamic teachers,” said John A. Roach, superintendent of the
Carlsbad, Calif., schools. “But they’re not going to replace paper
texts right away.”
Whenever it comes, the online onslaught — and the competition from
open-source materials — poses a real threat to traditional textbook
publishers.
Pearson, the nation’s largest one, submitted four texts in
California, all of them already available online, as free
supplements to their texts.
“We believe that the world is going digital, but the jury’s still
out on how this will evolve,” said Wendy Spiegel, a Pearson
spokeswoman. “We’re agnostic, so we’ll provide digital, we’ll
provide print, and we’ll see what our customers want.”
Most of the digital texts submitted for review in California came
from a nonprofit group, CK-12 Foundation, that develops free
“flexbooks” that can be customized to meet state standards, and
added to by teachers. Its physics flexbook, a Web-based,
open-content compilation, was introduced in Virginia in
March.
“The good part of our flexbooks is that they can be anything you
want,” said Neeru Khosla, a founder of the group. “You can use them
online, you can download them onto a disk, you can print them, you
can customize them, you can embed video. When people get over the
mind-set issue, they’ll see that there’s no reason to pay $100 a
pop for a textbook, when you can have the content you want
free.”
The move to open-source materials is well under way in higher
education — and may be accelerated by President Obama’s proposal to
invest in creating free online courses as part of his push to
improve community colleges.
Around the world, hundreds of universities, including M.I.T. and
King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals in Saudi Arabia, now
use and share open-source courses.Connexions, a Rice University
nonprofit organization devoted to open-source learning, submitted
an algebra text to California.
But given the economy, many educators and technology experts agree
that the K-12 digital revolution may be further off.
“There’s a lot of stalled purchasing and decision making right
now,” said Mark Schneiderman, director of federal education policy
at the Software & Information Industry Association.
“But it’s going to happen.”
For all the attention to the California initiative, digital
textbooks are only the start of the revolution in educational
technology.
“We should be bracing ourselves for way more interactive, way more
engaging videos, activities and games,” said Marina Leight of the
Center for Digital Education, which promotes digital education
through surveys, publications and meetings.
Vail’s Beyond Textbooks effort has moved in that direction. In an
Empire High School history class on elections, for example,
students created their own political parties, campaign Web sites
and videos.
“Students learn the same concepts, but in a different way,” said
Matt Donaldson, Empire’s principal.
“We’ve mapped out our state standards,” Mr. Donaldson said, “and
our teachers have identified whatever resources they feel best
covers them, whether it’s a project they created themselves or an
interesting site on the Internet. What they don’t do, generally, is
take chapters from textbooks.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/09/education/09textbook.html?pagewanted=2&_r=1&sq=digital%20publishing&st=cse&scp=6