Sounds a bit like safari books. The OU has plenty of text books available through that and on their own site too. Nothing new in this, just a wider market.
Students, rejoice ... and squint! Google rents out textbooks to mobes
Google is offering fanbois and fandroids the chance to borrow academic textbooks on their smartphones. The update to the Chocolate Factory's Google Play app to allow the lending of textbooks, which often prove prohibitively expensive for students. Its iOS update adds the ability to borrow rental books, something that …
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Monday 12th August 2013 11:32 GMT Don Jefe
School Requirements
Schools get around this by requiring the student to have a physical copy of the required text. At the university where my wife occasionally teaches the professors aren't allowed to count the student as 'present' for the class if they don't own the book and have it with them.
It is a blatant money grab by the universities and the authors (who are often the professors) but the practice has already been proven in court. The schools are allowed to define the criteria/accessories required for taking the class. It comes back to how screwed up financing higher education has become, but that's another rant.
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Monday 12th August 2013 14:01 GMT Don Jefe
Re: School Requirements
I think my favorite was the book that included the syllabus and the rubrics for the class on copy/scan resistant paper. No book, no syllabus. It was obviously designed in such a convoluted manner than transcribing it was more work than it was worth to a student and it had zero resell or reuse value as they changed the syllabus every semester.
God forbid a uni student spent some of their grant money on beer and condoms when there are books to be sold to captive audiences! When I went to school it was specifically stated in the Federal grant application that a small amount was included to 'allow the student to engage in the collegiate lifestyle and social activities'.
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Monday 12th August 2013 15:41 GMT Rampant Spaniel
Re: School Requirements
and a new edition every year or two to cut down on reselling. I absolutely detested that aspec of my degrees. It was usually the 'soft subjects' like HCI where this kind of bollocks occured. The actual coding (x86 \ ansi c \ java etc) either didn't have set texts or used more generic sanely priced ones. I much prefered the OU's approach.
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Tuesday 13th August 2013 03:36 GMT GaryDMN
A bit late to the party
K-12 textbook publishers in the USA and Europe have already standardized on iPad (iOS). They didn't do this recently, they have been providing iPad courseware and books for a couple years. Pearson is the largest and they have a full offering available for school systems. There are millions of students in the USA that the school systems provide iPads to and the students can bring them home during the school year.