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A bit of signal propagation, since I know that there are some teacherly types in the crowd. Lamba the Ultimate (a high-end programming site I follow) has a pointer to an intriguing-looking new publisher named College Publications. Their remit is apparently to publish textbooks for (gasp) a reasonable price, with halfway-decent royalties to the authors. Their focus seems to be in computer science and related fields (certain forms of math, logic and philosophy), so it doesn't help everybody, but it seems to be worth a look if you're teaching in those fields and want textbooks that won't break the students' banks.

More generally, I suspect this is the thin end of the wedge. There is little good reason for the outrageous prices of most college textbooks, and with the Internet and related technologies making publishing much easier, I suspect we're going to see a collapse in the business models of traditional textbook publishers. I'd bet that College Publications is essentially a clearinghouse with a skeleton staff that mainly focuses on vetting and editing, while outsourcing the actual printing and distribution. As such, they can probably do a reasonably good job pretty cheaply, and thoroughly undercut the traditional publishers. If more companies follow their lead, it *should* lead to prices falling to a more reasonable level. (Probably still not cheap, given the smallish distribution of the average textbook, but lower than current norms.) Clicking through their catalog, it looks like they're asking about half the price of the typical textbook -- that is, much closer to the cost of an ordinary book.

And yes -- some folks will point out that the Web may replace paper textbooks entirely. I suspect that's half-true: the rise of the Web will lead some people away from paper. But I expect a lot to hang on to paper textbooks for a good while yet, and this is a good middle ground. College Publications, to their credit, addresses this head-on: they don't assert copyright, and explicitly say that it's okay with them for a textbook to go onto the web once it has achieved profitability. Assuming they're honest and fair about the definition of "profitability", this is a very reasonable and realistic approach, likely to get the attention of authors in the field...

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Date: 2008-11-10 06:01 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rosinavs.livejournal.com
The Web is already starting to replace some paper textbooks. I tried a Web and CD-Rom based text a few years ago that was horrendous. It needs serious work before it is usable. However, I'm using traditional paper texts now that have the entire text of the book available online for just the purchase of an access code, which is less than half the price of the paper text. For students who prefer having a paper text, they get the online access code for free with the paper text, so losing their text or having it stolen is no longer an issue. I like them because I do not have to carry two 10 lb texts home at one time. I just fire up the internet and go to work. Also, the online system has the same problems from the text put into an online format for giving online homework and tests. I hardly have to grade anything anymore, if I choose not to.

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