Dictionary Definition
textbook adj : according to or characteristic of
a casebook or textbook; typical; "a casebook schizophrenic"; "a
textbook example" [syn: casebook] n : a book prepared
for use in schools or colleges; "his economics textbook is in its
tenth edition"; "the professor wrote the text that he assigned
students to buy" [syn: text, text
edition, schoolbook, school text]
[ant: trade
book]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- /ˈtɛkst.bʊk/
Noun
- a formal manual of instruction in a specific subject, especially one for use in schools or colleges.
Translations
- Arabic:
- Bosnian: udžbenik
- Chinese: 教科書, 教科书 (jiàokēshū)
- Croatian: udžbenik
- Czech: učebnice
- Danish: lærebog
- Dutch: studieboek
- Finnish: oppikirja
- French: livre de classe
- West Frisian: skriuwboek
- German: Lehrbuch
- Hungarian: tankönyv
- Italian: libro di testo
- Japanese: 教科書 (きょうかしょ, kyōkasho)
- Korean: 교과서 (gyogwaseo)
- Malay: buku teks
- Portuguese: compêndio
- Russian: учебник (učébnik)
- Serbian:
- Slovak: učebnica
- Spanish: libro de texto
- Swedish: lärobok
Adjective
textbook- of or pertaining to textbooks or their styles.
- textbook examples
- dealing with a subject in a pragmatic or fundamental way, as
books or persons do.
- a textbook approach to introductory psychology
- having the typical characteristics of some class of phenomenon.
- a textbook case of mistaken identity
Extensive Definition
A textbook is a manual of instruction or a
standard book in any branch of study. They are produced according
to the demand of educational institutions. Although most textbooks
are only published in printed format, many are now available as
online electronic –books, or e-books.
History
Texts specifically designated for educational purposes were written in ancient Greece. The modern textbook has its roots in the standardization made possible by the printing press. Johann Gutenberg himself may have printed editions of Ars Minor, a schoolbook on Latin grammar by Aelius Donatus. Early textbooks were used by tutors, teachers, who used the books as instructional aids (e.g. alphabet books) and individuals involved in autodidacticism.Compulsory education and the subsequent growth of
schooling in Europe led to the printing of many standardized texts
for children. Textbooks have become the primary teaching instrument
for most children since the 19th century. Two textbooks of
historical significance in United States schooling were the 18th
century New England Primer and the 19th century McGuffey
Readers.
As of 2007, the four largest college textbook
publishers in the United States were Pearson, Cengage Learning,
McGraw-Hill, and Houghton-Mifflin. In addition, other large
publishers include EMC Paradigm; John Wiley & Sons, Inc.; Jones
and Bartlett; Bedford, Freeman, and Worth Publishing Group; F. A.
Davis; W. W. Norton; and others.
Technological advances are constantly changing
America’s higher education landscape, including textbooks. Online
and digital materials are making it increasingly easy for students
to access materials other than the traditional print textbook.
Students now have access to electronic and PDF books, online
tutoring systems and video lectures.
Most notably, an increasing number of authors are
foregoing commercial publishers and offering their textbooks under
a creative
commons or other open license. The New York Times recently
endorsed the use of free, open, digital textbooks in the editorial
"That
textbook costs how much?"
Market
The "Broken Market"
The textbooks market does not operate according to the same economic principles as a normal consumer market. First, the end consumers (students) do not select the product, and the people choosing the product (faculty) do not purchase the product. Therefore, price is removed from the purchasing decision, giving the producer (publishers) disproportionate market power to set prices high.This fundamental flaw in the market is blamed as
the primary reason that prices are out of control. The term "Broken
Market" first appeared in Economist James Koch's analysis of the
market commissioned by the Advisory Committee on Student Financial
Assistance.http://www.ed.gov/about/bdscomm/list/acsfa/kochreport.pdf
This situation is exacerbated by the lack of
competition in the textbook market. A recent wave of consolidation
reduced the number of major textbook companies to just three:
Pearson, Cengage Learning and McGraw-Hill. Consequently, there is
less competition than there used to be, and the high cost of
startup keeps new companies from entering.
New editions & the used book market
Students seek relief from rising prices through the purchase of used copies of textbooks, which tend to be less expensive. Most college bookstores offer used copies of textbooks at 75% of the new price. Most bookstores will also buy used copies back from students at the end of a term if the book is going to be re-used at the school. Bookstores typically offer 50% of the new price. Books that are not being re-used at the school are often purchased by an off-campus wholesaler for 0-30% of the new cost, for distribution to other bookstores where the books will be sold.Students who look beyond the campus bookstore can
typically find lower prices. With the ISBN or title, author and
edition, most textbooks can be located through online used book
sellers or retailers.
Most leading textbook companies publish a new
edition every 3 or 4 years, more frequently in math & science.
A study conducted by The Student PIRGs found that a new edition
costs 12% more than a new copy of previous edition, and 58% more
than a used copy of the previous edition.]
Textbook publishers maintain these new editions are driven by
faculty demand. The Student PIRGs' study
[http://www.maketextbooksaffordable.org/newsroom.asp?id2=11993
found that 76% of faculty said new editions were justified “half of
the time or less” and 40% said they were justified “rarely” or
“never.”
The Student PIRGs also point out that recent
emphasis on electronic textbooks, or "eTextbooks," does not always
save students money. Even though the book costs less up-front, the
student will not recover any of the cost through resale.]
Bundling
Another publishing industry practice that has been highly criticized is "bundling," or shrink-wrapping supplemental items into a textbook. Supplemental items range from CD-ROMs and workbooks to online passcodes and bonus material. Students do not always have the option to purchase these items separately, and often the one-time-use supplements destroy the resale value of the textbook.[http://www.maketextbooksaffordable.org/newsroom.asp?id2=28414According to The Student PIRGs, the typical
bundled textbook is 10%-50% more than an unbundled textbook, and
65% of professors said they “rarely” or “never” use the bundled
items in their courses.http://www.maketextbooksaffordable.org/newsroom.asp?id2=11993
The 2005 GAO Report found that the production of
these supplemental items was the primary cause of rapidly
increasing prices:
While publishers, retailers, and wholesalers all
play a role in textbook pricing, the primary factor contributing to
increases in the price of textbooks has been the increased
investment publishers have made in new products to enhance
instruction and learning...While wholesalers, retailers, and others
do not question the quality of these materials, they have expressed
concern that the publishers’ practice of packaging supplements with
a textbook to sell as one unit limits the opportunity students have
to purchase less expensive used books....If publishers continue to
increase these investments, particularly in technology, the cost to
produce a textbook is likely to continue to increase in the
future.http://www.gao.gov/docsearch/abstract.php?rptno=GAO-05-806
Bundling has also been used as a means of
segmenting the used book market. Each combination of a textbook and
supplemental items receives a separate ISBN. A single textbook
could therefore have dozens of ISBNs that denote different
combinations of supplements packaged with that particular book.
When a bookstore attempts to track down used copies of textbooks,
they will search for the ISBN the course instructor orders, which
will locate only a subset of the copies of the textbook.
Pending legislation on the state and federal
level that seeks to limit the practice of bundling, by requiring
publishers to offer all components separately.http://www.maketextbooksaffordable.org/newsroom.asp?id2=36865
Publishers have testified in favor of bills including this
provision,
http://www.leg.state.co.us/CLICS/CLICS2008A/commsumm.nsf/58e6d054c29cbe1287256e5f00670a70/78f66284de2d10b28725740400734883?OpenDocument
but only in the case that the provision exempts the loosely defined
category of "integrated textbooks." The Federal billhttp://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/bdquery/z?d110:h.r.04137:
only exempts 3rd party materials in integrated textbooks, however
publisher lobbyists have attempted to create a loophole through
this definition in state bills.][http://www.leg.state.co.us/clics/clics2008a/csl.nsf/billsummary/6A69934AE701F1788725738C0065864E
Price Disclosure
Given that problem of high textbook prices is linked to the "broken" economics of the market, requiring publishers to disclose textbook prices to faculty is a solution pursued by a number of legislatures.http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2007/04/13/textbooks By inserting price into sales interactions, this regulation will supposedly make the economic forces operate more normally.No data suggests that this is in fact true.
However, The Student PIRGs have found that publishers actively
withhold pricing information from faculty, making it difficult to
obtain. Their most recent study found that 77% of faculty say
publisher sales representatives do not volunteer prices, and only
40% got an answer when they directly asked. Furthermore, the study
found that 23% of faculty rated publisher websites as “informative
and easy to use” and less than half said they typically listed the
price.
The US House passed language in the 2008 Higher
Education Act reauthorization bill that would require price
disclosure.][http://stingyscholar.blogspot.com/2008/02/house-passes-legislation-to-make.html
Legislation requiring price disclosure has passed in
Connecticut],
Washington[http://www.leg.state.or.us/07reg/measpdf/sb0300.dir/sb0365.b.pdf
],
Minnesota[http://www.revisor.leg.state.mn.us/revisor/pages/search_status/status_detail.php?b=House&f=HF1063&ssn=0&y=2007
, Oregon],
Arizona[http://www.azleg.gov/DocumentsForBill.asp?Bill_Number=1175
, Oklahoma ] and
Colorado[http://www.leg.state.co.us/clics/clics2008a/csl.nsf/billsummary/6A69934AE701F1788725738C0065864E
. Publishers are currently supporting price disclosure mandates,
though they insist that the "suggested retail price"] should be
disclosed, rather than the actual price the publisher would get for
the book.
Used textbook market
Once a textbook is purchased from a retailer for the first time, there are several ways a student can sell his/her textbooks back at the end of the semester. Students can sell to 1) the college/university bookstore; 2) fellow students; or 3) a number of online Web sites or student swap service.Campus buyback
As for buyback on a specific campus, faculty decisions largely determine how much a student receives. If a professor chooses to use the same book the following semester, even if it is a custom text, designed specifically for an individual instructor, bookstores often buy the book back. A Government Accountability Office (GAO) report found that, generally, if a book is in good condition and will be used on the campus again the next term, bookstores will pay students 50 percent of the original price paid. If the bookstore has not received a faculty order for the book at the end of the term and the edition is still current, they may offer students the wholesale price of the book, which could range from 5 to 35 percent of the new retail price, according to the GAO report.When students resell their textbooks during
campus “buyback” periods, these textbooks are often sold into the
national used textbook distribution chain. If a textbook is not
going to be used on campus for the next semester of courses then
many times the college bookstore will sell that book to a national
used book company. The used book company then resells the book to
another college bookstore. Finally, that book is sold as used to a
student at another college at a price that is typically 75% of the
new book price. At each step, a markup is applied to the book to
enable the respective companies to continue to operate.
Student to student sales
Students can also sell or trade textbooks among themselves. After completing a course, sellers will often seek out members of the next enrolling class, people who are likely to be interested in purchasing the required books. This may be done by posting flyers to advertise the sale of the books or simply soliciting individuals who are shopping in the college bookstore for the same titles. Many larger schools have independent websites set up for the purpose of facilitating such trade. These often operate much like digital classified ads, enabling students to list their items for sale and browse for those they wish to acquire.Textbook exchanges
In response to escalating textbook prices, limited competition, and to provide a more efficient system to connect buyers and sellers together, online textbook exchanges were developed. Most of today's sites handle buyer and seller payments, and usually deduct a small commission only after the sale is completed.'Rental Programs
According to Nicole Allen of The Student PIRGs, renting is “the best short-term” way to lower textbook costs.[http://www.kansascity.com/201/story/501408.html PIRG data found that students using existing textbook rental services pay $130 to $240 per year plus some course materials, while students attending public four-year colleges currently pay an average of $800 to $900 to purchase their textbooks each year. http://www.maketextbooksaffordable.org/newsroom.asp?id2=18107More than 20 schools offer textbook rental
programs, including The University of Wisconsin-Whitewaterhttp://www.uww.edu/stdrsces/textbook/index.html
and Southern Illinois University http://www.siue.edu/MUC/textbooks.html.
Open Textbooks
The latest trend in textbooks is "open textbooks." An open textbook is a free, openly-licensed textbook offered online by its author(s). A number of these textbooks already exist, according to PIRG, and are being used at schools ranging from Caltech to Harvard.http://www.maketextbooksaffordable.org/statement.asp?id2=37633#whatAlthough the largest question seems to be who is
going to pay to write them, several state policies suggest that
public investment in open textbooks might make sense.
http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/pub/07-08/bill/asm/ab_2251-2300/ab_2261_bill_20080221_introduced.htmlhttp://www.utahsbr.edu/pdfs/LegAppSum/2007_Session_Appropriations_Summary_Mar_9.pdf
PIRG seeks to build support for this idea through
a statement 1000 professors signed.http://www.maketextbooksaffordable.org/statement.asp?id2=37614
International Market Pricing
Similar to the issue of re-importation of pharmaceuticals into the US market, the GAO report[4] also highlights a similar phenomenon in textbook distribution:Retailers and publishers have expressed concern
about the reimportation of lower-priced textbooks from
international locations.
Specifically, they cited the ability students
have to purchase books from online distribution channels outside
the United States at lower prices, which may result in a loss of
sales for U.S. retailers. Additionally, the availability of
lower-priced textbooks through these channels has heightened
distrust and frustration among students regarding textbook prices,
and college stores find it difficult to explain why their textbook
prices are higher, according to the National Association of College
Stores. Retailers and publishers have also been concerned that some
U.S. retailers may have engaged in reimportation on a large scale
by ordering textbooks for entire courses at lower prices from
international distribution channels. Concerned about the effects of
differential pricing on college stores, the National Association of
College Stores has called on publishers to stop the practice of
selling textbooks at lower prices outside the United States.
Publishers told us that they intend for the
textbooks they distribute in other countries to be sold for use in
those countries, not for resale to the United States, and so have
taken recent actions to limit large-scale reimportation. Most of
the publishers with whom we spoke say they are particularly
concerned about the actions of foreign distributors and U.S.
retailers that may result in large-scale reimportation of
textbooks. As a result, publishers told us they have taken recent
steps to limit the reimportation of textbooks in large quantities.
Specifically, publishers told us that they have strengthened their
agreements with foreign wholesalers to prevent the large-scale sale
of U.S. textbooks back to the United States. Some publishers also
said they have made an agreement with an online retailer outside
the United States to limit the number of copies of a given textbook
that can be delivered to a single U.S. address in one order.
Because these measures target large-scale reimportation of U.S.
textbooks Publishers Have Taken Recent Steps to Limit the Reentry
of Their Textbooks into the U.S. from international sources at
lower prices, they will not prevent U.S. students from purchasing
single copies of textbooks from international sources.
Production
Cost distribution
According to the National Association of College Stores, typically 12% of the price of a new book goes to the author's royalties, 23% goes to the store, 32% pays for the publisher's paper, printing, binding, and editorial costs, and another 32% is taken by the publisher to cover expenses such as marketing and administration, with the remainder going to company profits. Bookstores and used-book vendors profit from the resale of textbooks on the used market, with publishers only earning profits on sales of new textbooks.Research
According to a U.S. General Accounting Office (GAO) study[2] published July 2005:Following closely behind annual increases in
tuition and fees at postsecondary institutions, college textbook
and supply prices have risen at twice the rate of annual inflation
over the last two decades.
Rising at an average of 6 percent each year since
academic year 1987-1988, compared with overall average price
increases of 3 percent per year, college textbook and supply prices
trailed tuition and fee increases, which averaged 7 percent per
year. Since December of 1986, textbook and supply prices have
nearly tripled, increasing by 186 percent, while tuition and fees
increased by 240 percent and overall prices grew by 72 percent.
While increases in textbook and supply prices have followed
increases in tuition and fees, the cost of textbooks and supplies
for degree-seeking students as a percentage of tuition and fees
varies by the type of institution attended. For example, the
average estimated cost of books and supplies per first-time,
full-time student for academic year 2003-2004 was $898 at 4-year
public institutions, or about 26 percent of the cost of tuition and
fees. At 2-year public institutions, where low-income students are
more likely to pursue a degree program and tuition and fees are
lower, the average estimated cost of books and supplies per
first-time, full-time student was $886 in academic year 2003-2004,
representing almost three-quarters of the cost of tuition and
fees.
According to the 2nd edition of a study[3] by the
United States Public Interest Research Group (US PIRG) published in
February 2005:
Textbook prices are increasing at more than four
times the inflation rate for all finished goods, according to the
Bureau of Labor Statistics Producer Price Index. The wholesale
prices charged by textbook publishers have jumped 62 percent since
1994, while prices charged for all finished goods increased only 14
percent. Similarly, the prices charged by publishers for general
books increased just 19 percent during the same time period.
According to the 2007 edition of the College
Board’s Trend in College Pricing Report published October
2007:
College costs continue to rise and federal
student aid has shown slower growth when adjusted for inflation,
while textbooks, as a percentage of total college costs, have
remained steady at about 5 percent.
K-12 textbooks
In most K-12 public schools, a local school board votes on which textbooks to purchase from a selection of books that have been approved by the state Department of Education. Teachers receive the books to give to the students for each subject. Teachers are usually not required to use textbooks, however, and many prefer to use other materials instead. Textbook publishing in the U.S. is a business primarily aimed at large states, especially California and Texas. This is due to state purchasing controls over the books. The Texas State Board of Education spends in excess of $600 million annually on its central purchasing of textbooks.In grundskolan (basic school), the Swedish
equivalent of K-12, textbooks are paid for by the school
system.
High school
In recent years, high school textbooks of United States history have come under increasing criticism. Authors such as Howard Zinn (A People's History of the United States), Gilbert Sewall (Textbook Publishing), and James W. Loewen (Lies My Teacher Told Me) make the claim that U.S. History textbooks contain mythical untruths and omissions, which paint a whitewashed picture that bears little resemblance to what most students learn in universities. Inaccurately retelling history, through textbooks or other literature, has been practiced in many societies, from ancient Rome to the Soviet Union. History textbooks are not subjected to review by professional academics, nor can authorship of a high school textbook be used to advance an academic toward tenure at a university. The content of history textbooks thus lies entirely outside the academic forum of fact and social science and is instead determined by the political forces of state adoption boards and ideological pressure groups.Science textbooks have been the source of ongoing
debates and have come under scrutiny from several organizations.
The presentation or inclusion of controversial scientific material
has been debated in several court cases. Poorly designed textbooks
have been cited as contributing to declining grades in mathematics
and science in the United States and organizations such as the AAAS
have criticized the layout, presentation, and amount of material
given in textbooks.
Discussions of textbooks have been included in
the Creation and evolution in public education debate. The Smith v.
Board of School Commissioners of Mobile County brought forward a
debate about secular humanist values being presented in
textbooks.
In his popular book Surely You're Joking, Mr.
Feynman!, the late physics Nobel Prize laureate Richard P. Feynman
described his devastating experiences as he once sat in a
commission that evaluated science textbooks. At some instances,
there were nonsensical examples to illustrate physical phenomena;
then a company sent — for reasons of timing — a textbook that
contained blank pages, which even got good critiques. Feynman
himself experienced veritable attempts of bribery.
Higher education
In U.S. institutions of higher education, textbooks are chosen by the professor teaching the course, or by the department as a whole. Students buy their own copies of their books. In institutions of higher education, students pay for textbooks themselves, although higher education in Sweden is free of charge otherwise.With higher education costs on the rise, many
students are becoming sensitive to every aspect of college pricing,
including textbooks. The 2005 Government Accountability Office
report on college textbooks said that since the 1980s, textbook and
supply prices have risen twice the rate of inflation in the past
two decades [1]. A 2005 PIRG study found that textbooks cost
students $900 per year on textbooks, and that prices rose four
times the rate of inflation over the past decade.http://www.maketextbooksaffordable.org/newsroom.asp?id2=15618
A June 2007 Advisory Committee on Student Financial Assistance
(ACSFA) report, “Turn the Page,” reported that the average U.S.
student spends $700-$1000 per year on textbooks.http://www.ed.gov/about/bdscomm/list/acsfa/edlite-txtbkstudy.html
While many groups have assigned blame to
publishers, bookstores or faculty, the ACSFA also found that
assigning blame to any one party—faculty, colleges, bookstores or
publishers—for current textbook costs is unproductive and without
merit. The report called on all parties within the industry to work
together to find productive solutions, which included a movement
toward open
textbooks and other lower-cost digital solutions.
See also
- Kanawha County textbook controversy
- Wikibooks http://wikibooks.org/ - A sister project to Wikipedia whose goal is to create textbooks.
- Casebook - A special type of textbook used in law schools in the United States.
References
- Slatalla, Michelle. "Knowledge Is Priceless but Textbooks Are Not" New York Times, Aug 30, 2007
External links
- National Association of College Stores
- Make Textbooks Affordable The Student PIRG's campaign to make textbooks affordable.
- Research on textbooks prices.
- Textbook LineA textbook seller sharing his experience and know-how
- How Textbooks Get Made: Confessions of a Textbook Editor
- History Textbook Controversies in Japan
- Improving the Use of Elementary Social Studies Textbooks
- High School Biology Textbooks Do Not Meet National Standards
- The Textbook League
textbook in Danish: Lærebog
textbook in German: Lehrbuch
textbook in Esperanto: Lernolibro
textbook in French: Manuel scolaire
textbook in Italian: Libro di testo
textbook in Latvian: Mācību grāmata
textbook in Japanese: 教科書
textbook in Polish: Podręcznik szkolny
textbook in Russian: Учебник
textbook in Simple English: Textbook
textbook in Swedish: Lärobok
textbook in Vietnamese: Sách giáo khoa
textbook in Chinese: 教科書
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abecedarium, abecedary, alphabet book,
battledore, casebook, exercise book,
gradus, grammar, hornbook, manual, manual of instruction,
primer, reader, schoolbook, speller, spelling book, t, text, workbook