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 Don't Buy That Textbook, Download It Free  Jerome A. Pollos/Coeur d'Alene
Press, via Associated Press

Ashley Kelly, a freshman at North Idaho College, shopped for textbooks at
the start of the fall semester last month.

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    By NOAM 
COHEN<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/c/noam_cohen/index.html?inline=nyt-per>
Published: September 14, 2008

SQUINT hard, and textbook publishers can look a lot like drug makers. They
both make money from doing obvious good — healing, educating — and they both
have customers who may be willing to sacrifice their last pennies to buy
what these companies are selling.

It is that fact that can suddenly turn the good guys into bad guys,
especially when the prices they charge are compared with generic drugs or
ordinary books. A final similarity, in the words of R. Preston McAfee, an
economics professor at Cal Tech, is that both textbook publishers and drug
makers benefit from the problem of "moral hazards" — that is, the doctor who
prescribes medication and the professor who requires a textbook don't have
to bear the cost and thus usually don't think twice about it.

"The person who pays for the book, the parent or the student, doesn't choose
it," he said. "There is this sort of creep. It's always O.K. to add $5."

In protest of what he says are textbooks' intolerably high prices — and the
dumbing down of their content to appeal to the widest possible market —
Professor McAfee has put his introductory economics textbook online free. He
says he most likely could have earned a $100,000 advance on the book had he
gone the traditional publishing route, and it would have had a list price
approaching $200.

"This market is not working very well — except for the shareholders in the
textbook publishers," he said. "We have lots of knowledge, but we are not
getting it out."

•

While still on the periphery of the academic world, his volume,
"Introduction to Economic Analysis," is being used at some colleges,
including 
Harvard<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/h/harvard_university/index.html?inline=nyt-org>and
Claremont-McKenna, a private liberal arts college in Claremont,
Calif..

And that, in a nutshell, is a big difference between textbook publishers and
the drug makers. Sure, there have been scientists with Professor McAfee's
attitude — Jonas Salk was asked who owned the patent to the polio vaccine
and scoffed: "Could you patent the sun?"

For the textbook makers, however, it is a different story. Professor McAfee
allows anyone to download a Word file or PDF of his book, while also taking
advantage of the growing marketplace for print on demand.

In true economist fashion, he has allowed two companies, Lulu and Flat World
Knowledge, to sell print versions of his textbook, with Lulu charging $11
and Flat World anywhere from $19.95 to $59.95. As he said on his Web site,
he is keeping the multiple options to "further constrain their ability to
engage in monopoly pricing."

A broader effort to publish free textbooks is called Connexions, which was
the brainchild of Richard G. Baraniuk, an engineering professor at Rice
University<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/r/rice_university/index.html?inline=nyt-org>,
which has received $6 million from the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation.
In addition to being a repository for textbooks covering a wide range of
subjects and educational levels, its ethic is taken from the digital music
world, he said — rip, burn and mash.

Unlike other projects that share course materials, notably OpenCourseWare at
M.I.T.<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/m/massachusetts_institute_of_technology/index.html?inline=nyt-org>,
Connexions uses broader Creative Commons license allowing students and
teachers to rewrite and edit material as long as the originator is credited.
Teachers put up material, called "modules," and then mix and match their
work with others' to create a collection of material for students. "We are
changing textbook publishing from a pipeline to an ecosystem," he said.

Like Professor McAfee, Professor Baraniuk says he decided to share his
material while writing a textbook.

"If I had finished my own book, I would have finished a couple years ago,"
he said. "It would have taken five years. It would have spent five years in
print and sold 2,000 copies." Instead, he said, he posted it on the Web site
and there have been 2.8 million page views of his textbook, "Signals and
Systems," including a translation into Spanish.

Connexions is strongest in statistics and electrical engineering — areas
with technologically advanced students and a greater need to update material
than, say, works on medieval history. He said there were 850,000 unique
users a month, with more than 50 percent of the traffic originating from
outside the United States.

"It's anyone's guess as to when we will break through," he said.

One of the most popular Connexions contributors is Sunil Kumar Singh, a
production engineer from New Delhi who works for the Oil and Natural Gas
Corporation of India. He explains physics for precollege students, using the
feedback from readers who e-mail from all over the world.

"It is a two-way process," he wrote in an e-mail message. "I, for one, have
experienced difficulty during my formal study years with the best of
textbooks around." He said the new system "gives me opportunity to respond
to the editing needs all the time."

•

While these open-source projects slowly grow, the textbook publishers have
entered the online publishing field with CourseSmart, a service owned by
five publishers. In service for only a year, CourseSmart allows students to
subscribe to a textbook and read it online, with the option of highlighting
and printing out portions of it at a time.

The price is generally half of what a print book costs, a sum that can still
appear staggering — an introductory economics textbook costs around $90
online. (This semester, a student has the option of downloading a book as
well — but it is an either-or choice: read online or download to a
computer.)

Frank Lyman, executive vice president at CourseSmart, said that the company
was created in response to changing times. "There wasn't a lot of content
and it was in a bunch of formats," he said of past efforts by publishers.
"There never was any momentum."

There are 4,000 textbooks currently available — about a third of the market
— but the goal is to cover "50 percent of the backpack." Without being
specific, he said that tens of thousands of textbooks have been read online
and that 1,240 separate institutions have a student who has made at least
one e-textbook purchase.

While conceding that open-source textbooks would take hold in a few subject
areas, Mr. Lyman stressed that the current system would still prevail and
that collaborative works online would have a hard time winning an audience.

"Of all the things that are changing, one thing is consistent — the
authorship model," he said.

"What doesn't worry me is that leading experts will say I will write my own
damn book and people will read it."

 More Articles in Technology
»<http://www.nytimes.com/pages/technology/index.html> A
version of this article appeared in print on September 15, 2008, on page C3
of the New York edition.

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