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Classes without textbooks? More colleges are giving it a try

Since 2010, an effort at Temple University to move away from the use of traditional - and often expensive print textbooks - has saved students $1 million. Temple is far from an outlier. Similar efforts are underway at Rutgers, Rowan and other schools.

Temple University physical geology professor Natalie Flynn talks to her students about using a free website (on smart board) instead of a textbook, on the  first day of class Aug. 26, 2019. She is using open resource materials in the classroom as part of a program at Temple that encourages professors to write their own textbooks or use other free resources so students don't have to buy expensive textbooks.
Temple University physical geology professor Natalie Flynn talks to her students about using a free website (on smart board) instead of a textbook, on the first day of class Aug. 26, 2019. She is using open resource materials in the classroom as part of a program at Temple that encourages professors to write their own textbooks or use other free resources so students don't have to buy expensive textbooks.Read moreTOM GRALISH / Staff Photographer

When Natalie Flynn surveyed students in her Temple University intro to physical geology classes, she found half weren’t buying the textbook she used.

Many couldn’t afford it.

“We were developing a very, very uneven playing field in the classroom,” she said.

That’s when Flynn decided to phase out print textbooks from as many of her courses as possible. She’s part of a small but growing effort at Temple to use or create online materials, including textbooks that are openly licensed and vetted — and perhaps most important, free to students.

Temple officials estimate the effort, which began in 2011 and has gotten buy-in from nearly 90 of the university’s 3,850 full- and part-time professors, has saved students $1 million.

In the last year, Temple in collaboration with its library and university press began giving professors $5,000 stipends and support to write their own free, open texts. Eight projects are underway via “North Broad Press,” including a book being written by the criminal justice department for its intro course.

“We put it through peer review, copy editing, and production,” said Annie Johnson, Temple’s library publishing specialist.

Many other colleges locally and nationally are taking similar steps to ease the burden of textbook costs, which can exceed $1,000 a year, according to some estimates.

“The goal is to try to create as much open content as possible,” said Steven Bell, Temple’s associate university librarian. “This isn’t something that happens overnight. This is a long-term project, but we are seeing a revolution.”

The move toward “Open Educational Resources” comes as print textbook sales continue to drop and rentals and e-book sales increase.

“We’ve seen textbook sales decrease by approximately 10% per year as students switch from buying new and used textbooks to using rentals, buying from alternative sources, and embracing digital subscriptions,” said Lori Friedman, a spokesperson for Lehigh University. “Textbook rentals now account for about 30% of our sales.”

Some states, including New York, are funding efforts to make open resources more available to students. In Pennsylvania, academic libraries are pushing for state funding, as well as educating and training faculty about open resources, Bell said.

“Some ask why should faculty give away their intellectual content for free,” Bell said. “For many faculty, it’s a social justice issue, one of access.”

At Franklin and Marshall College in Lancaster, the student government in a letter last April implored faculty to address high textbook costs that affect students inequitably, citing “a great many cases in which students are either dissuaded from joining a class because of the textbook costs, develop an increased financial burden because they buy them regardless, or have to go to great lengths to develop alternative methods for acquiring the necessary materials.”

The college, said Christopher Barnes, scholarly communications librarian, is trying to help. Last spring, F&M handed out its first-ever textbook affordability awards to faculty who best used open resources. Barnes’ team also has offered faculty help in finding free alternatives to print texts.

“The greatest resource has been the level of support throughout campus, from the provost and president on down,” he said.

Some educators caution that while they support making more material free to students, Open Educational Resources vary in quality among disciplines, as well as how up-to-date they are and how much support they offer for faculty and students using them.

“Some OERs are great and some may not be helpful,” said Regan A.R. Gurung, a professor of psychology at Oregon State University. “The bottom line here is that OERs are extremely promising, but we’ve got to make sure that in our assessments of OER that we are being true to the students. Just giving them something free if it’s not the same quality really in the long run is not doing our students a service.”

Rutgers University encourages faculty to explore and evaluate OERs the same way they would a commercial textbook, said Zara Wilkinson, reference and instruction librarian at Rutgers Camden.

“We also encourage them to think about other content they can provide to students that might not be OER,” such as library resources, she said.

Rutgers in 2016 began offering faculty $1,000 incentives to reduce reliance on print textbooks in their classes. Since then, the university estimates 19,300 students at its campuses in Camden, Newark, and New Brunswick have benefited and saved $3.5 million, Wilkinson said.

Rowan University in Glassboro, N.J., earlier this year gave $2,000 grants to faculty to move toward open resources, said Sean Hendricks, an assistant vice president. The university estimates students are saving $120,000.

With more faculty coming on board in 2020, students could save as much as $1.2 million, he said. More than 4,200 students last year took College Comp II, which will be using an open textbook next year. Students could save a quarter of a million in that subject alone, Hendricks said.

Manor College in Jenkintown surveyed more than 50 faculty last fall from a range of disciplines and found that most use open educational resources. The majority said they also use a print textbook, said Cherie Crosby, dean of education and professional studies.

“It’s a progression,” she said. “I don’t know if we’ll be completely OER, but we’re moving toward that.”

An individual print textbook for some subjects can cost $200 or more. Students have found ways around the tab. They buy used versions or previous editions. They rent or borrow. They opt for e-books. They take pictures of key pages with their phones. They even download PDFs of pirated versions.

“There’s a massive email chain for a pirated version of Bio 1,” Philip Mattes, a student in Flynn’s geology class, pointed out.

Mattes. 22, a senior environmental science major from Scranton, said Temple’s Class of 2020 Facebook page was filled with students offering to sell old textbooks at the beginning of the semester.

“I saw multiple versions of the same book that I bought for $150,” he said. “Someone just sold it for $30.”

Flynn told students they wouldn’t have to buy a book for her class. Instead, she gave them the URL for a free book, written by Salt Lake Community College faculty.

“It has a lot of nice interactive features to it," such as videos and animations, she said.

Senior Jem Palma, of Cheltenham, was pleased.

“I’m used to having to pay for not only textbooks but access codes for all of my classes, even clickers for attendance,” she said. “So this is great.”

Flynn said she’s gotten print textbooks out of all of her general education courses, which enroll students from a mix of majors. Sometimes, there’s no way to avoid a book for higher-level classes, she said. For those, she keeps multiple copies for students to borrow.

“Even as majors, I don’t think they need to own it,” she said.

With the help of a coach from Temple’s Center for the Advancement of Teaching, Donald Wargo, an associate professor of economics, is writing one of the new textbooks for a course he’ll teach next year on financial literacy.

The book will cover topics such as how to buy a house, take out a car loan, find a job, and save for retirement. Wargo came up with a table of contents and approach. Under each chapter, he wrote 10 to 15 sub topics and arranged them in a logical order. Now, he’s writing. He aims to finish four pages a day.

Because he’s taught for a while and knows the topic, he hasn’t had to do much research, which saves time, he said. Students will save money. Comparable books on financial literacy run $125 or $150, he said.

“All of us — professors — feel that students are overcharged on textbooks, quite frankly," he said.

Even among Temple professors who aren’t officially part of the textbook affordability project, the use of textbooks is waning. During his opening class this semester on The American Economy, assistant professor William Newman told students the names of textbooks that contain information that will be discussed in class.

“Nowhere do I say they’re required,” he told students. “Most of the information you’re going to need for the test is going to be on the PowerPoint slides I show you."