The textbook scam…and a radical idea from a college lecturer

Jan Gerston
2 min readJul 9, 2021
Photo by Iñaki del Olmo on Unsplash

Years ago, a colleague, an electrical engineer, was angered by the speciousness of his daughter’s elementary school textbooks. The textbook cited incorrect data about temperatures of stars. It was apparent, from a quick read, that the writers merely randomly assigned temperature ranges to the star colors. Bad science, and he was justifiably angry.

Fast forward a few years. A fellow technical writer interviewed at a well-known publisher of elementary school textbooks. She described the office as a white-collar sweatshop, saying, “Whoever was left standing at the end of the interview got the job.”

For a decade I was the coordinator and adviser in a graduate engineering program. Even at this rarefied level, the scam continues. Professors revise a textbook, making minor changes, and thereby rendering the previous edition obsolete. And thereby quashing the resale market. And thereby requiring students in the next semester to pay top dollar for the new edition.

Not insignificant. The average price of a new graduate-level engineering textbook is $250. And so it goes.

What a scam!

To make things work — and it’s like something out of Steven Leavitt’s Freakonomics— textbook publishers add feedstock to this runaway nuclear reaction by sending to professors — gratis — evaluation copies (also called desk copies), thus enticing profs to prescribe the new drug…um, rather adopt the new textbook.

Stop the madness!

A lecturer in mechanical engineering proposed a revolutionary idea: make his courses textbook-agnostic.

Genius!

In other words, it would be the student’s responsibility to learn the general principles, using whatever textbook or method they chose. Let’s face it: the concepts of thermodynamics and fluid dynamics have not changed much in the past 100 years. Even modern physics (quantum mechanics and physics of solid state) dates to the 1930s.

In all fairness, some faculty eschew textbooks altogether, instead preparing class notes for purchase.

And graduate students, at least, spend at much more time teaching themselves concepts in early morning or late evening study groups or alone as they spend in class. Even undergraduates are left to their own devices. (Several undergraduate computer science students lamented privately, “I did not spend all this money to go to [enormous state research university] to teach myself computer science.”)

The plan —

  • empower students to learn fundamental concepts by whatever method they choose, even a superseded textbook;
  • assign relevant homework;
  • reinforce the concepts in class;
  • administer fair examinations;
  • treat students fairly; and
  • don’t treat students as cash cows

Writer Quincy Larson, wrote in 2017 how one university is rewarding faculty who embraced open educational resource textbooks for high-enrollment courses.

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Jan Gerston

Cyclist, hiker, textile enthusiast, Anglophile. Domestic goddess-without-portfolio. Fan of any classic music genre, Baroque to rock. Owned by 2 dogs + 2 cats.