Covering a wide range of disciplines, open textbooks are freely available, under an unrestricted license, to download and print in various file formats from several web sites and OER (open educational resources) repositories. Many organizations provide access to open textbooks through their websites. Several file formats are made available for open textbooks; typical formats are: HTML, Adobe PDF, and plain text.
An open textbook is a body of educational content that is openly available over the web, by mail, or in a book store with a copyright that allows copying and distribution or, with the most open copyrights, allows modification of the content and even sale.
Open textbooks are more affordable than commercially available textbooks; this permits student education budgets to stretch further, thus giving students greater flexibility in their education choices. Furthermore, faculty can readily customize open textbooks to better meet their local teaching and learning needs. Open textbooks provide pricing, flexibility and customization advantages that commercially available textbooks currently do not provide, customize and update open textbooks.
There is essentially no difference in the faculty vetting process carried out for open textbooks, compared to commercially published textbooks. As with all textbooks, open textbooks vary in quality. Faculty selection of open textbooks, as in the selection of commercial textbooks, is often a collaborative process driven by departmental faculty. The quality of a particular open textbook can be determined in several ways: 1) recommendations by faculty who have used the open textbook, 2) vetting by faculty reviewers, and 3) faculty use of review guidelines created to standardize the open textbook review process. Some OER sites (e.g., Connexions) have a review system built-in.
Most open textbooks are available for viewing on a computer via the Internet or as a document that can be downloaded for offline viewing or printing by students. Faculty can provide their students with the webpage address where students can access the open textbook. Alternatively, several print-on-demand services are available via the Internet that will provide students printed copies for a minimal fee. Additionally, campus bookstores and print shops can provide printed copies of the open textbook for sale. Print-on-demand services will soon be available as well.
Open textbook authors are no different than commercial textbook authors, with one exception. Open textbook authors share their knowledge with students freely in order to increase accessibility, and significantly reduce cost to the student.
“Open textbook projects rely on volunteers who are committed to a vision of providing high-quality, freely available textbooks to the worldwide community of educators and learners. Most of the projects mentioned in this module have information on their site on how you can participate in their project.” (from OER Commons Tutorial)
Some open textbooks were originally commercial books whose copyright has run out or whose copyright was returned to the author who has put it under an open copyright. Some authors were hired by a school or foundation to write open textbooks for some particular reason or group of students. Any author writing an open textbook should consult Creative Commons. Most authors use their attribution only or attribution-share-alike license.
Overall, the introduction of open textbooks can create more opportunities for faculty who wish to publish commercial material, because faculty who wish to write commercial (for sale) material will be able to leverage open content by providing commercial (for sale) addendums to that open content.
If the textbooks that are available for sale have a reasonable price, there will be little impact. However, if you can buy a printed version of an open textbook for $20 when the equivalent commercial version sells for $120, it will cause people to change.
Availability of open content and textbooks can potentially increase class enrollments by providing students with free (online) or low-cost (print-on-demand) open content. Thus, students who have traditionally not been able to enroll in a course because the textbook cost is too high, will no longer encounter that barrier.
Students traditionally have a fair amount of discretion in using textbooks that are assigned to them by faculty; open textbooks do not change that equation. Open textbooks will provide the same quality and variety of content as commercially available textbooks, with the additional advantage that open textbooks will be more easily customized by faculty (to meet localized education needs), more accessible to physically challenged populations, and available for sale to students for significantly less cost (free, or as low cost print versions) than commercially published textbooks.
It will make students think you care about their financial burden. Several systems will allow the students to either use the open books in print form or on-line, giving much more flexibility.
Articulation agreements between community colleges and universities generally do not include specific requirements about textbooks except to specify that the title or samples of the textbook should be included in the course outline. Check with your campus articulation officer to determine if your articulation agreements prohibit the use of open textbooks or require only publishers’ textbooks. As open textbooks proliferate, colleges and universities will seamlessly include them in articulation agreements.
Campus bookstores can profit from obtaining print copies of open textbooks and selling them just as they do for publishers’ textbooks but only if the open access copyright allows commercialization. Many campus bookstores are already engaged in efforts to lower the cost of publishers’ textbooks with rental programs and other innovative strategies.
Some disadvantages of OER include: