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Nature, the company that created Scitable, is now entering the cheap textbooks for college market:

Scitable is a free learning community mainly focused on life sciences, created by Nature that has recently launched “Principles of Biology”, a college level electronic textbook focused on biology.  Drawing upon their experience with Scitable, Nature has made this new college textbook full of interactive features like online grade book for instructors, quizzes and assessments, and more.  What is perhaps most notable about this biology college textbook release is that upgrades of new content is free for life – hello answer to cheap textbooks for college.

Cheap Textbooks for College

Principles of Biology from Nature

So how much is Nature asking for this biology textbook – is it really a cheap book?  Nature is only charging $50 for this electronic textbook with free upgrades for life.  However, couldn’t someone find all this information online for free?  Perhaps, but Nature has taken this into account:

There is some DRM, but the most important part of the anti-piracy strategy we’ve chosen for this program is ensuring that the real product, in its home context, is so effective that there is a significant disincentive to break the rules. For example, we integrate assessments into every page of the textbook, and those assessments feed directly into the online gradebook that instructors will use to keep tabs on their students’ progress. Without purchasing full access to the digital product, students won’t be able to feed into the gradebook, which should dramatically undermine their ability to get a passing grade. Similarly, we make it very easy for instructors to customize the interactive textbook while they are adopting it, which means that any pirated version floating around won’t help students to be aligned with their own class. Perhaps some people will take the time to find ways to get around the rules. But at the same time the relative ease of use of this product will be, I believe, very appealing to a generation that’s grown up online, and will be a strong selling point of the program.

$50 for a used textbook for college is cheap, let alone considering one where the content will always be updated free of charge.  Vikram Savkar of Nature feels that their college textbooks are born “digital” and designed to capitalize upon that new and exciting platform instead of just putting the same content from a regular college textbook into ereader format.  Savkar also states that the constant updating is also essential to ensuring continued value of their biology textbook by keeping it updated and easily searchable:

It’s quite time consuming to dig through your old boxes, dust off a book from ten years ago, and flip through a few hundred pages to find the tidbit you were looking for (only to discover that it’s now out of date). What if searching your old textbooks were as easy as typing a term into Google? And if you had the confidence that someone behind the scenes was keeping them up to date and rigorously high quality? I think you’d find that you would refer to many of your textbooks over time. You’d hear a news story about genomics, for example, but no longer remember exactly what it is, do a quick search on your Nature platform, and within a half an hour be back up to speed.

So not only are they offering a cheap textbooks solution, but one that will stay current and useful.  Savkar summarizes, “I believe we’re moving into an age when textbooks can be lifelong tools, rather than short-lived supplies for one college class.”

“Principles of Biology” is meant to be read on a Kindle or Nook, nor on a tablet like the iPad, Kno, or even Android platform, but rather a browser based experience to be able to reach the largest audience:

In the first place, because it’s browser-based it will natively be accessible on essentially any internet-enabled device; no one will ever have to wait for us to roll out an app for whatever new device they have just purchased.  In the second place, a browser-based book is more accessible to screen readers and other devices for disabled students. Third, for the basic purchase price we will give students lifetime access to the material . . . and our editorial team will keep the content current as the state of science evolves, so that even after 5 years the former student, when returning to their college textbook, will find that it’s completely up to date. Lifetime access is difficult to picture for many kinds of app-based books, because of how rapidly the underlying technologies and devices will evolve; whereas a browser-based solution has a good likelihood, in our opinion, of being accessible decades from now. Fourth, because all of the content and data for the book is stored in the cloud, access is not locked to a particular machine, or even to any set of machines. Students can use the interactive textbook from any machine they happen to be at, so long as they remember their user name and password, with no new set-up.

Nature offers a variety of social and peer to peer features on the Scitable platform, but removed those in their cheap textbooks in favor of instructor defined online assessments and grade books.  They hope to integrate with existing content management systems already in place at other colleges nationwide including Blackboard and Desire2Learn.  Nature.com wisely choose to utilize HTML 5 as their base to ensure compatibility of their interactive features across all features including iOS for the iPad.

Nature has a very interesting electronic solution for cheap textbooks for college with several unique twists that could be the start of great things in the world of cheap textbooks – finally.

 

Where to get textbooks as cheap as possible if not free?

Well, free is not always an option, but many college students wonder where to find textbooks for cheap?

  1. Get a textbook price comparison of buying used textbooks online versus an online textbook rental.
  2. If you need a free textbook ask around to borrow one, or see our resource list below.
  3. Check Craigslist as another place where to get textbooks for cheap.
  4. Check your local and college libraries as they might have a copy.
  5. Remember to factor textbook buy back prices if you buy a textbook versus a textbook rental when determining total cost.
  6. Be considerate, but your professor might have their free textbook review copy to lend you

Where to find textbooks for free?  Top 10+ sites where to get textbooks for free:

Where to get textbooks free

Google’s Free eBooks – Here is a list of the top ebooks found at Google’s eBookstore

Online Mathematics Textbooks – A growing list of free mathematics textbooks hosted by Georgia Tech University, Atlanta, Georgia

Project Gutenberg – Free ebook site started by Michael Hart, did you know the first ebook was created on July 4, 1971?

WikiBooks – A huge collection of open content textbooks that anyone can edit or download free

TextbookRevolution – A student run organization with huge growing list of free online textbooks and educational materials

Flat World Knowledge – Since 2009 their free textbooks have been adopted by over 1600 professors at over 900 schools in over 40 countries

Free High School Science Texts – Volunteers created free science books to help support high school education in South Africa

FreeBooks4Doctors – The place to download free medical textbooks on the internet

FreeTechBooks – Hundreds of free technical and computer books to download as open source, lots of free computer programming books

BookBon – Free ebooks for student and travelers written exclusively for UK based BookBon – financed by sparse in book ads

Open Educational Resources Consortium – Community College Consortium for Open Educational Resources (CCCOER) has over 500 open source textbooks for viewing and downloading for free

cK-12 Flexbooks – Customizable free textbooks digitized on multiple platforms focused on the K-12 market

Did we miss any websites on our search for where to get textbooks for free?  We actually just gave you 12 sites where you can find textbooks for free.  However, please leave us a comment below if there are others to include in the list for free textbooks online.

A textbook according to Wikipedia is:

textbook or coursebook (UK English) is a manual of instruction in any branch of study. Textbooks are produced according to the demands of educational institutions. Although most textbooks are only published in printed format, many are now available as online electronic books.

The article continues with facts and figures about the broken textbook market that President Obama called a “scam” and “a huge racket” during his campaign, but no need to rehash the high cost of textbooks.

Here at RentScouter we are always on the search on where to get textbooks for cheap if you can’t get them free.

A brief highlighting of our current textbook rental and used textbook companies:

BookRenter – One of the first in the business to offer textbook rentals

Chegg – Not the first, but definitely the biggest company to rent textbooks by many standards

CampusBookRentals – Great place to rent books and support their charitable causes.

TextbookStop – Innovative new textbook rental company offering their “RentBack” option

And some of the finest companies that buy back textbooks when you sell back used books for cash:

Powell’s Books – A Portland institution that buys all kinds of weird used books, but tough on condition

BookByte – One of the oldest in the business of buying back books, sells through McKenzie Books

First Class Books – Roots in the Southwest, in business over a decade, fast service

TextbooksRus – Also known as “Bookstores”, based in Ohio, one of the largest textbook buyback companies

Amazon Textbook Buyback – Only Amazon credit for trade-ins, but usually the best sell back price, watch condition, we discuss Amazon credit versus cash for textbooks and their special Amazon Student Savings program.

SellBackYourBook – Solid performer that wants your DVDs, CDs, Video Games, and calculators

CKY Books – Solid company that will return rejected textbooks, good customer service

Blue Rocket Books – Sometimes slow, but solid textbook buy back prices, and for every book they buy they donate to a worthy cause

Better World Books – Buys and sells millions of books online to support global literacy initiatives – cheap shipping

Moola4Books – Older company that just started online book buyback, usually good prices

You can’t always find free textbooks, but we can help you find where to get textbooks for cheap, or sell them for the highest price.

 

College textbook wholesaler and college bookstore chain giant, Nebraska Book Company (NBC), has filed for bankruptcy protection today in Delaware via a recent story on Reuters.

Alan Siemek, Chief Financial Officer, of NBC said:

The relative decline of our campus stores’ performance is due to a combination of online textbook sales, and more recently textbook rental programs, which have been successful in attracting “value shoppers” away from our campus book stores

Really Mr. Siemek?

“Value shoppers” are to be shamed for leaving your higher priced textbooks sitting on the shelves versus buying cheap textbooks online or getting a textbook rental?  No wonder you have been experiencing declining earnings – perhaps you are a little out of touch with college students no longer wanting to pay exorbitant prices for textbooks?

NBC said it lost nearly $100 million in its latest fiscal year on revenue of almost $600 million.  This filling follows only months after Borders Group Inc., the nation’s second largest bookstore chain, filed for bankruptcy in February.  Each company sited mounting debt payments and declining brick and mortar store sales to online book sellers.

According to court filings in Delaware, NBC had $650 million in assets and $560 million in debt as of their initial filings on February 14th, 2011.

Nebraska Book Company was founded in 1915 with a single physical bookstore near the University of Nebraska campus.  Since that humble beginning they currently operate over 280 bookstores on or near college campuses, and remain a large textbook wholesaler to even some of their sited textbook rental competitors.  The main rivals of NBC include Barnes & Noble and partner Follett Higher Education Group in addition to MBS Textbook Exchange, Inc. founded in 1909 in Columbia, Missouri as the Missouri Store Company.

Nebraska claims it has lined up $200 million of new financing to keep operating in bankruptcy while it hopes to get court approval for debt restructuring.

NBC’s textbook buy back site, BookleBerry, suddenly had their cash for textbook prices disappear without warning a few weeks ago – we now know why they stopped offering to buy back textbooks.