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-- The Case of Elsevier: The Higher Education Paradigm.
The Case of Elsevier: The Higher Education Paradigm.
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| A few days ago, inspired by this recent post of Tim Gowers, a web page entitled �the cost of knowledge� has been set up as a location for mathematicians and other academics to declare a protest against the academic publishing practices of Reed Elsevier, in particular with regard to their exceptionally high journal prices, their policy of �bundling� journals together so that libraries are forced to purchase subscriptions to large numbers of low-quality journals in order to gain access to a handful of high-quality journals, and their opposition to the open access movement (as manifested, for instance, in their lobbying in support of legislation such as the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) and the Research Works Act (RWA)). [These practices have been documented in a number of places; this wiki page, which was set up in response to Tim's post, collects several relevant links for this purpose. Some of the other commercial publishers have exhibited similar behaviour, though usually not to the extent that Elsevier has, which is why this particular publisher is the focus of this protest.] At the protest site, one can publicly declare a refusal to either publish at an Elsevier journal, referee for an Elsevier journal, or join the board of an Elsevier journal. (In the past, the editorial boards of several Elsevier journals have resigned over the pricing policies of the journal, most famously the board of Topology in 2006, but also the Journal of Algorithms in 2003, and a number of journals in other sciences as well. Several libraries, such as those of Harvard and Cornell, have also managed to negotiate an unbundling of Elsevier journals, but most libraries are still unable to subscribe to such journals individually.) http://terrytao.wordpress.com/2012/...t-of-knowledge/ |
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| What is edX? Answering common questions about MIT and Harvard�s new partnership in online education. What is edX? An organization established by MIT and Harvard University that will develop an open-source technology platform to deliver online courses. EdX will support Harvard and MIT faculty in conducting research on teaching and learning on campus through tools that enrich classroom and laboratory experiences. At the same time, edX will also reach learners around the world through online course materials. The edX website will begin by hosting MITx and Harvardx content, with the goal of adding content from other universities interested in joining the platform. edX will also support the Harvard and MIT faculty in conducting research on teaching and learning. What are MITx and Harvardx? Portfolios of MIT and Harvard online courses offered to learners around the world through edX. What technology will edX use? An open-source online learning platform that will feature teaching designed specifically for the Web. Features will include: self-paced learning, online discussion groups, wiki-based collaborative learning, assessment of learning as a student progresses through a course, and online laboratories. The platform will also serve as a laboratory from which data will be gathered to better understand how students learn. Because it is open-source, the platform will be improved continuously. Is there anything innovative about the online technology? Yes. It will move beyond the standard model of online education that relies on watching video content and will offer an interactive experience for students. And the technology will be open-source; other universities will be able to leverage the innovative technology to create their own online offerings. Why are MIT and Harvard doing this? To improve education on campus and around the world: On campus, edX research will enhance our understanding of how students learn and how technologies can best be used as part of our larger efforts to improve teaching and learning. Beyond our campuses, edX will expand access to education, allow for certificates of mastery to be earned by able learners, and make the open-source platform available to other institutions. http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2012/edx-faq-050212.html |
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| With college costs skyrocketing, a growing group of policymakers is coalescing behind an audacious plan: Make college free for anyone who can't pay. It may sound impossible in an era of dwindling education budgets, but proposals in Michigan and California claim it can be done through tax credits or creative repayment setups. If either plan becomes reality, it could show a way out of the tuition crisis that's affected most public and many private universities. The most elite private universities have long offered generous scholarships to low- and middle-income students out of their teeming endowments, with some�like Harvard and Princeton�promising a free ride without student loans to anyone whose parents don't earn enough to pay. But for the vast majority of college-bound students, that's not an option�yet. Since taking office, President Barack Obama has modestly expanded federal Pell Grants and loan accessibility. But in his State of the Union address this year, Obama acknowledged those reforms are not enough to keep education affordable. "Colleges and universities have to do their part to keep costs down," he said. Patrick Callan, president of the National Center for Public Policy and Higher Education, says the cost-free tuition vision is in its earliest days, but he's excited for the possibility. "I've been a hawk on the tuition issue and have been opposed to tuition hikes," he says. "I haven't heard the cost-free position articulated with the exception of the demonstrations for the 99 percent. But I certainly wouldn't oppose making college free." In Michigan, Senate Minority Leader Gretchen Whitmer, whose district includes Michigan State University, introduced the "Michigan 2020 Plan," which would offer free or near-free tuition to state universities or community colleges for any Michigan high school graduate. The bill would award about $9,500�the median cost at a public university in the state�to all students who complete kindergarten through high school in Michigan public schools. Students who moved to the state partway through their academic careers or transferred from private schools would earn a portion of that sum. Advocates say the entire program could be funded by closing tax loopholes with no effect on individual taxpayers. http://www.good.is/post/could-college-be-free/ |
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| "Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales is helping a UK government bid to make the results of Government funded research available freely online. The move taps into a popular protest at the restrictions which academic publishers place on the availability of research. From the article: 'Almost 11,000 researchers have signed up to a boycott of journals owned by the huge academic publisher Elsevier. Subscriptions to the thousands of research journals can cost a big university library millions of pounds each year � costs that have started to bite as budgets are squeezed. Harvard University, frustrated by the rising costs of journal subscriptions, recently encouraged its faculty members to make their research freely available through open access journals and to resign from publications that keep articles behind paywalls.'" http://yro.slashdot.org/story/12/05...e-academic-data |
you have to distinguish education from going to university. You can educate yourself for pretty much no cost right now. Everything you could learn in at an undergraduate and arguably a master's level is on the internet. This isn't about access to knowledge. This is about on one end, upward mobility and on the other side, having a standardized way to assess the overall education of a population and deciding if we want that or not and the benefits and cons that come with that decision. It isn't really about knowledge. University is about opportunity.
I own several Elsevier books and although I don't really use the internet versions, there has been a decline in service. Back in the day, by buying a certain atlas or book, one would receive free, unlimited access to the E-version. Over the course of two years, this has changed and now a days books only offer 2 year e-access to the the material. Kinda shitty when you pay 200$ for a manual.
Regarding the journals, I have actually never encountered high quality ones which were free.
Re: The Case of Elsevier: The Higher Education Paradigm.
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| Originally posted by Lagrangian Can there be free education for all? |
Canada has a higher education program that is reasonable. Not too cheap that people go without really committing but not too high that it prevents certain people of limited financial means to go. If you want it, you can have it. Whether it is worth it, that is your decision.
Sweden has free education. However, it's close to impossible to get in, even with perfect scores it can take up to years to get it and the actual costs in the university cities (Stockholm, Uppsala, G�teborg) are so high that the students often must take big loans (100.000$).
As for Elsevier, and some other publishers, it really boggles the mind: Academics are already paid to do research, they receive grants so they can fund said research, yet some books cost hundreds of dollars. There's something incredibly wrong with this system, and I can't see a single justification for these high prices.
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| Originally posted by Lira As for Elsevier, and some other publishers, it really boggles the mind: Academics are already paid to do research, they receive grants so they can fund said research, yet some books cost hundreds of dollars. There's something incredibly wrong with this system, and I can't see a single justification for these high prices. |
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| Originally posted by Chimney I think it's due to the traditional (mis)conception that all academics make huge amounts of money after graduating. So in contrast, books are more expensive. Besides there is a lot of research put in writing a 1000 page manual. |
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| Originally posted by Chimney Last year, I bought a physiology book that costed rought ~100�. A few months later it was outdated. |
such is the racket of textbooks. Undergrad math hasn't changed in a few centuries. The only things that get updated are pictures so that they include minorities, a different code to access the online material you wouldn't have to need if the schools were not colluding forcing students to have to use those resources.
My sister finished both her undergrad and degree in medicine without ever buying a book. Schools have everything on reserve, including access to those sites the new programs incorporate. People are just lazy. Buying textbooks is stupid unless you actually enjoy the book and want to keep it , otherwise, borrow it , copy it , and save yourself 100$.
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| Originally posted by Lira Such is science |
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| Buying textbooks is stupid unless you actually enjoy the book and want to keep it , otherwise, borrow it , copy it , and save yourself 100$. |
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| Originally posted by Chimney I think it's more of "such is business", for us at least. The very top notch research is a bit obsolete for students who are building the basics for the time being. However a new cover, a few "revised" changes and a brand new spicier price tag. |
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| Originally posted by Looney4Clooney such is the racket of textbooks. Undergrad math hasn't changed in a few centuries. The only things that get updated are pictures so that they include minorities, a different code to access the online material you wouldn't have to need if the schools were not colluding forcing students to have to use those resources. |
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| Originally posted by Chimney My sister finished both her undergrad and degree in medicine without ever buying a book. Schools have everything on reserve, including access to those sites the new programs incorporate. People are just lazy. Buying textbooks is stupid unless you actually enjoy the book and want to keep it , otherwise, borrow it , copy it , and save yourself 100$. |
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| Originally posted by Lira Oh, when you said "outdated" I read that as "the things we knew no longer hold"... because such is science after a while. |
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| Originally posted by Lira Most books we're talking about, I believe, are not aimed at undergrads. |
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| Originally posted by Chimney Yea. The world of morfopathology (cancer research), virology and other fields moves indeed at an extreme pace, however most of the body's function remain the same. What the hell does "undergrad" mean? |
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| Originally posted by Looney4Clooney pretty universal term. What you do before you start a master level degree. |
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| Originally posted by Looney4Clooney graduate level at least at the level it should be doesn't really use those books that have an edition update every 2-3 years. And graduates have more access to inter library loans. I would assume most graduates spend much less on books. |
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| Originally posted by Looney4Clooney Most of the reading is from journals, which every university provides free online access. |
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| Originally posted by Looney4Clooney I can't speak for every school but textbooks are kinda the territory of the undergrad. |
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| Originally posted by Looney4Clooney pretty universal term. What you do before you start a master level degree. |
i was. I can't speak for every school as i only went to school in NA. I do think that the digitization of everything will allow much cheaper access to books for higher learning. Textbooks overall are being phased out for ebook versions.
What do you mean by absurd prices for journals ? Every institution i know provides online access as part of the tuition. The actual cost to most journals is pretty damn low. I mean i just renewed my subscription to the NJM for 150$. The amount of information you get is staggering. Do institutions in Brazil not include access to this information as part of the tuition ?
Overall, i think the issue with education and the cost has little to do with the price of books. I think that moving in the direction of online content streamlining certain courses that don't really need or allow interaction , specifically those huge classes where asking questions is not really permitted, would cut down alot of costs. But progress is not so simple when you have a legacy of a certain model of how to learn , the people making the decisions not wanting to make themselves obsolete. I mean do you really need an instructor for calculus ? Calculus is not going to change nor has it in a really really long time. But the system requires a room, a tenured professor and so on.
I think the solution is two sided. Government needs to realize the benefit of having a population with a rounded education but also find more cost effective and creative ways of implementing the education.
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| Originally posted by Lira Can't be arsed to add this to my previous post but, no, it isn't universal. I happen to know what it means because I've considered studying in the US, but what you call an "undergraduate" is what we call "graduando" and what you call graduates is what we call "pó-graduando", for example. |
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