Dear Students and Faculty: Please Go Digital

David Levin:

Textbooks are expensive. There, I said it.

The high price of print textbooks is something that students and parents have been bemoaning increasingly over the past decade, and understandably so. Enrolling in college requires a significant financial investment from students and their families, and I understand the frustration they feel when, after signing up for years of loans, they see a charge for an expensive textbook appear on their credit card. The icing on a pricey cake.

This – debate around the price of textbooks – and I hesitate to call it a debate, as it only has one side – continues this back-to-school season with a fresh round of criticism over $300 textbooks weighing down backpacks across the U.S. And while I’m tempted to offer a defense of these prices citing the costs involved, I won’t. It’s really yesterday’s conversation, because we now have a better answer: replacing print textbooks with learning technology that’s not only cheaper but – more importantly – way more effective.