March 2, 2000
Bookbag of the Future
Dental Schools Stuff 4 Years' Worth of Manuals and
Books Into 1 DVD
By LISA GUERNSEY
tarting this fall, students at
seven dental schools will be spared the strain of toting heavy
textbooks to and from the library. They won't even need to go to the
bookstore to buy a single textbook, workbook or laboratory manual.
|
 Jenny Warburg for The New York Times
|
DIGITIZING BOOKS: Todd Watkins is
the founder of Vital Source Technologies, which is putting a
four-year dental school curriculum onto a single DVD.
|
Instead,
each incoming student will be asked to purchase a DVD containing the
entire curriculum -- textbooks, manuals and lecture slides -- for all
four years of dental school. Each semester, students will trade the
old DVD for an updated version. Creators of the technology estimate
that the DVD's, each weighing less than an ounce, will replace more
than 2 million pages, thousands of images and more than 400 pounds of
books and manuals.
"It essentially provides all of the textbooks, all the course
syllabi, all of the handouts and most of the images that faculty will
be using throughout the entire curriculum from the first day of
class," said Fred Moore, associate dean for academic affairs at the
College of Dentistry at New York University, which is participating in
the project.
Educators and electronic publishers have talked for years about the
advantages of creating digital replacements for heavy and often
quickly outdated printed textbooks. But digital textbooks have been
slow to appear, a lag that has been attributed to everything from
technological limitations to publishers' fears of copyright
infringements. Most students still buy printed textbooks, although
many books now come with CD-ROM's that provide supplementary material.
The dental schools' use of DVD's is a sudden leap forward. Experts
in textbook publishing say it is the first time that digital content
has completely replaced books for all students in a school. And it is
almost surely the first time that an institution of higher education
has attempted to put an entire curriculum -- from handouts to manuals
-- in one integrated electronic format for all four years of a degree
program.
Still, whether students will embrace an entirely digitized
curriculum is an open question.
Some digital-textbook experiments have shown that students facing a
lot of reading prefer printed books, said Gary Shapiro, senior vice
president for intellectual property at Follett, a company that manages
college bookstores. Follett, for example, has conducted focus groups
to test students' reactions to online or CD versions of textbooks.
Based on the company's findings, Mr. Shapiro said, "It is unlikely
that a student will sit in front of a computer and read a textbook."
Price is another issue. Because the disks are designed to include
four times as much material as students are typically asked to buy,
the price for DVD's, or for other digital vehicles for presenting
information -- will be anything but cheap.
Developers say that a DVD with updates will cost roughly the same
as the total for the books students are expected to buy now: $3,000 to
$6,000, paid over time. And coordinators of the project acknowledge
that students will have no choice but to buy all the books they might
use in four years, instead of picking and choosing.
Still, Wayne Loney, a third-year dental student who tested the
concept, said he thought that students would accept the cost.
"You're paying for more convenience," said Mr. Loney, a student at
the University of Texas Health Science Center in San Antonio, where
the project originated. "If I had to leave for the weekend, all I had
to do was just take my Powerbook and fire it up from wherever I was."
The software's searching capabilities provided an even more
important convenience, Mr. Loney said. "If I was looking for a piece
of information, all I had to do was type it in, and the software would
give me a list of every place that topic came up."
Even images of microscope slides could be found with a simple
search. "It was like we had a full-blown histology lab at our
fingertips," he said.
It was the integration of four years' worth of laboratory slides,
textbook entries and professors' manuals that provided the impetus for
adopting the DVD model, administrators and professors say.
"The first year of school is basic science, and sometimes students
fail to see the relevance of that to what they will need to know,"
said Pamela Jones, co-director of the project at the dental school at
the University of Buffalo, which announced its participation two weeks
ago.
But, Dr. Jones said, once students are able to search across all
four years' worth of educational material, they will see the
connections. A student in an introductory anatomy class, for example,
could search the word "maxilla" and discover how an understanding of
the jaw's structure would help in advanced orthodontics classes.
The other four participants are the dental schools of Boston
University, the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey,
the University of Florida at Gainesville and the United States Navy
Postgraduate Dental School.
|
|
| Making
the leap from printed to digital textbooks.
| |
|
|
The project was something of a surprise to observers of the nascent
digital-textbook industry, some of whom expressed admiration for the
dental schools' aggressive approach. "It's the kind of experiment that
needs to be done," said Mr. Shapiro, of Follett. "It will be
fascinating to see how the students react to it."
But some experts said that publishers of dental textbooks might be
better situated than other textbook makers for a transition from print
to digital. Because there are fewer than 10 publishers of dental
textbooks, it may be easier for dental schools and software makers to
agree on how to create digital textbooks, industry experts say.
And the ease of searching digital information may be more appealing
to dental students, who often use their textbooks as references to be
read in short chunks instead of as continuous text, chapter by
chapter.
The structure of dental education also helps, administrators say.
Within a school, dental students take virtually the same classes, are
taught from the same books and are asked to read the same manuals and
handouts. Each dental school will choose the books, handouts and
slides that will appear on the DVD developed for that school.
In addition to the curriculum DVD, students will have to buy a
laptop with a DVD player. Most students, administrators say, will add
the cost of the computers and the DVD's to their requests for
financial aid.
Part of the dental schools' strategy in making these purchases
mandatory is to ensure that the computers and disks qualify for
federal education loans, which cover only required materials.
To further help with the costs of the laptops, the schools are
talking with computer manufacturers to come up with four-year leasing
programs.
Meanwhile, a company called Vital Source Technologies has been
digitizing hundreds of textbooks, manuals and professors' handouts to
be included in the DVD's.
The company, which is based in Raleigh, N.C., has also been
negotiating with publishers on behalf of universities to license the
books in electronic form. (It will not disclose the publishers' names
until a formal announcement is made on April 1, but representatives at
the universities have said that most major dental textbook publishers
are involved.)
The company's main contribution, however, is its technology. Todd
Watkins, the founder of Vital Source, has developed software that will
enable students to do several things with the same set of digitized
materials. During an interview in his office this week, he
demonstrated how it worked:
Clicking on a title opens a window showcasing a book's cover. By
clicking on each page, students can turn pages as if they were reading
a printed book. Students will also be able to search for specific
words as they appear in the table of contents of one book, the full
text of one book or the full text of all books and images that are
included on the DVD. They will also be able to create online
bookshelves containing anything they wish to link together, like
chapters from several books that are related to the same topic.
Dr. Watkins, who has a degree in dentistry, said his training
brought him much closer to understanding students' needs. He came up
with the idea for a fully searchable electronic curriculum almost 10
years ago, when he was a new faculty member at the University of Texas
Health Science Center in San Antonio, where he also conducted research
on how information technology could be used in education.
Health-science textbooks seemed ideal for digitizing, Dr. Watkins
said, because they are so expensive to print. Many textbooks, for
example, present diagrams in black-and-white, a process that costs
less than color. But in digital textbooks, color can be used liberally
with no added cost. Dr. Watkins said publishers had already begun
sending him color versions of diagrams for the DVD's to replace the
black-and-white diagrams in printed textbooks.
In 1995, Dr. Watkins started to test versions of his software with
groups of students at the university. A few years later, he asked
William Chesser, a childhood friend with a background in education
issues, to help him design more substantial trials. Mr. Chesser is now
the company's vice president.
Kenneth Kalkwarf, the dean at the Texas dental school, also got
involved, urging Dr. Watkins and Mr. Chesser to experiment with
digital content in all the courses, instead of focusing on one
textbook for one course.
Dr. Kalkwarf soon put together the seven-school consortium.
"It is the universities that are demanding this," Dr. Watkins said.
"We were never a technology in search of a market. We are essentially
trying to solve problems with technology."
The rise of digital textbooks, electronic publishers say, may also
halt a nontechnological trend that has worried many schools: Students,
it turns out, are not always buying the books that professors assign.
Although national data about students' book-purchasing habits have not
been collected recently, some industry experts estimate that as many
as 50 percent of students in some fields are either buying used
editions or none at all. In dental schools, the trend may be even more
pronounced.
Vital Source found that in some classes, only 10 percent of dental
students bought the books a professor listed on a syllabus.
"Textbooks are so expensive," Dr. Watkins said; they cost $100 to
$200 on average. "Students are basically having to decide whether to
buy a book or pay the rent," Dr. Watkins added. From what he has seen,
he said, students get by with a hodgepodge of materials based on
chapters photocopied from textbooks in the library, paperback
workbooks and handouts from professors.
By asking students to buy a DVD containing all the assigned books,
school administrators say, they are hoping to make the content more
accessible -- even if it means that students have to pay for more
material than some of them expected.
"We're making sure that we are putting into the hands of our
students all the materials that they are expected to have," said Dr.
Jones, at Buffalo's dental school. "This way we are getting around the
problem of students' not buying textbooks."
And publishers are starting to embrace the idea of digital books
for exactly that reason. Their logic goes like this: If the books are
searchable, if they can be updated with a few clicks and an online
connection, and if they can be as weightless as digital bits, students
might actually spend money on them instead of bypassing the cash
register in favor of the photocopy machine.
McGraw-Hill, a publisher that is responsible for a few thousand
textbooks, has started packaging CD-ROM's with textbooks to give
students enhanced versions of the printed material. The main point of
the CD-ROM's, which include animation and video, is to "help students
learn more quickly," said Henry Hirschberg, McGraw-Hill's group
president for higher-education, professional and international
publishing.
But the enhancements are also part of the company's strategy to
stay competitive and sell more books.
Electronic books, for example, can be revised much more often and
more cheaply than their printed versions, and professors may be more
inclined to encourage students to buy new CD-based editions instead of
relying on used but still current books.
To make the electronic versions of its textbooks, McGraw-Hill has
hired Versaware, an electronic-book publisher that is working with
nearly 100 traditional publishers to digitize their books. By the
beginning of the next school year, 30 to 50 popular college-level
textbooks will be available on CD or through the Web, said Julie
Greenblatt, Versaware's vice president for business development.
The company is also creating online spaces where students can
create electronic libraries stocked with books they have bought and
downloaded. (Some examples can be found on Ebookcity.com.)
"The technology absolutely supports" the kind of integration the
dental schools have adopted, Ms. Greenblatt said. Logistics and
politics are now the only barriers to having searchable digital
content available throughout high schools and colleges. For example,
some publishers are still leery of having their content integrated
with materials from competitors, she said.
But Ms. Greenblatt said those hurdles could be overcome, especially
considering the current drive to embrace distance learning.
By 2002, she said, nearly 80 percent of universities are expected
to have some kind of online courses. Digital textbooks, she said, go
hand in hand with that trend.
"In the next five years," she predicted, "you will have pervasive
electronic content."
For now, professors and administrators in the seven dental schools
are eager to see how the DVD's will change the way members of next
year's class absorb and understand what they have been taught.
"Students will be taught more concepts and be given more strategies
to access much broader sources of information," said Dr. Moore, of
N.Y.U. "This changes the whole paradigm for learning."