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Saylor Foundation Awards Prizes To Free College Textbooks

Brad Lucier writes "The Saylor Foundation has a vision: Free and open materials for a complete undergraduate university education. To that end, they've announced the first winners in their Open Textbook Challenge: Four textbooks were relicensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 (CC-BY 3.0) Unported license, the most open of the CC licenses, and in return the authors were awarded a prize of $20,000 for each book. See the blog entries and the accompanying press releases for details. The second wave of submissions will be accepted until May 31, 2012."

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  1. It would be nice, admittedly by elrous0 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Free and open materials for a complete undergraduate university education.

    I love that vision, but I don't think Houghton Mifflin and all those universities that make money off their bookstores are going down without a fight.

    BTW, on a related note, has anyone else noticed that a lot of universities now are requiring students to not only buy books, but also access codes to course websites? My niece is taking undergrad classes and had to spend about $200 extra on these course codes during her first semester to access MANDATORY class websites (one of them was "MyMathPlus," I remember). Seems like a pretty sleazy way to make even more money for someone.

    --
    SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.