首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
In a Digital Age, Students Still Cling to Paper Textbooks They text their friends all day long. At night, they do research
In a Digital Age, Students Still Cling to Paper Textbooks They text their friends all day long. At night, they do research
admin
2013-04-26
54
问题
In a Digital Age, Students Still Cling to Paper Textbooks
They text their friends all day long. At night, they do research for their term papers on laptops and commune with their parents on Skype. But as they walk the paths of Hamilton College, a poster-perfect liberal arts school in this upstate village, students are still hauling around bulky, old-fashioned textbooks —and loving it.
"The screen won’t go blank," said Faton Begolli, a junior from Boston. "There can’t be a virus. It wouldn’t be the same without books. They’ve defined ’academia’ (学术) for a thousand years."
Though the world of print is receding before a tide of digital books, blogs and other Web sites, a generation of college students growing up with technology appears to be holding fast to traditional textbooks. That loyalty comes at a price. Textbooks are expensive—a year’s worth can cost $700 to $900—and students’ frustrations with the expense, as well as the emergence of new technology, have produced a perplexing array of options for obtaining them.
Internet retailers like Amazon and Textbooks.com are selling new and used books. They have been joined by several Web services that rent textbooks to students by the semester. Some 1,500 college bookstores are also offering rentals this fall, up from 300 last year. Here at Hamilton, students this year have a new way to avoid the middleman: a nonprofit Web site, created by the college’s Entrepreneur Club, that lets them sell used books directly to one another.
The explosion of outlets and formats—including digital books, which are rapidly becoming more sophisticated—has left some students bewildered. After completing the difficult job of course selection, they are forced to weigh cost versus convenience, analyze their own study habits and guess which texts they will want for years to come and which they will not miss.
"It depends on the course," said Victoria Adesoba, a student at New York University who was standing outside that school’s bookstore, a powder-blue book bag slung over her shoulder. "Last semester, I rented for psychology, and it was cheaper. But for something like organic chemistry, I need to keep the book. E-textbooks are good, but it’s tempting to go on Facebook, and it can strain your eyes."
For all the talk that her generation is the most technologically knowledgeable in history, paper-and-ink textbooks do not seem destined to disappear anytime soon.
According to the National Association of College Stores, digital books make up just under 3% of textbook sales, although the association expects that share to grow to 10-15% by 2012 as more titles are made available as e-books.
In two recent studies—one by the association and another by the Student Public Interest Research Groups-three—quarters of the students surveyed said they still preferred a bound book to a digital version.
Many students are reluctant to give up the ability to flip quickly between chapters, write in the margins and highlight passages, although new software applications are beginning to allow students to use e-textbooks that way.
"Students grew up learning from print books," said Nicole Allen, the textbooks campaign director for the research groups, "so as they transition to higher education, it’s not surprising that they prefer a format that they are most accustomed to."
Indeed, many Hamilton students grow passionate about the weighty volumes they still cany from dorm room to lecture hall to library, even as they compulsively (克制不住地) check their smartphones for text messages and e-mails.
"I believe that the codex is one of mankind’s best inventions," said Jonathan Piskor, a junior from North Carolina, using the Latin term for book.
That passion may be one reason that Barnes & Noble College Booksellers is working so hard to market its new software application, NOOKstudy, which allows students to navigate e-textbooks on Macs and PCs. The company, which operates 636 campus bookstores nationwide, introduced the free application last summer in hopes of luring more students to buy its electronic textbooks.
"The real obstacle is getting them to try it," said Tracey Weber, the company’s executive vice president.
The company is giving away "College Kick-Start Kits" to students who download NOOKstudy in the fall semester, with a dozen classic e-books like The Canterbury Tales and The Scarlet Letter. CourseS-mart is letting students try any e-textbook free for two weeks.
But not every textbook is available in digital or rental format. At Hamilton, for instance, only about one-fifth of the titles are sold as e-textbooks this fall. A stroll through the campus store revealed the price difference. A book on constitutional law, for instance, was $189.85 new, $142.40 used and $85.45 for rent. (Typically, an e-textbook is cheaper than a used book, though more expensive than a rental.)
The expense of college textbooks, which is estimated to have risen four times the inflation rate in recent years, has become such a concern that some politicians are taking up the cause. Last month, Senator Charles E. Schumer of New York urged more college stores to rent books, after a survey of 38 campus bookstores in New York City and on Long Island by his office found that 16 did not offer the option.
On Thursday, students at more than 40 colleges nationwide are planning an Affordable Textbooks Day of Action to encourage faculty members to assign texts that are less expensive, or offered free online.
For now, buying books the old-fashioned way—new or used—prevails. Charles Schmidt, the spokesman for the National Association of College Stores, said that if a campus store sold a new book for $100, it would typically buy the book back for $50 at semester’s end and sell it to the next student for $75.
The buy-back price plunges, however, if the professor drops the book from the syllabus or if the bookstore has bought enough books to meet demand. When Louis Boguchwal, majoring in economics and math, tried to sell a $100 linear algebra (线性代数) textbook back to the college bookstore, he was offered $15.
"It was insulting," he said. "They give you next to nothing."
Thus, the creation of Hamilton’s new nonprofit Web site, getmytextbooks.org. So far, traffic has been light: only about 70 books have been sold this fall. But Jason Mariasis, president of the Entrepreneur Club, said he expected sales to pick up as word spread.
Mr. Begolli, a member of the club, recently sold three German novels for $17 on the site. "If I had sold them back to the bookstore, I would have gotten $7 or $8," he said. "The bookstore is king when it comes to textbook sales. We felt there should be something for students, by students."
Yet some students have to go it alone. Rosemary Rocha, an N.Y.U. student pursuing a degree in hospitality and tourism management, added up her required reading for the semester $600. "It’s harsh," she said. "I’m currently collecting unemployment, so that’s not going to happen."
Instead, she waits to borrow the few copies her professors leave on reserve at the library, or relies on the kindness of classmates. "My friends will let me borrow their books in exchange for coffee or a slice of pizza," she said "I very seldom buy the textbooks, but I’m always like a chicken without a head."
What can we learn about textbooks from Victoria Adesoba’s case?
选项
A、Printed textbooks will not disappear any time soon.
B、Their cost is students’ chief consideration.
C、E-books are the first choice of low-income students.
D、Science students prefer printed textbooks.
答案
A
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/xLB7777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
HappinessfollowsaU-shapedcurveduringaperson’slifetime,accordingtoresearchshowingthatmiddle-agedpeoplearetheunh
HappinessfollowsaU-shapedcurveduringaperson’slifetime,accordingtoresearchshowingthatmiddle-agedpeoplearetheunh
Theresearch,ledbyRobinDunbar,headoftheInstituteofCognitiveandEvolutionaryAnthropologyatOxfordUniversity,showed
A、Theydon’tdamagecomputersystems.B、Theyneedtoattachthemselvestootherfiles.C、Theycouldspreadontheirownthrough
A、Thedegreetheydisruptthecomputer.B、Thewaytheyreproduceandspread.C、ThespacetheyoccupyontheInternet.D、Thetarg
Comparedwithelderlyparentsandadultchildreninfiveotherindustrializednations,Americansaretwiceaslikelytohave"di
A、Readingmagazinearticles.B、Reviewingbookreports.C、Writingresearchpapers.D、Selectinginformationsources.C选项均以-ing形式开头
Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowriteashortessayentitledTuitionBasedonPerCredit-hourBasis.Youshouldwri
Comparedwithelderlyparentsandadultchildreninfiveotherindustrializednations,Americansaretwiceaslikelytohave"d
A、Fosterfamiliesofadoptedchildren.B、Onlythewomanandhertwinsister.C、Severaltwinsinadoptivefamilies.D、Adoptedchi
随机试题
患犬,2岁,就诊时体温40.5℃,食欲减退,被毛粗乱无光,眼球下陷,皮肤弹性降低,消瘦,腹泻,腹壁紧张、敏感。请问如果要查清病因,一般不需进行下列哪项检查
A.宫颈刮片B.宫颈管涂片C.后穹隆涂片D.阴道侧壁涂片E.诊断性刮宫
治疗特发性血小板减少性紫癜出血,应首选
患者,女性,43岁。被汽车撞倒,头部受伤,唤之睁眼,回答问题错误,检查时躲避刺痛。其格拉斯哥昏迷评分为
广域网的主要特点有()。
甲公司与李某签订一份2年期劳动合同。双方在劳动合同中约定:试用期3个月,试用期间李某的工资按约定工资(月薪1600元)的60%执行。如在劳动合同履行期间甲公司发生经营方式调整,则劳动合同即行终止,甲公司无需向李某支付经济补偿。要求:根据上述资料,分析回答
Areyougoingtohighschooltogoonwithyourstudy?Whatwillyoudoifyoucan’t?Don’tworry.Vocationalschoolsareopenf
A、 B、 C、 D、 A该数列可化为,故空缺处应为即1/2,选项A正确。
图4—4是一个软件项目的活动图,其中顶点表示项目里程碑,连接顶点的边表示包含的活动,则里程碑(17)在关键路径上。若在实际项目进展中,活动AD在活动AC开始3天后才开始,而完成活动DG过程中,由于有临时事件发生,实际需要15天才能完成,则完成该项目的最短时
现有SQLServer2008数据库服务器,其中的一个数据库占用80GB空间,另有一台用于备份的计算机,该机器上有4个大小均为50GB的硬盘分区。若要将此数据库完全备份到该计算机上,则()。
最新回复
(
0
)