Anonymous wrote:Very. In MCPS we finally got books for pre-cal and one other class. BUT, the school only had a classroom copy so you had to buy your own if you wanted it. None in Algebra or Geometry. No books to read either.
Anonymous wrote:It's pretty low on my list of concerns. It's not like textbook-learning was inspiring for lots of kids.
-Teacher
There's no guarantee an ebook will be constantly updated. All the other pros are features of the reading app, not the book itself. A pirated PDF with a good reader would have the same features.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope, not bothered. Books are costly, out of date, and stagnant. Online resources are dynamic and cost effective.
FYI, online resources cost the same as print books. That's as it should be, they shouldn't be cheaper, since it's the same information. But people erroneously think that they are.
They have better information because they are updated regularly. They also have interactive tools that help you work with the information and search tools. They are also better for kids with visual issues, dyslexia, executive function issues etc. because the supports are built in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope, not bothered. Books are costly, out of date, and stagnant. Online resources are dynamic and cost effective.
FYI, online resources cost the same as print books. That's as it should be, they shouldn't be cheaper, since it's the same information. But people erroneously think that they are.
They have better information because they are updated regularly. They also have interactive tools that help you work with the information and search tools. They are also better for kids with visual issues, dyslexia, executive function issues etc. because the supports are built in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nope, not bothered. Books are costly, out of date, and stagnant. Online resources are dynamic and cost effective.
FYI, online resources cost the same as print books. That's as it should be, they shouldn't be cheaper, since it's the same information. But people erroneously think that they are.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Progressives: "Textbooks are so old fashioned - who cares?"
also progressives: "Why are students falling behind?!?!?"
It's not progressives - it's progressive education pedagogy that textbooks are the hallmark or crutch of a bad or lazy teacher. This isn't a liberal or conservative issue. It's a teacher school issue.
Anonymous wrote:I have a kid in elementary, middle and high school and none of my kids seem to use books. Of course they read in English but that is it! My high school kid is taking world history with no book. My middle school kid has no algebra book. My elementary school kid has no science book.
Does this bother anyone else?
I hate that everything is online. I want to buy my high school kid a book he can flag and highlight.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Fun fact that goes through my mind any time someone mentions textbooks: I grew up in a communist dictatorship. We had textbooks in every class! Actually really good ones in math. And guess what: parents had to buy them for their children. Poor children received free school copies.
Compare to post-communist fighting-for-social-justice America in 2023 where schools don't buy textbooks because they lack the money and asking parents to buy them is considered anti-equity or whatnot because the poor couldn't afford it (and no one would want to subsidize them.) My MS kid now is being read to from a book because the teacher doesn't have enough copies for every child to read themselves.
Fwiw, the reason we're all complaining about this is because we had textbooks for all of our classes when we were young.
Anonymous wrote:Nope, not bothered. Books are costly, out of date, and stagnant. Online resources are dynamic and cost effective.
Anonymous wrote:Progressives: "Textbooks are so old fashioned - who cares?"
also progressives: "Why are students falling behind?!?!?"