The Horizon Report 2010 – Two to Three Year Time Horizon (3 of 4)

Two to Three Year Time HorizoniPad

This post is number three of a four-part series on the Horizon Report 2010. To start at the beginning visit the overview.

Electronic Textbooks

My oldest school-friend and I used to walk home from elementary and middle school hauling our bulky textbooks and I vividly remember a conversation we had about a not-too-distant future where we would just carry home a CD-ROM with all of our information on it. . . Well, along with my promised future of flying cars, jet packs and robot housekeepers the future is turning out to be somewhat of a disappointment.

According to the Horizon Report, Electronic Textbooks are not that far from becoming a reality in many college campuses.  I completely agree, with the increasing number of e-book readers that are hitting the market in 2010, the apparent of a long-awaited Apple Slate iPad device and the increasing ebook consumer market, the climate is finally right for electronic textbooks to have their day.  I just hope it gets done right.  Many publishers (as I learned from Hall Davidson at TRETC this year) still don’t quite get the idea that an electronic textbook has the potential to be so much more than just the pages from the print version of the book.

Opportunities:
1) Digital Texts could Redefine Our Notion of Classroom Materials
The possibilities are endless for Digital Texts to revolutionize the way we use a reference text in the classroom.  Basically, I’m hoping for an experience that transcends the linear and isolated reading experience found in contemporary printed texts, in favor of an experience that makes connections within the text, and also with other learners.

2) Potential Cost Savings
At the university level the  fact that students purchase their own books points to an opportunity for significant savings if they purchase an e-book over the dead-tree alternative.  In a K-12 setting, the cost of textbooks is taken on by the district.  Depending on the licensing agreements and subscription deals, there may or may not be a great cost savings to schools, however, electronic textbooks could be easily maintained and updated.  The textbook replacement cycle may diminish if the text remains up to date.

3) Customized Texts
Electronic textbooks might also afford schools the ability to pick and choose the content that they purchase in order to support the specific culture that they are targetting.

Challenges:
1) A model for K-12 electronic textbooks
Book vendors Digital Content Providers and Schools will really have to think outside the box to

2) Potential for a standards war
iPad, iPod, Netbooks, Tablet PCs, Web-Based, Kindle,ePub . . . there are so many potential devices that could view electronic textbooks.  To ensure success of digitally distributed content, it needs to be done right, preferably around an open, standards-based format like ePub to ensure compatibility across platforms.

3) Accessibility
This should be an opportunity, as digital texts can be adapted for all kinds of accessibility needs, but we would be wise to think of these requirements during the selection process.

Action Steps:
Is the possibility of any kind of electronic textbook resources considered when we go through the textbook adoption process?  How do we evaluate the quality of electronic supplementary resources that come with textbooks?  Is there a potential cost-savings associated with finding an innovative way of using electronic versions of textbooks.  Taking a longer view, is there someone in the district who can stay abreast of the developments in electronic textbook

Augmented Reality:

I have to admit that this is the area that I have the hardest time envisioning in education.  Don’t get me wrong, I’m psyched about the idea of a virtual Heads Up Display in my car and beamed onto my eyeballs.  Just imagine, I’d never forget a face.  But the reality of augmented reality using an App like Layar means peering through a 4-inch screen at the world.  I’ll give it the benefit of the doubt, maybe in a more urban area this is the best idea since sliced bread, but I just haven’t seen it in action enough to get excited about it.

I guess that in fieldwork this could be fabulous.  I love the notion of standing in the Roman Colosseum and using an augmented reality app to fill the space with live action and crowds watching a gladiator in battle, but my imagination needs some stretching to see an immediate application.  All that being said, augmented reality was apparently all the rage at the British Education Training and Technology (BETT) show in London this year.  Perhaps I just need to see it in action for myself.

Opportunities:
Adding a layer of digital content to real life brings in a whole new dimension to the world.  Google sky map is an awesome example of what can be accomplished — just point it to the sky, and it labels what you are looking at.  It is remarkable.  I’m looking forward to a day when this can be expanded.  Imagine pointing the device at a bird and getting a precise identification and data on that specimen, getting chemical information molecular structure and data in Chem Lab.   I can imagine lots of awesome future uses, but today’s technology is still a little clunky for my likes.

Challenges:
I would be cautious of this being a technology for technology’s sake issue. If it were incorporated into an existing device, then that sounds much more realistic.

Action Steps:
Pay attention to further developments.

View Comments to “The Horizon Report 2010 – Two to Three Year Time Horizon (3 of 4)”

  1. mrplatts.com » Blog Archive » Horizon Report 2010 – Future Technology impacting Education – Overview (Part 1 of 4) Says:

    [...] 2-3-Year Horizon [...]

  2. Andy Lucas Says:

    5th grade is currently considering augmenting their curriculum via Blended Schools or some other digital format from our current textbook vendor rather than purchasing a whole new set of textbooks. Of course, that means a lot more work for me since everything is still piecemeal and not presented in one bundle. I'm also finding it somewhat difficult to create “buy-in” with a couple of them. Anyway, I think it's a start for the District.

  3. mrplatts Says:

    I feel like this is the dilemma. Many would like to think that we are (should be) in the post-textbook era, but our district isn't really big enough to have full-time curriculum designers, so it falls on you as the curriculum leader to piece it together. Maybe we can do a better job if we get the cream of the cream and present it in a bundled format, but what happens when the technologies change.

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