• On TV.com: THE GIRLS NEXT DOOR photos

September 28, 2005 4:00 AM PDT

Wikibooks takes on textbook industry

  • Font size
  • Print
Related Stories

Authors Guild sues Google over library project

September 20, 2005

Yahoo to support Wikipedia

April 7, 2005

Open-sourcing the news

January 7, 2005
If you found yourself needing an old biology textbook and couldn't locate your battered copy from college, you'd have a few options.

You could go to a university bookstore and snag a used copy; you could drop a few dollars on a new one at Amazon.com; or you could track down some old college chums and ask for their copies.

But if Jimmy Wales and his colleagues at the Wikimedia Foundation have anything to say about it, you could have another way to go--the Wikibooks project. It's their attempt to create a comprehensive, kindergarten-to-college curriculum of textbooks that are free and freely distributable, based on an open-source development model.

Created in the same mold as the Wikipedia project--the open-source encyclopedia that lets anyone create or edit an article and that now has nearly 747,000 entries in English alone--Wikibooks is still in its earliest stages.

Yet because of Wikibooks' digital model, in which material written for the project can be as short or as long as needed, and be easily manipulated, read and edited, Wales and others believe it can pose a major challenge to the publishing industry's hold on the world of textbooks.

"The purpose is really contained in the word 'freely licensed,' which is to make available to anyone in the world, in any language, a curriculum that they can copy, redistribute and modify, for whatever purpose they may have, for free," Wales said.

The publishing industry is "going to have to recognize that there's a fundamental shift in the marketplace," he added. "Some of them will prosper. Some of them will figure out the new regime and find out ways to add value. Others will stick their heads in the sand and get slaughtered."

The hope is that by turning the Wikibooks keys over to a worldwide community of writers and editors, the project will eventually contain tens of thousands of books and smaller entries on a wide range of topics. In each case, the idea is that any Wikibooks reader could create his or her own book or make edits to an existing title.

Wales explained that the Wikibooks authors--whom he calls "volunteers"--are professionals from many fields, college and graduate students and professors. "All sorts of geeky people, basically," he said.

Today, Wikibooks contains 11,426 submissions. The topics covered range from biology to economics in New Zealand. Because the books are digital and open source, any teacher can decide to assign one and simply point students to PDFs they can print.

But Wales is the first to acknowledge that the project is several years away from maturity.

"It's still a young project," he said. "I would consider it to be mission accomplished when we could point and say, 'Well, you could teach yourself, or someone could teach you using these materials, (anything) from the kindergarten to the university level.'"

Naturally, Wikibooks isn't the only effort to amass a vast collection of digital books. Google has been building its library and print projects since last year. But where Google's project is a digital database of often copyrighted works, Wikibooks' material is all work that has been made free to the public.

"The bigger it gets and the more people stumble across it, the more people are interested in volunteering."
--Jimmy Wales, co-founder, Wikipedia

Some in education think a project like Wikibooks gives academics new outlets for their research and puts a great deal of pressure on traditional textbook publishers to adapt to new technologies.

"There are a couple of huge tensions that exist in the academic world," said Steven Brewer, an assistant professor of biology at the University of Massachusetts. "One is that the traditional model of publication as scholarship is slow. It takes a long time for material to get through the peer review process...As the idea of Wikibooks becomes more popular, we're going to see a bunch of things that are already published on the Internet start to become collected there."

Brewer also hopes Wikibooks opens up a new kind of learning opportunity for students because it leverages the power of digital information that is instantly modified and easily researched.

"There are a number of things people can do...that don't require Wikibooks to be finished yet," Brewer said. "The big one is to get students involved in producing materials (and) also vetting materials (and) also adding elaboration to materials."

He envisions teachers--at any level--asking students to examine existing Wikibooks entries for accuracy and relevancy and then appending their findings to those entries. That would allow the project to become a teaching tool and a work in progress all at once.

"Increasingly, we're going to see classes where students do that kind of work," Brewer said, "and I think that at that point we're going to see Wikibooks really take off."

Charlie Hibbard, a former high school teacher from San Francisco, agreed that Wikibooks can become a multilayered tool in a way

CONTINUED: ...
Page 1 | 2

See more CNET content tagged:
Jimmy Wales, biology, textbook, curriculum, college

Add a Comment (Log in or register) 11 comments
How would this work?
by Jimmu411 September 28, 2005 9:55 AM PDT
What happens when somone puts out a text on the origin of Man? Seems like you'd have constant alterations by various religious fundamentalists and Darwinian proponents each "correcting" the mistakes of the others, with occasional insertions by feminists demanding that the topic should be the origin of Persons...
Reply to this comment
same as wikipedia
by Karios Kasra September 28, 2005 9:57 AM PDT
backups of every change, admins have the right to revert changes, voting in place for best version, etc.
View reply
"Evoultion" is in the Wikipedia and seems to last (and evolve...)
by hadaso September 28, 2005 11:31 AM PDT
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evolution
strategy
by September 29, 2005 6:08 AM PDT
I think that the strategy for textbook companies is pretty straight-
forward. Instead of hiring authors to write textbooks, hire them to
supply information to a wikitextbook. Restrict editing to these
people. Then sell access to the wikitextbook to students. It's not a
true wiki, but close enough if you have enough editors.
Reply to this comment
This is fine for textbooks, but ...
by nasser0000 September 30, 2005 10:46 AM PDT
my wife has grown weary of the constant, download this 40 page except from a book, etc. etc. that she sees at her school. It's like, we pay HOW MUCH? and you aren't willing to print them yourselves and hand them out to us?

Also, what happens if a student does not have broadband or their broadband goes down?
Reply to this comment
Reader Requirements
by hollasch October 2, 2005 12:10 PM PDT
My new PDA has VGA resolution of around 160dpi. The ultimate target for standard reading resolution is around 200dpi. A reading device at that resolution surpases printed reading (particularly with backlighting, search, audio, annotations and so forth). Prototype devices already a few years old easily held around 350 novels. Couple that with continuous or even sporadic broadband/network access, and you have the other end of the story. Imagine a device that completely surpassed what you get with a bookcase, which you could carry with you anywhere, mark up, cross link, and occasionally update when possible. The wait is killing me...
Or what if I want to read elsewhere?
by October 3, 2005 8:20 AM PDT
Or what if I want to cram for finals the way I did when I was in college, buried into my hammock between two trees on the other side of campus from my dorm, to minimize distractions? Not the best place to have to read all my "textbooks" off a computer.
View reply
How about a USB Flash Drive
by tantrik November 15, 2005 4:38 PM PST
That way you can download what you want onto the flash drive and the kid can take it to school.
Some schools are insisting on this already.
Suspect Revisionist History
by cjohn17 October 2, 2005 8:10 PM PDT
I've found that many of the search results contain revisionist
history with a noticeable left tilt.

I consider this a suspect product at best. No surprise considering
its open source with little editorial oversight.

http://espellahumanzee.blogspot.com/
Reply to this comment
advertisement

Latest tech news headlines

RSS Feeds

Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.

More feeds available in our RSS feed index.

Markets

Market news, charts, SEC filings, and more

Related quotes

Dow Jones Industrials (-2.51%) -215.45 8,376.24
S&P 500 (-2.93%) -25.52 845.22
NASDAQ (-3.14%) -46.82 1,445.56
CNET TECH (-3.18%) -34.27 1,045.01
  Symbol Lookup
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right