Hello all
Greetings from over the pond!
I read this development with interest and look forward to seeing more on it.
For those of you interested in how libraries can and could get involved in this sort of activity you might be interested in some of the work at The University of Manchester. For a summary see here and you can also read in full here (OA version also available)
One of our big drivers was reducing the costs to our student which I know resonates with a lot of US library colleagues. We are also working with JISC and other UK academic libraries to look at options for a co-ordinated national agreement, so still work to do here. I am firm believer however in the more libraries get involved with this activity the more affordable it will be for all concerned, especially our students
Any queries then please do get in touch either by email or on Twitter
Have a good day
Best wishes
Dominic
Dominic Broadhurst|Academic Engagement Manager|University of Manchester Library|University of Manchester|email:
[log in to unmask]
ORCID ID
Read my recent journal article
The direct library supply of individual textbooks to students: examining the value proposition
https://doi.org/10.1108/ILS-
From: LibLicense-L Discussion Forum [mailto:[log in to unmask]
Sent: 09 March 2018 01:06
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: OhioLINK announces statewide textbook price agreements
From: "Evans, Gwen" <[log in to unmask]>
Date: Thu, 8 Mar 2018 20:51:04 +0000
My email is blowing up, so I thought I’d answer a few basic questions here.
This isn’t a deal involving libraries at all. It’s still a “student pays” model, using the inclusive access model of textbook provision. OhioLINK got involved because our consortium of academic higher education libraries, as a practical matter, covers more than 85% of Ohio Department of Higher Education accredited non-profit institutions in the state (and all the public institutions) and we were the only entity in the state that was 1) used to negotiating with publishers and 2) could cover public and private institutions with one agreement. In addition, our libraries tend to be the leaders for other affordable learning initiatives in the state, like OER and alt-textbook programs, and OhioLINK is supporting both those sorts of initiatives already.
It's a price agreement – implementation at each campus is entirely up to the campus. If they are already doing inclusive access, they’ll just do it a lower price from these publishers. If they aren’t doing it, this may provide an incentive to start the process on their campus. There are a lot of necessary partners – students, faculty, campus bookstores, provosts, etc. and each campus is different (especially with respect to bookstore contracts). That’s why we settled on a “net to publisher” model.
We are concentrating on publishers with demonstrated cost savings across our 91 institutions – first priority is high enrollment in lower division courses, with a title catalog widely assigned in Ohio. That has meant the big five and/or textbook publishers where we already have an existing contract for OhioLINK (Wiley fits both categories).
We do have a vetting procedure for publishers if they are interested – actual demonstrated impact in the state of Ohio is key. If you are
a textbook publisher interested in this initiative and think you can make it worth OhioLINK’s time, contact Johnathan Michael at [log in to unmask]
Best, Gwen
Gwen Evans
Executive Director, OhioLINK
ph: 614-485-6608
ORCID ID:0000-0002-4560-0435
Per Ohio Revised Code, this communication and any attachments may constitute a public record. (http://codes.ohio.
Date: Wed, 7 Mar 2018 07:50:07 -0500
OhioLINK announces statewide textbook price agreements with Wiley,
Pearson, and McGraw Hill
by Gwen Evans on March 6th, 2018
OhioLINK is proud to announce that it has negotiated with major
publishers to offer significant discounts on inclusive access
e-Textbooks to its members — 91 institutions of higher education
statewide. We have price agreements with Wiley, McGraw Hill, and
Pearson that will result in savings up to 80% on inclusive access
e-textbooks, discounts on courseware, and a potential savings of up to
$35 million each year for the students of Ohio.
[SNIP]
http://affordablelearning.