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AC 2007-2585: PREPARING FOR ELECTRONIC

Hugh Jack, Grand Valley State University Hugh Jack is the Chair of Product Design and Manufacturing Engineering at Grand Valley State University in Grand Rapids Michigan. His interests include controls, automation, and open source software. Page 12.1177.1

© American Society for Engineering Education, 2007 Preparing for Electronic Textbooks

Abstract

Electroniccopiesofarebecomingincreasinglycommon.Examplesoftheseincludenoned itablePDFfiles,orfullyeditablebooksbasedonthemodel17.Electronicbooksarewell suitedtoengineering;theyallowveryfastupdates,theyareeasytoaccess,theydonotrequirethe bulkofpaper,theyareeasilysearchable,andtheyallowmultiple/alternatesources.So,thisbegs thequestion,whyaretheresofewelectronicbooksinuseinhighereducation?Inpart,thisis becausemanyofthecommercialbooksarenotavailableelectronically.Althoughsomepublishers areexploringwaystomaketheircollectionsavailableelectronicallytheseeffortsarestillintheir infancy.

However,alargerpuzzleisinthestepawayfrompapertopurelyelectronicmedia.Forexample, considerthefollowingproblems.HowdoyouwritenotesorslipapageintoafixedPDFfile?Is thedocumentyouareviewingonyourmachineoronthenetwork?Whocanchangethedocu ment?Whathappensifsomebodychangesahomeworkproblemafteritwasassigned?Etc. Assumingthatthefutureoftheelectronicisonlinetherearecurrentlytwopopularmodels. IntheDistributionmodelthereareasmallnumberofauthorsandeditorswhocontrolanddistrib uteafixedoreditableformatforthebook.Thismodelmostcloselyresemblesthecurrentpublish ingmodel.IntheopenmodelthebookwouldbeonaWikiorContentManagementSystem (CMS)wheremultipleeditorsandcontributorscouldfreelychangeit.Theopenmodelhasgreat potentialtogenerateexcellentelectronicbooks,butitaddssomenewconsiderationsnotprevi ouslyencountered.Thepaperdiscussessomeoftheanticipatedissuessuchasmultipleversions, variousnotations,vandalism,andrightsforstudentsandfaculty.Inadditionasetoffea turesareproposedforthepurposeoffuelingdiscussion.

The Current Situation

Ourstudentsmakeextensiveuseoftextbooksthatareprintedonpaper.Theyalsospendasignifi cantamountoftimecarryingbagsfullofpaper.Thisfliesinthefaceofmanypredictionsthat paperwouldallbutdisappearbythemillennium.Althoughpaperhassomeclearbenefits,itis worthaskingwhyelectronicbooksarenotmorecommongivenandotherportableelec tronicdevices.

Electronicdoesexistbutitissomewhatlimited.Thereareaneverincreasingnumber offreeelectronicbooksavailableonthe.MostoftheseareinPDFformat,makingthem easytoreadandsearchwhilekeepingtheoverallfilesizerelativelysmall.Someolderbooksare storedasscannedimages,preventingsearchesandrequiringmuchlargerfilesizes,buttheseare stillrelativelysmallonamodernharddrive.However,publishersarereluctanttoreleasetheir Page 12.1177.2 mainstaytitlesinelectronicformatsforfearofthecopyinglikethatseeninthemusicindustry. Therehavebeenmanyfalsestartsasthecommercialpublishershavetriedtojointheelectronic world.Someoftheseincludetheeffortslistedbelow.Itisworthnotingthatmostoftheirefforts increasethecostforthematerials,donotrelinquishcontrolofcontent,anddonottakefulladvan tageofmoderncomputers. includingsupplementalCDswithadditionalchapters,solutions,videos,software,etc. timelimitedaccesstoonlineresources. electroniconlybookswherestudentsbuyaccessforasemester. readersand/orsoftwarethatlockintheelectronicbooks. unrestrictedbundledwithregularebooks.Theauthorrecallsabundledsupple menttoacontrolsbookusingMathcadin1995. onlinewithlimitedcapabilities.

Foranumberofreasonsthefreeopensource(FOS)communityisgrowingawayfromthetradi tionalpublishersandstartingtodevelopmaterialsthemselves.Themostnotablecaseistheemer genceof.orgfromamerecuriosityacoupleofyearsago,toamajorcompetitortothe EncyclopediaBritannica1.Otherpublishersexpecttoconfrontsimilarsituationssoonfrom groupsfocusedontextbooks2,3.

The Good and Bad of Paper

Mostofusappreciatethevalueoflookingthroughatofindinformation.Havingasetof booksonrelatedtopicsgroupedonashelfcreatesknowledgeproximitybetterthanasearch engine4could.Afewminutesofflippingcangiveabird’seyeviewofatopic,andatableofcon tentsandindexcangiveeasyaccesstospecificinformationveryquickly.Moreoverthebookson theshelfaregenerallytrustworthybecausetheyhavebeenreviewedandeditedbyqualifiedpro fessionals.

Bytheirverynaturepaperboundbookshavesomeconstraintsimposedbythefactthattheymust beedited,printedandsoldwithinareasonabletimeframe.Insummarythesecanbelistedas, booksarepreparedtoaddressatopictheemphasisison‘a’ thematerialinabooksifoftenaimedataparticularknowledgelevel booksmustbeprintablewithinlimits(length,size,features,colors,etc) bookscanbeaugmentedwithmedia(suchasCDs) ashouldcoveratopicinalinearorderthatbuildsincomplexity booksarecontrolledbyasingleauthorwiththesupportofhighlyqualifiedreviewers andeditors thecostishigherifthebookismorecomplexorhasasmallcirculation

Ironicallyitisworthnotingthatallmodernbooksaretypesetinsoftwareandexistinanelec tronicformbeforetheyareeveryprinted.Itwouldactuallybemucheasier,butlesslucrative,if

thepublishersdispensedwiththeprintingprocess. Page 12.1177.3 New Developments

Theconceptofelectronicpublishinganddistributionisnotnewandisdestinedtohappeneventu ally.Someoftheissuessurroundingelectronicpublishingare;

Thenumberofelectronicbooksavailableontheinternethasblossomed.Oneoftheear liestpioneersofinternetpublishingisProjectGutenbergthatspecializedinoutofcopy rightclassics5.Morerecentlytherehavebeenaproliferationofbooksthataremore recentlyoutofprint6,orselfpublished7.

Anumberoftoolsalreadyexistforcollaborativepublishing.Forexampleelectronic booksontheinternetcanusetheGnuFreeDocumentationLicense(GFDL)8.Forexam pleabookoriginallyreleasedinEnglish9underthislicensewasthentranslatedto Dansk10.

Manyindividualsareconcernedthatifthepublishersdominatethetransitiontoelec tronicbookstherewillbeawidespreaduseofDigitalRightsManagement(DRM)pro tectiontopreventcopyrightinfringement.ThereismajordesignthatDRMisintendedto helpprotectcontentowners,itisveryharmfultotherightsofthegeneralpublic.Itis alsoexpectedtohavenumerousconsequencesforlibraries11.

Collaborativepublishingmodelsseemtohavecapturedtheimaginationandspiritof thoseoutsidetheacademicworld.Wikipediaisanexcellentexample,allowingindividu als(notverifiedexperts)tocontributeandeditarticles.Thelargercommunitythen reviewsandvetsthearticlesforaccuracyandimpartiality.Earlyconcernsthatthesite wouldbeoverrunwithvandalismand‘flamewars’havebeenlargelyunfounded.

Previouslyfiguresandequationswerestoredasbitmappedimagesthatwereverydiffi culttoedit.TheInternetstandardsgroupshavebeenadoptingnewstandardsthatallow easiereditingoffigureswithSVG12andequationswithMML13.

ContentManagementSystems(CMS)havebeendevelopedforcooperativelydevelop ingcomplextechnicaldocumentsusingnetworkedenvironments.Someoftheseinclude Drupal14,15.Inmanywaysthesearemorelikedistributedworkprocessors,asopposed tothedistributedwebeditorsofthewikimodels.

Othermodelsareemergingsuchasportablecomputingapplicationsusing flashdrives.Forexampleonethatappliestothisworkisaportablewikienvironment thatincludesMMLandSVGeditingcapabilitiesrunningonawebpagewithAJAXno additionalsoftwareisneededonthehostcomputer,beyondthebrowser16.Anothersim ilarsoftwarepackageisDoxwiki. Page 12.1177.4 A Sample Vision

Technologicallywearereadyforelectronicbooksintheclassroom.Themajorbarrieratthispoint isaprovenmodelthatotherscanreuse.Acrudeexamplemodelofuseofthebookinacourseis outlinedbelow. 1.Beforethecoursetheinstructoridentifiesthetextsectionsanddepththatshe/hewants touseforthestandardstudent.Aninstructorcouldevenelecttoprovideasetofprob lemstosolveforthesemester,andthenreferencestocoursematerialtohelpthestudents solvetheproblems. 2.Atthebeginningofacourseeachstudentdownloadsthetextbookmastercopytotheir flashdrive,ortheyconfigureanonlinesite. 3.Asthesemesterprogressesstudentsareguidedthroughthebookatahighlevel.Ifa particularstudentneedsmoreknowledgeaboutaparticulartopictheypursuethedetails theyneedby'drillingdown'inthetextorontheInternet.Itwouldalsobepossibleto providealternatematerialsforconcretevs.learners. 4.Throughoutthesemesterstudentsmaketheirownnotationsinthetextbookthatonly theycansee.Theymayalsochoosetosubmitsuggestionsorcorrectionstothemaster version.Ifapprovedthecorrectionswillbeavailabletootherstudentsimmediately. 5.Bytheendofthecourseeachstudenthasaviewofthebookthatishighlyindividual ized. 6.Studentscanreconciletheirchangedbookwiththeonlinebookatanytime.This wouldhavevaluebyallowingthemtoimportcorrectionsandimprovementssincethe initialcreation.

OnepossibleuseisillustratedinFigure1.Essentiallyaninstructorwouldassemblea(linear) courseoutlineusingavailableresources.Someoftheresourceswouldbeconsideredcoreand simplycopiedintothecourseoutline.Othersmaybeleftashyperlinksforavarietyofreasons suchascopyrights,thematerialchangesfrequently,thematerialisreview/tutorialinnature,etc. Thestudentswouldthentakeacopyofthecourseoutlinemadebytheinstructorandfollow/mod ifyastheyseefit.Itisalsopossibleforthestudentsandinstructortosubmitchanges/additionsto thesources,basedupontheirlocalchanges.Thesourcesmayalsobemaintainedbyothersoutside theacademicsystemasappropriate.

Whilethemodelpresentedappearstoonlyconsiderfreesources,itispossibleforthismodeltobe ofvalueforcommercialpublishers.Thisisimportantbecausecommercialpublishersdohelppro videadditionalmotivationfordevelopinghighqualitybooks,services,andinformation. Page 12.1177.5 Internet Instructor Student Course Copy Outline

Academic Databases

IndicatesLocalCopyMade

IndicatesHypertextLinktoOutsideSource

Figure1AnexampleCourseSoftwareModel Page 12.1177.6 Issues to be Resolved

Thereareanumberofissuesasclassifiedbelow.

Essential Identifysoftwarethatrequireslittleornoclientendinstallation/maintenance. Allowdynamiconlineeditingofequation(MMLorLatex)andimageformats (SVG)indocuments. Establishpermissions/policiesforpublicandcoursebasedbookediting. Aclearmodeltoemphasizethevalueforinstructorsiscriticaltotheadoptionof themodel. Themodelshouldallownonlinearityincludinglinkingtootherdocumentsand mediatypes. Allowthematerialtobeconstructedinalternatewayssothatitisnotdrivenby thebodyofthewriting.

NicetoHave Identifywaystoallowportableelectronicbooksthatvaryfromthemastercopy, butreferbacktoit. ExploreuniquetechnologiesthatallowlocallyhostedWiki's(orCMSs)suchas doxwiki,,. Apolicythatencouragestheuniformityofnotationsandformatswithoutforcing amonoculturetodevelop. Useoftoolssuchaswritelytosupportcollaborativework. Developacommercialmodelforpublishingtorewardauthors,editors,anddis tributors. Concurrentdevelopmentsoftwaremayprovideatoolforresolvingparallel changesinthebook.OnesuchsystemlonginuseforsoftwareistheConcurrent VersionSystem(CVS).

The Next Step

Theauthorisprogressingtodevelopidentifyandtestsoftwaretoimplementtheelectronictext books.Itishopedthatotherswouldbeabletoprovidehelpfulinputtosteerthisprocess. Page 12.1177.7

1.Giles,J.,“Internetencyclopaediasgoheadtohead”,Nature(http://www.nature.com/news/2005/ 051212/full/438900a.html),Dec.2005 2.“TotallyFreeMath”,BernardJ.KleinPublishing,http://www.totallyfreemath.com/math.html,Jan.2007 3.“GlobalTextProject”,http://globaltext.org,Jan.2007 4.“Google”,http://www.google.com,Jan,2007 5.“ProjectGutenberg”,http://www.gutenberg.org/wiki/Main_Page,Jan.2007 6.“FreeTechBooks”,http://www.freetechbooks.com/index.php,Jan.2007. 7.Jack,H.,“BooksPage”,http://claymore.engineer.gvsu.edu/~jackh/books.html,Jan.2007 8.“GNUFreeDocumentationLicense“,http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html,Jan.2007 9.Jack,H.,“AutomatedManufacturingSystems;PLCs“,http://claymore.engineer.gvsu.edu/~jackh/books/plcs/,2007 10.multipleauthors,“PLCbogen”,http://da.wikibooks.org/wiki/PLC_bogen,Jan.2006 11.DavisJr.,D.D.,“DigitalRightsManagementandContentLicensing”,http://www.sla.org/content/ Shop/Information/infoonline/2002/may02/davis.cfm,May2002 12.“ScalableVectorGraphics(SVG)XMLGraphicsfortheWeb”,http://www.w3.org/Graphics/ SVG/,Jan.2007 13.“MathematicalMarkupLanguage(MathML™)1.01Specification“,http://www.w3.org/TR/REC MathML/,July1999 14.“Drupal”,http://drupal.org/,Jan.2007. 15.Visel,D.,“anintroductiontosophie”,http://www.futureofthebook.org/sophie/introduction/,March,2006 16.“ASciencePadaTiddlyWikisuitableforscientificnotes“,http://math.chapman.edu/~jipsen/ascience pad/asciencepad.html,Jan.2007 17.““,http://www.wikibooks.org,Jan.2007. Page 12.1177.8