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Joel Neff's avatar

There are two factors at play, I think: one is the lack of standardized access to digital technologies. As a narrow and personal example, during the pandemic, I have been severely limited in what technologies I can use in online or hybrid lessons because I have to make sure that all students can access everything equally and fairly. (This has been problematic for a lot of reasons, but the most surprising one was bandwidth.) So, in your example of replacing a diagram of a frog dissection with an online, interactive model I would need to make sure that all students could access the model; if it were an AR model, I would need to make sure all students had devices that could properly display AR tags and labels.

The second factor is that it is far easier to design a digital app, website, or ebook from the ground-up than it is to re-configure existing textbooks as hybrid versions. As an example, a lot of the textbooks I use have replaced CDs with online audio. It works well enough. However, if I were to build that textbook from the ground up as an app, I could have all the audio and video files embedded and playable from within the text itself.

But the truth is, I think even the best hybrid textbooks are just a stopgap. I predict that within the next few years, we'll see the promised full-color e-ink screens come to market and that will contribute to a rapid, full-scale shift in how textbooks are both produced and marketed. So, while hybrid textbooks would be nice, I suspect most publishers are trying to find new models rather than modify old ones.

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Chevanne Scordinsky's avatar

Gatekeepers are tied to traditional and profitable modes of book sales and learning but I’d also say their a common denominator. They can reach most and don’t press the current system to change to elevate that common denominator.

Hybrid programs can help reach more learners in the current system, however. Rather than saying someone is just “not good” at a subject, the varied illustrations could illuminate it. The flexibility might actually attract more sales outside education because people would be able to learn something of interest in a new way.

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