U Minnesota Bookstores Partner with McGraw-Hill To Reduce Textbook Costs

Students at the University of Minnesota (U of M) will soon have access to their course textbooks through their e-readers and tablets at a reduced cost. The U of M Bookstores have entered into a two-year partnership with McGraw-Hill Higher Education to make all of the publisher's e-books and adaptive learning products available to U of M students at a discounted rate.

The U of M Bookstores have access to the enrollment and textbook information for each course at the university. With this new arrangement, the bookstores will be able to identify which course materials are part of the McGraw-Hill Higher Education digital catalog and which students require access to those materials. Students will automatically have access to those materials on any browser-enabled device through the university's learning management system. The bookstores will directly bill students' bursar accounts for the materials.

"As McGraw-Hill Education evolves its e-book business model, so are we evolving," said Bob Crabb, director of University of Minnesota Bookstores, in a prepared statement. "We are pleased to partner with McGraw-Hill for this first-of-its-kind program. We view this as a strong opportunity to increase e-book usage on campus while keeping costs down for students. It's also an opportunity for us to expand our traditional retail model and begin to move toward a service bureau model."

This is not the first time U of M has collaborated with McGraw-Hill Education. The university previously participated in an e-book pilot program with the publisher, together with Internet2 and Courseload.

U of M also uses McGraw-Hill Education's online learning platforms:

McGraw-Hill's e-books are capable of interfacing with these digital tools.

The University of Minnesota serves 65,000 undergraduate and graduate students and employs 25,000 faculty and staff across its five campuses.

The university's new McGraw-Hill Education e-book program will launch with the fall 2012 semester.

About the Author

Leila Meyer is a technology writer based in British Columbia. She can be reached at [email protected].

Featured

  • student reading a book with a brain, a protective hand, a computer monitor showing education icons, gears, and leaves

    4 Steps to Responsible AI Implementation

    Researchers at the University of Kansas Center for Innovation, Design & Digital Learning (CIDDL) have published a new framework for the responsible implementation of artificial intelligence at all levels of education.

  • glowing digital brain interacts with an open book, with stacks of books beside it

    Federal Court Rules AI Training with Copyrighted Books Fair Use

    A federal judge ruled this week that artificial intelligence company Anthropic did not violate copyright law when it used copyrighted books to train its Claude chatbot without author consent, but ordered the company to face trial on allegations it used pirated versions of the books.

  • server racks, a human head with a microchip, data pipes, cloud storage, and analytical symbols

    OpenAI, Oracle Expand AI Infrastructure Partnership

    OpenAI and Oracle have announced they will develop an additional 4.5 gigawatts of data center capacity, expanding their artificial intelligence infrastructure partnership as part of the Stargate Project, a joint venture among OpenAI, Oracle, and Japan's SoftBank Group that aims to deploy 10 gigawatts of computing capacity over four years.

  • laptop displaying a phishing email icon inside a browser window on the screen

    Phishing Campaign Targets ED Grant Portal

    Threat researchers at cybersecurity company BforeAI have identified a phishing campaign spoofing the U.S. Department of Education's G5 grant management portal.