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

  • consumer electronic devices—laptop, tablet, smartphone, and smart speaker—on a wooden surface with glowing AI icons hovering above

    OpenAI to Acquire Io, Plans Consumer AI Hardware Push

    OpenAI has announced plans to acquire io, an artificial intelligence hardware startup co-founded by former Apple design chief Jony Ive. The deal is aimed at creating a dedicated division for the development of AI-powered consumer devices.

  • Jasper Halekas, instrument lead for the Analyzer for Cusp Electrons (ACE), checks final calibration. ACE was designed and built at the University of Iowa for the TRACERS mission.

    TRACERS: The University of Iowa Leads NASA-Funded Space Weather Research with Twin Satellites

    Working in tandem, the recently launched TRACERS satellites enable new measurement strategies that will produce significant data for the study of space weather. And as lead institution for the mission, the University of Iowa upholds its long-held value of bringing research collaborations together with academics.

  • computer monitor with a bold AI search bar on the screen

    Google Reimagines Search with AI Mode

    About a year after launching AI Overviews in its flagship search offering, Google has announced broad availability of AI Mode in Search.

  • abstract pattern of cybersecurity, ai and cloud imagery

    OpenAI Report Identifies Malicious Use of AI in Cloud-Based Cyber Threats

    A report from OpenAI identifies the misuse of artificial intelligence in cybercrime, social engineering, and influence operations, particularly those targeting or operating through cloud infrastructure. In "Disrupting Malicious Uses of AI: June 2025," the company outlines how threat actors are weaponizing large language models for malicious ends — and how OpenAI is pushing back.