Top Hat Launches Courseware Online Marketplace for Higher Ed

Top Hat, a company known for its classroom response tools for colleges and universities, earlier this week brought its digital textbook marketplace out of beta.

In the marketplace, now available to Top Hat users at more than 750 colleges and universities, educators can select free or fee-based digital course content. They can also create their own interactive content with text, activities, quizzes, videos, questions, social media feeds and more and share it within the marketplace — earning a portion of the money anytime their materials are used by fellow academics. In addition, educators can collaborate with each other in the marketplace to co-create interactive textbooks and supplementary course materials. They can also act as a peer reviewer, offering others feedback on materials.

A few higher ed institutions started testing out Top Hat's courseware platform last year, according to a news release, and it is now widely available. A professor at the University of Oregon used the platform to co-author an interactive textbook for her geography course with her students, for example. They mined through social media data to design a game that simulates an earthquake and included it in the digital textbook.

The marketplace builds on Top Hat's vision to create a complete teaching platform and fulfills a promise the company made earlier this year to expand its academic content — going head-to-head with textbook publishers. The company aims to give students a low-cost option for purchasing courseware compared to traditional textbooks, the news release said.

To learn more, watch a video overview or visit the marketplace.

About the Author

Sri Ravipati is Web producer for THE Journal and Campus Technology. She can be reached at [email protected].

Featured

  • From Fire TV to Signage Stick: University of Utah's Digital Signage Evolution

    Jake Sorensen, who oversees sponsorship and advertising and Student Media in Auxiliary Business Development at the University of Utah, has navigated the digital signage landscape for nearly 15 years. He was managing hundreds of devices on campus that were incompatible with digital signage requirements and needed a solution that was reliable and lowered labor costs. The Amazon Signage Stick, specifically engineered for digital signage applications, gave him the stability and design functionality the University of Utah needed, along with the assurance of long-term support.

  • Abstract geometric shapes including hexagons, circles, and triangles in blue, silver, and white

    Google Launches Its Most Advanced AI Model Yet

    Google has introduced Gemini 2.5 Pro Experimental, a new artificial intelligence model designed to reason through problems before delivering answers, a shift that marks a major leap in AI capability, according to the company.

  • Training the Next Generation of Space Cybersecurity Experts

    CT asked Scott Shackelford, Indiana University professor of law and director of the Ostrom Workshop Program on Cybersecurity and Internet Governance, about the possible emergence of space cybersecurity as a separate field that would support changing practices and foster future space cybersecurity leaders.

  • Two stylized glowing spheres with swirling particles and binary code are connected by light beams in a futuristic, gradient space

    New Boston-Based Research Center to Advance Quantum Computing with AI

    NVIDIA is establishing a research hub dedicated to advancing quantum computing through artificial intelligence (AI) and accelerated computing technologies.