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  • Good morning, Hank.

  • It's Tuesday, So textbooks are expensive.

  • In fact, since I was born, average textbook prices have gone up by a factor of more than eight, far faster than inflation or housing prices or even medical care.

  • Americans spent over $10 billion last year on textbooks, which is significantly more than we spent on all fiction, like every print book and e book and audiobook of Harry Potter and the Great Gatsby and Goodnight Moon and those thrillers your Dad reads and Oh my God, we spend so much money on textbooks.

  • And what makes all this a little weird is that while textbooks are much more expensive than they used to be, they are also like, less important.

  • When I was a kid, if I wanted to learn about, say, geometry, textbooks were basically the only way.

  • But now there are lots of options.

  • There's Matha gone and extraordinarily intuitive, Siri's of online courses that has interactive elements to help you understand and confirm what you're learning.

  • Or you can watch three blue one Brown videos that help visualize complicated mathematical concepts.

  • Or you can follow Khan Academy Siris on geometry and all these learning tools and many others are entirely free now.

  • In many cases, they're not as comprehensive as textbooks, but on the other hand, they are much more interactive and also able to adapt to different needs for different students and just to reiterate.

  • Instead of costing $10 billion per year, much of which is paid by underfunded public school systems, they cost nothing.

  • Okay, so every year, Bill and Melinda Gates release an annual letter, and this year's letter is about surprises.

  • They've learned from the ways that data can be sexist toe how slow innovation in toilet technology has harmed human health.

  • And they also say the textbooks are becoming obsolete.

  • If you're interested in this kind of stuff, you should read the entire letter.

  • Lincoln, the Doobie Doo below.

  • But innit, Melinda points out that almost half of college students are over the age of 25 more than half have a job.

  • And she writes that these students often don't have the time or resource is to effectively navigate an inefficient, inflexible learning environment.

  • I am definitely not an expert in this, but anecdotally I do hear that from a lot of students, like price of educational materials is one barrier to post secondary education.

  • But the way those materials work or don't work is another barrier.

  • And then from middle school and high school students.

  • I often hear that there is a huge divide between the way that students actually learn and the way that teachers often want to teach and the textbooks and other educational materials they are required to use.

  • Most textbook buying decisions are not made by students or teachers or even school administrators.

  • They are made at the district or state level.

  • Now, of course, the standardization does exist for a reason.

  • It's an attempt to make sure that teachers air using comprehensive and reliable resource is to teach kids what they need to know.

  • Also, I think people in so called a Jew tech have spent way too much time trying to replace teachers, which just ain't gonna work, in my opinion, like there is no way to replace the incredibly vital person to person work that teachers do.

  • As Bill says in the letter, effective education of materials should seek to be a compliment to what teachers do not a replacement.

  • So our textbooks becoming obsolete.

  • Maybe, but I worry that, like other things in our economy that are growing more expensive, textbooks are somewhat impervious to the wall of supply and demand, like the actual consumers, students.

  • And sometimes teachers often don't have a lot of choice when it comes to textbooks, which I think limits innovation and also makes them artificially expensive.

  • The truth is, I have no idea how this will shake out.

  • I'm terrible at predicting the future, but I will say this.

  • I got a C minus in 10th grade geometry, which, if anything, was generous.

  • And I've always been really embarrassed about not understanding even the basics of high school math.

  • I had good teachers, but they had a lot of students, and I just couldn't get it from the textbook.

  • But then, at the age of 41 I worked my way through math organs, geometry courses with some help from a real life math teacher.

  • And while I was learning, I kept being like, Oh wow, cool.

  • Now I understand how Tess elation is work, and that makes me optimistic in spite of it all.

Good morning, Hank.

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B1 中級

教科書は時代遅れ? (Are Textbooks Obsolete?)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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