Flat World Knowledge Partners with Bookshare to Make
Free College Textbooks Accessible to People with Print Disabilities
Breakthrough Agreement Reduces Costs for Postsecondary
Institutions; Improves Timely Access to Core Textbooks in Accessible
Formats
Contacts:
Flat World Knowledge Media Contact: Corey Oiesen
Dovetail Public Relations
408-395 -3600
fwk@dovetailpr.com
Bookshare Media Contact: Valerie C. Chernek
410-871-2670
valerie.c@bookshare.org
Benetech Media Contact: Ann Harrison
415-637-5262
ann.h@benetech.org
December 14, 2009, Nyack, NY and Palo Alto, CA – Flat World Knowledge,
the leading publisher of expert-authored, open content college textbooks,
today became the first dedicated college textbook publisher to supply
its digital textbooks to Bookshare, the world’s largest online
accessible library for people with print disabilities.
Approximately one to two percent of the U.S. population has print disabilities
that qualify for Bookshare. This agreement will benefit more than 75,000
Bookshare members who are blind or who have low vision, a physical disability
or a severe learning disability that affects reading. In addition, the
open content license will allow other users to benefit from accessible
content: students who are English language learners, those who have
milder or undiagnosed disabilities and those who benefit from multi-modal
reading with a combination of simultaneous highlighted text and computer-generated
speech.
“If all publishers supplied their books directly to Bookshare,
it would save colleges and universities millions of dollars each year
and immediately equalize educational opportunities,” said Jim
Fruchterman, CEO of Benetech, the nonprofit organization that operates
Bookshare. “Without the cooperation of a publisher such as Flat
World, students often wait for weeks to get textbooks in accessible
formats and, in some cases, are forced to drop courses due to lack of
accessible books. Flat World is the first postsecondary textbook publisher
to recognize and alleviate this problem.”
The agreement comes at an important time for thousands of cash-strapped
postsecondary institutions that currently spend millions of dollars
each year to scan and convert texts into accessible formats for their
students with print disabilities. These institutions, which are already
suffering from budget cutbacks from state, local and private funding
sources, can access these textbooks from Bookshare at no cost.
Flat World is one of the fastest growing providers of higher education
learning materials. For the Fall 2009 semester, over 40,000 college
students at more than 400 colleges used Flat World textbooks, up from
only 1,000 students at 30 colleges in Spring 2009.
“Flat World Knowledge removes barriers to textbook access,”
said Eric Frank, co-founder of Flat World Knowledge. “Our open
textbook model eliminates the cost barrier by making them free online
and by providing affordable choices offline. We're proud to work with
Bookshare to collectively remove another barrier by enabling full, free
access for thousands of students with print disabilities.”
The Flat World/Bookshare agreement will provide timely access to peer-reviewed,
professionally edited digital textbooks in accessible formats for students
and individuals with qualified disabilities. The initial agreement covers
eleven high-quality digital textbooks, mostly weighted toward business
and economics, as well as an additional fifty titles under development.
The titles under development, to be released over the next two years,
cover general education subjects such as algebra, psychology, genetics,
sociology and media and society. Within two years, Flat World’s
Bookshare catalog will include most of the twenty-five highest-enrollment
college courses.
Flat World Knowledge will supply its textbooks directly to Bookshare
as digital XML files. This will bypass the typical paper-to-digital
scanning process, eliminate scanning errors and allow students to access
the books more quickly. Bookshare will convert Flat World Knowledge
books and make them available in DAISY (Digital Accessible Information
System) and BRF (Braille Ready Format) formats. DAISY files are versatile
electronic files that allow students with print disabilities to easily
navigate through a book, manipulate the appearance of text and pages,
and select preferred voices and their rate of speed. These options support
individual reading styles and enable multi-modal reading with simultaneous
text and computer-generated speech. Students with print disabilities
and Bookshare memberships can read the texts via free ebook software
from Bookshare, and all students with reading challenges can use other
common DAISY software applications and hardware devices that support
DAISY or BRF.
Traditional copyrighted books that do not have open licensing terms,
including those contributed to Bookshare by almost all other publishers,
are protected with digital rights management technology and are available
only to those with a documented print disability. Operating under an
exemption in the U.S. copyright law called the Chafee amendment, Bookshare
maintains rigorous qualification standards to prevent books from being
distributed to unqualified individuals. The Chafee amendment enables
nonprofit and government entities to create accessible versions of copyrighted
works and distribute them freely to individuals with print disabilities.
About Bookshare
Bookshare is the world’s largest accessible online library for
people with print disabilities. Through its technology initiatives and
partnerships, Bookshare seeks to raise the floor on accessibility issues
so that individuals with print disabilities have the same ease of access
to print materials as people without disabilities. In 2007, Bookshare
received a $32 million five-year award from the U.S. Department of Education,
Office of Special Education Programs (OSEP), to provide free access
for all U.S. students with a qualified print disability. The Bookshare
library now has over 63,000 books and serves more than 75,000 members.
Bookshare is an initiative of Benetech, a Palo Alto, CA-based nonprofit
which creates sustainable technology to solve pressing social needs.
Bookshare offers a variety of membership options for schools, organizations,
qualified students and individuals. Publishers interested in contributing
to the Bookshare library should contact Robin Seaman, Publisher Liaison.
Visit Bookshare at http://www.bookshare.org.
About Flat World Knowledge
Founded in 2007 by textbook publishing industry veterans Jeff Shelstad
and Eric Frank, privately held Flat World Knowledge is a leading publisher
of open textbooks for higher education. Flat World Knowledge’s
textbooks are written by the world’s leading subject matter experts.
The books are peer-reviewed, professionally edited and made available
for free online under a Creative Commons license to educators and students.
Educators have the freedom to use the books as-is or to reorganize and
edit them to suit their unique classroom requirements. Students can
access the books for free online or purchase alternatives from print-on-demand
versions of the books, to audio versions, to downloadable versions and
more at a fraction of the cost of traditional textbooks. Students can
also purchase from a range of digital study aids that support each book.
Flat World Knowledge backs its textbooks with an online social learning
platform that allows students to learn from one another as well as from
the book. For more information visit www.flatworldknowledge.com.
Comments about the Bookshare/Flat World Knowledge Agreement
“College students today are frustrated with the cost of printed
textbooks,” shared Deborah Armstrong, Alternate Media Specialist
at De Anza Community College, Cupertino, CA. “This partnership
with Bookshare and Flat World Knowledge is a giant step forward to offer
high-quality, peer-reviewed, open source digital textbooks to minimize
costs and parents’ angst for how to pay for core textbooks necessary
to support their child’s college education.”
“Our college campus uses Flat World Knowledge in its Accounting
120 and 121 courses,” said Erika Higginbotham, Adaptive Computer
Technology Specialist at San Diego Mesa College. “The partnership
with Bookshare means that students with disabilities in those courses
will have their textbooks when the semester begins. As more textbook
publishers join together to support individuals with disabilities, we
look forward to the day of having a majority of textbooks available
in accessible formats when school begins to support more students in
all required subject areas.”
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