David Ruth
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david@rice.edu
Jade Boyd
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OpenStax developing textbooks that deliver personalized lessons
Rice University-based nonprofit to create books that optimize how each student learns
HOUSTON — (Aug. 5, 2014) — Rice University-based nonprofit OpenStax, which has already provided free textbooks to hundreds of thousands of college students, today announced a $9 million effort to develop free, digital textbooks capable of delivering personalized lessons to high school students.
OpenStax officials said the pioneering K-12 education project, which is funded by a grant from the Laura and John Arnold Foundation (LJAF), will use the same kind of technology that Google, Amazon and Netflix rely upon to deliver personalized search, retail and entertainment choices.
“The same sort of algorithms that might predict which songs or books you’ll like can be used to deliver a personalized experience to every child in a classroom,” said OpenStax Founder Richard Baraniuk, Rice’s Victor E. Cameron Professor of Engineering.
OpenStax is best-known for its higher-education division, OpenStax College. The rapidly growing publisher uses philanthropic gifts to produce high-quality, peer-reviewed textbooks that are free online and low-cost in print. OpenStax College’s first seven books have already saved students more than $13 million.
OpenStax’s latest project is unique in more than one respect. It marks the nonprofit’s first venture in the K-12 educational space as well as its first effort to enhance books technologically to improve education outcomes in addition to educational access.
“We can improve outcomes in a number of ways,” Baraniuk said. “We can help teachers and administrators by tapping into metrics that they already collect — like which kind of homework and test questions a student tends to get correct or incorrect — as well as things that only the book would notice — like which examples a student clicks on, how long she stays on a particular illustration or which sections she goes back to reread.”
Baraniuk said the technology will pinpoint areas where students need more assistance, and it will react by delivering specific content to reinforce concepts in those areas. The personalized books will deliver tailored lessons that allow individual students to learn at their own pace. For fast learners, lessons might be streamlined and compact; for a struggling student, lessons might include supplemental material and additional learning exercises.
“The technology is already here, in the sense that most of us use it online every day,” said Daniel Williamson, OpenStax managing director. “However, the full potential of this technology has yet to be realized for education. The project will allow us to demonstrate that this technology is effective and can be used in the classroom to improve both students’ and teachers’ return on effort.”
Williamson and Baraniuk said the two-year project calls for OpenStax to create proof-of-concept, fully personalized textbooks for Advanced Placement biology and high school physics. Much of the educational content will be repurposed from two popular OpenStax College titles — Concepts of Biology and College Physics.
“This dynamic technology has the potential to dramatically improve teaching and learning,” LJAF Director of Venture Development Kelli Rhee explained. “Teachers will have a powerful, new tool for customized instruction that will help students master subject material. Progress will be tracked in real time and can be monitored from any location, giving teachers, parents, administrators and students greater insight into academic performance.”
OpenStax is a nonprofit initiative of Rice University and is made possible by the support of the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, LJAF, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the 20 Million Minds Foundation, the Maxfield Foundation, the Calvin K. Kazanjian Foundation and the Leon Lowenstein Foundation. For more information, visit http://openstaxcollege.org.
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VIDEO is available at:
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CAPTION: Rice University-based publisher OpenStax is embarking on a $9 million effort to develop free, digital textbooks capable of delivering personalized lessons to high school students.
CREDIT: Jeff Fitlow/Rice University
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CAPTION: Richard Baraniuk
CREDIT: Jeff Fitlow/Rice University
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CAPTION: Daniel Williamson
CREDIT: Jeff Fitlow/Rice University
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