Apple to Remake Textbooks, Inspired by Steve Jobs

Steve Jobs introduces the iPad in San Francisco, Jan. 27, 2010. Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Even in his last months, Steve Jobs, the Apple co-founder who had already masterminded the iPad and iPhone, reimagined digital music, animated films and done so much more in modern technology, said he had new projects on his mind.

On Thursday in New York, Apple is holding what it calls "an education announcement in the Big Apple." Word on the street - well, not the street, but all over the digital world - is that the company has been working on one of Jobs' pet projects: to reinvent the old-fashioned American school textbook.

Gene Munster, the technology analyst who closely follows Apple for Piper Jaffray, said Apple will offer a series of software tools to make it possible to move education from textbooks to interactive digital lessons - easily prepared by publishers, teachers or others interested in creating learning materials.

"Instead of a textbook, we call it a 'native digital learning experience,'" Munster said. "I know that's a lot of words. People will call it a textbook, but it's really not just an e-book or digital book."

Jobs is cited by his biographer, Walter Isaacson, as saying textbooks were just waiting to be transformed. Not only were they dull and sometimes outdated, they were heavy (just ask any seventh-grader with a backpack full of them).

In "Steve Jobs," Isaacson wrote, "His idea was to hire great textbook writers to create digital versions, and make them a feature of the iPad. In addition, he held meetings with the major publishers, such as Pearson Education, about partnering with Apple. 'The process by which states certify textbooks is corrupt,' he said. 'But if we can make the textbooks free, and they come with the iPad, then they don't have to be certified. The crappy economy at the state level will last for a decade, and we can give them an opportunity to circumvent that whole process and save money.'"

Jobs had apparently been thinking about the educational market for a long time. Munster pointed to an interview Jobs did in 1996 in which "he was very cynical about getting education on board with technology. I think the Isaacson book reflects his later thinking."

(Walter Isaacson's publisher, Simon & Schuster, said he was out of the country and could not be reached.)

Munster said Piper Jaffray surveyed 25 computer-system managers from schools teaching kindergarten to 12th grade. "The biggest reason iPads are not in schools is not a lack of content, but that school I.T. departments can't manage hundreds of iPads," he said. "They can't control them the way they control computers."

It's not a matter of cost for schools, he said. Instead, they worry about students using school equipment to roam online instead of study. With Apple's new tools, he said, teachers, publishers and others should be able to create new learning materials even if they're not tech-savvy.

"A line being used is that 'it's the Garage Band of textbooks," said Munster. (Garage Band is an app sold by Apple that helps one create music.)

Who is threatened if Apple succeeds? Publishers who don't embrace the change, said Munster - as well as sellers of school backpacks, since students will have less to carry.

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  • aaron  •  Monroe, Louisiana  •  3 months ago
    Textbook makers have had this coming for a long time. $100+ for a new book? Please. It probably cost 3 or 4 dollars to make. In one semester of college, you could easily spend $500 or $600 on new textbooks. That's like buying a new iPad every semester.
    • UCLA Ph.D. 1978 3 months ago
      Text books are a large profit center for Colleges. Expect the loss of book profits to be added to up front fees. Colleges are about money.
    • Shackelford 3 months ago
      Aarone that is very well put. I spent at least between $500-$600 EVERY semester on new books that were a joke. Especialy a used McPearson math book for $145 plus $75 for the online access account for tests and that the previous book owner had already used.
    • SF CA 3 months ago
      UCLA - Is that why publishers continually release new versions even though barely anything has changed? The used book market is out-of-date after one year. Well, I guess colleges could get a cut of a digital book just as easily.
  • Elly  •  New York, New York  •  3 months ago
    Amazon and B&N have books in this format.. why everybody is fussing about Apple creating a program for that? What if Amazon, B&N or any other company (apple included) create a "textbook only reader" that schools could provide students on a "school year loan" basis as the normal textbooks?
    • Jacob 3 months ago
      Nice looking pic
    • MWGRAD 3 months ago
      The issue is that the Books on Amazon and B&N are in an open format.
      The intent for Apple is to design them so they ONLY work on the Apple IOS.

      Hence instead of being able to read the 'e-Textbook' on Any Device, it would need to be an iOS Device due to artificial limitations placed by Apple.

      Give me a "e-Textbook" that I can read on my iPad, Android Tablet, Windows PC, or other device and I'm happy. However, students will now need to buy Hardware and the cost of the books will not be reduced and I have no doubt they will have copy protection that will make them unsellable.
    • Dan 3 months ago
      You missed the point of the article. This is not just eTextbooks. Those are out and have been out. It's about making something that replaces textbooks and also provides teachers a way to easily create teaching tools and lessons to reach students in new ways.
  • Claire B  •  Houston, Texas  •  3 months ago
    as a teacher its a nice idea but its $$$ and we have falling apart buildings, no $ for OTHER programs and a system in crisis. A tangible textbook is something both teachers AND Students can TOUCH and interact with using old fashioned reading skills, something we teachers struggle with every day. Real learning is not instant or immediate and instant gratification, which this modern digital media provides. Lessons are not always learned with some fun new app, but with reviewing, practicing and applications in the REAL world, which, as of this posting, doesn't take place on a screen of any kind. While it may be a nice once-in-a-while tool, it should NEVER replace human to human interaction and student accountability for their OWN education.
    • HITLER 3 months ago
      Your opinion won't matter. Things like this will keeping taking place and soon we will be having robots for everything.
    • x 3 months ago
      Two words: Khan Academy. Google it.
    • jerrp 3 months ago
      I don't think this article was about how apps are to replace people interaction but instead to enhance the learning process. If you add it up it makes perfect sense, 5 books at $50 a pop each year for 4 years = $1000 or a $400 Ipad.
  • Baron Greenback  •  Pinckney, Michigan  •  3 months ago
    Got to love the way Apple jumps on ancient bandwagons, and reinvents the technology as if it were brand new, and everyone kind of plays along with it.

    On the bright side, maybe this'll destroy Wiley and Pearson's market, seeing as how they've been doing the exact same thing for years and years. I'm okay with cutting two heads off a hydra and replacing it with one. Much, much better than the opposite.
    • Clinton 3 months ago
      Funny. But I see this more as Apple inking some deals and making it easier to produce digital books with enhanced features. Hell, we could be seeing the start of ANOTHER cottage industry. First there was the Garage Band and the iTunes Music Store, allowing independent artists to sell music. Then there was iOS and the app store, allowing independent code monkeys to sell software. Next there will be this book thing?
    • VeronicaC 3 months ago
      Been done, not new. I've been using digital copies of textbooks for years. Many of the high school books have digital editions online and on cd. My students never cared for them.
    • ArtisticEndeavors 3 months ago
      In early 2000 micrsoft came out with tablets. No one cared. Over 5 years later apple comes out with the EXACT same device at it costs Far More. The public wets itself like overly excited puppies.

      People are idiots.
  • carmen  •  Toronto, Canada  •  3 months ago
    I think its an amazing idea, no more wasting of money on textbooks, just have to figure out how the ipads wont go missing or get dropped and broken! My kids are in Highschool and there math class already uses the ipad..cant believe what a difference it has made!
    • Wilco 3 months ago
      Still have to have the textbook. Maybe not on paper, but the cost of the "knowledge" isn't going to change unless you are going to write it for free. Interested in doing that? thought not.
  • Mark  •  3 months ago
    Tell Apple we would require usb ports and Flash Player :-)
  • T. Roll  •  3 months ago
    I can you one thing....as Jobs lay dying....his life did NOT "Flash" before his eyes....bwahahahahahaha

    OK - that was pretty lame.
    More power to the iPad revolution - books are way overpriced in college.
  • wsdmskr  •  Parlin, New Jersey  •  3 months ago
    $550 dollars for USED textbooks this semester, not one will be returnable, none useful for a future class. This is one of the most disgraceful rip-offs of our college attending citizens.
  • Bret  •  3 months ago
    you can get some textbooks via kindle already.. this is old news!
  • ciccio a  •  Reno, Nevada  •  3 months ago
    always putting the cart before the horse.... We need to change the way we teach, that's the problem, text books are a sideshow to the real problem. As usual, Apple is great at improving "Side-Shows", that's the legacy they'll be known for.
  • Mr. BIG  •  Costa Mesa, California  •  3 months ago
    I only hope they take the laws seriously and only print the facts and remove all the misinformation, bad science, and lies in text books. They may start with printing books for medical schools that are now being printed by drug companies. That would be a huge start and hopefully we could make some necessary changes to those books to make them be geared toward healing rather than selling drugs.
  • Cannon Fodder  •  Denver, Colorado  •  3 months ago
    Are the current books not filled with enough propaganda for Apple? How much "history" will they make up for our kids to "learn"? And what about those who can't afford these damned things? Or the ones who refuse to use Apple products?
  • Dana  •  Baltimore, Maryland  •  3 months ago
    ummmm kindle but let me guess they are gonna call it iread put a really glitzy case and the apple logo and charge 3 times what it kinda cost now and 5-8 times what a normal person can afford
  • somebody  •  Olean, New York  •  3 months ago
    yes, lets all buy apple products...made by slaves in China who make 30 cents a day and work 35 hour shifts...
  • walters  •  Fort Meade, Maryland  •  3 months ago
    afraid kids with roam the internet instead of study... the teachers need to keep them engaged in the course material ...not to mention the devices could be locked down...come on people wake up and embrace the future... wouldn't it be great if while discussing a particular topic your child could go to the internet and find additional information to add to the discussion?
  • Elly  •  New York, New York  •  3 months ago
    About time!!! a couple of years ago i worked on a project where you could have the textbooks/interactive excercises/tests in a cd for those students who couldnt get into a school for one reason or another... it worked pretty good even for those who were not computer litterate.. hope this project comes thur.. it would be a great advance for education... an a relief for our poor aching backs!!
  • The Dark Knight  •  3 months ago
    I like paper books because it's harder to change history. That's why I keep all my old books from when I was in school.
  • Rob  •  Seattle, Washington  •  3 months ago
    I said the same thing years ago, the last time I went back to school. Why do we have to pay through the nose and carry around a bunch of heavy stupid books in a stupid back pack that's breaking our backs. They could just as easily put the books on CD's, which are light!

    Besides, they need a new book system anyway. One that's easier to make changes. I kept my last college books (1996-1997) especially because my web design book was WRONG. That's why the students had such a hard time. The book was wrong! Good thing I did it my way.....
  • RiZen AshE  •  Panama City, Florida  •  3 months ago
    My text books are very expensive for my major (computer engineering) but I don't think converting to using an e-reader will save you any money b/c the same hard work that is put into a paperback will now be put into software. It is just changing formats to go along with the tech age. The school will still charge you for the software and now you will have to have something portable like the iPad as well. I think it is a great idea personally but people who think it will save them money are just kidding themselves.
  • BrianD  •  3 months ago
    Wikitextbooks...