Welcome to our blog

books on a shelf icon

September 14, 2022 • 1 minute read
By: Mike Hale, Ph.D., Chief Learning and Content Officer

VitalSource has long been committed to increasing student success through easy access to affordable content. We also believe that if you can, you must improve learning for students and expand educational opportunities for all learners. Of course, we are not alone in this view and it is the reason many companies have built assessment-rich course materials. 

Insight-icon
VitalSource Insights
Whitepapers, infographics, case studies, and more
Browse
events
Events
VitalSource webinars and conferences
Connect
Blog > Washington Post explores the revolution in college course materials

April 24, 2018 • 1 minute read

Washington Post explores the revolution in college course materials

US_Blog_950_news

Share:

The Washington Post recently explored the revolution in college course materials in an article published on April 14, 2018. The article investigated questions about cost, fairness, and access for students as they grapple with high prices and adapt to changing technologies.

Our own Mike Hale, vice president of education for North America, shared his insights on this timely and important subject with the Post. He stated, “There are great open-educational resources, but we don’t want to sacrifice quality for affordability. We just want people to make a decision that includes both cost and quality.”

This intersection of cost and quality is what drives us at VitalSource. Our Inclusive Access model is the course content solution that’s driving down costs for students and giving them day-one access to the materials they need to persist. All students are able to access their digital course materials on the first day of classes through their institution’s Learning Management System. They benefit from lower prices made possible by volume discounts that are available only when all students in a course have day-one access.

Faculty don’t need to choose between affordability and academic freedom. With VitalSource’s extensive catalog and strong publisher relationships—we work with over 1,000 publishers to deliver quality digital learning materials—virtually any content can be adopted for use in Inclusive Access.

As this conversation continues to grow, VitalSource looks forward to leading the way.

To see the full article from the Washington Post, visit: Battle over college course material is a textbook example of technological change.

Subscribe to the blog

Subscribe