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> Teaching & Learning Resources > Faculty Resources
Textbook Acquisition
Tips and Techniques For Finding and Selecting Textbooks
David Knickerbocker
Book Operations Manager
MSU Bookstore, Inc.
Montana State University
The process of researching
textbooks for the purpose of selecting appropriate course materials has come a
long way in the last ten years, enabled as we have become by the Internet. New tools are now available that
consolidate and refine the process. No longer are faculty tied to the formerly traditional methods of
word-of-mouth, publisher representative dependent, or colleague based
information streams.
Certainly, those avenues
of information have not gone away, but they have been greatly enhanced by the
advent of new cooperative efforts to amass these various methods into one
process. Two examples of online
resources are listed below, both of which are compendiums dedicated to
streamlining the search for the perfect textbook.
Faculty Center Network
- www.facultycenter.net
Of the two, the Faculty
Center Network site, created by MBS Textbook Exchange, Inc., is the most useful to all MSU faculty members. A one-stop resource for college
textbooks, it is intended for faculty to use as a research tool and to assist
them in making informed adoption decisions. When users connect to the Faculty Center Network, they have
access to a robust bibliographic database of over 225,000 titles.
A user name and password is required to access the Faculty Center Network's
database and tools. Access to the
site is provided via the above link and is made possible by MSU Bookstore,
Inc. The Bookstore is issued a
generic user name and password, and then contacts faculty by way of a mailer,
which provides them with access instructions. Faculty can also contact David
Knickerbocker directly at dknick@montana.edu
to request the temporary password. Once inside the site, users have the ability to register and create a
unique user name and password for future access.
Researching textbooks
Users can browse by subject or locate books through an Advanced Search feature
by author last name (any author listed for the textbook), title keyword, ISBN,
or general keyword. Along with
these search options, there is a database of publisher contact information, a
"What's New" area for industry news and a list of new titles pending
release, searchable by title.
Once users locate a
textbook, they can:
- Sort all titles in the database by any author listed with the
textbook
- Review the author(s) biography(ies)
- Link to the previous edition or next edition of the textbook
- Link to the publisher for more information about the textbook
- Review bibliographic information such as the Summary, Table of
Contents, Sample Chapter, or Preface
- Link to the publisher for faculty supplement information
- Link to supplements produced by the publisher to accompany the
textbooks
- Read reviews of the textbook
- Obtain desk copy request information
Adoption Information
In addition to the bibliographic information, users can review the title's
subject ranking and adoption information.
A title's subject ranking indicates its level of demand within a specific
subject area according to MBS Textbook Exchange, Inc.'s, order history
indicating the book's popularity within its assigned subject area. (Titles are assigned to the unique
subject taxonomy created by MBS Textbook Exchange, Inc.)
In addition, the adoption data indicates where and how often the textbook is
used in the United States, and users can view a list of schools that have
adopted a particular textbook.
FCNotebook
Perhaps the most useful tool within the Faculty Center Network is the
FCNotebook. It allows users to keep a separate list of titles that they are
interested in so they do not have to search for those titles every time they
visit the Faculty Center Network.
From the FCNotebook, users also can create an adoptions list to give to their
departmental textbook coordinator or bring to MSU Bookstore for ordering
purposes. Users simply create their adoptions list, and then they fill in name,
campus address, department, phone number, e-mail address and term. Finally, on a title-by-title basis,
users can enter a course, section, quantity and statement of use information.
Users can also create an organized list of titles for requesting desk copies.
(Faculty should contact the publishers directly in order to receive a desk copy
for a title.)
Within the FCNotebook
faculty can:
- Search or browse the database of over 225,000 titles
- Research and review textbooks for adoption consideration
- Obtain publisher contact information
- See how popular a title is and where it's used
- Generate an Adoptions list to return to the Bookstore
- Locate desk copy request information by title
TWM Research - www.newtextlistings.com
Each semester, MSU
Bookstore, Inc. participates in a study to track curriculum changes at over 250
engineering schools. This enables
our campus, by way of this participation, to access the information obtained in
the study. This service allows
faculty to find out about new publications earlier in the semester - thus
reducing delays, last-minute changes and errors in their textbook adoption
orders to the Bookstore.
Though not helpful for all
disciplines at MSU, this service is currently available for departments of engineering, technology,
computer science, math, physics and statistics.
Here are a few other things
you should know about this Web site:
- It is designed to improve the flow of information between
publishers and faculty at over 250 universities in the US and Canada.
- It allows instructors to look up the course(s) they are scheduled
to teach to see what recent publications (including new editions) MIGHT be
appropriate for that course.
- It focuses exclusively on new titles and editions.
- It provides a direct link to the publisher's Web page for each
title.
- It is updated at the beginning of each Fall and Spring semester.
- It is NOT a listing of what books are in use at each
school.
- It is NOT an online bookstore - instructors should contact the
publisher to order an examination copy and adoption orders should be
placed with the Bookstore.
Summary
Certainly, the poor timing
of a new edition, or the non-availability of a classic, can have a negative
affect on the decision of what to book to use, but normally it must be based on
the needs and pedagogical concerns of the instructor. Ultimately, that decision is a personal one, but the use of
the above Web sites can greatly aid users in their decision making process.
While choosing a textbook
is by no means an easy process, it is hoped these two valuable resources can
make the effort somewhat less daunting.
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