Can iPads replace textbooks?

Apple has unveiled a grand plan to revolutionize the education industry with iBooks 2.0

Apple's proposed e-textbooks would cost less than their hardback predecessors and offer interactive tools, but students would need to shell out of the iPad, first.
(Image credit: Randy Faris/Corbis)

In a bid to reinvent the education industry, Apple on Thursday announced an app called iBooks 2.0 that allows educators and authors to create interactive textbooks for use on the iPad. Major publishers, including McGraw-Hill, Pearson, and Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, are on board, and some prestigious universities are giving the program a shot. The books will integrate videos and interactive lessons, complete with a robust new note-taking technology. And the digital textbooks will cost just $14.99, while their back-straining paper counterparts can run $75 and up. Can Apple do for textbooks what it did for the music industry?

Yes. This will change everything: "Apps, notes, syllabi, textbooks — they all integrate. As long as I can get iPads for my students, I can do it all," William Rankin, Abilene Christian University English professor, tells Ars Technica. This will "democratize" college classrooms, letting educators create relevant course material without relying on IT departments, textbook publishers, or school administrators. "A teacher will be able to do anything they need for their class."

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