What are the motivations for publishing new editions of an existing textbook, beyond new discoveries in a field? The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are In Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar ManaraWhat subjects benefit from textbook editions?How do you choose a textbook for a new classWhat unforeseen dangers might exist when choosing an open access textbook for a new subject?What subjects benefit from textbook editions?What open access textbook publishing initiatives are around?What are the benefits of taking textbook notes?What are possible legal ways to obtain a textbook for free?What is the difference between international, economy, and retail editions of textbooks?What is the purpose of international editions of books sometimes omitting some problems, footnotes, or other content?Seeking publishing advice for an academic textbookWhat are the best methods for independently publishing an academic book?

Is there a way to generate uniformly distributed points on a sphere from a fixed amount of random real numbers per point?

Why don't hard Brexiteers insist on a hard border to prevent illegal immigration after Brexit?

How to make Illustrator type tool selection automatically adapt with text length

Working through the single responsibility principle (SRP) in Python when calls are expensive

What is the padding with red substance inside of steak packaging?

Single author papers against my advisor's will?

Mortgage adviser recommends a longer term than necessary combined with overpayments

Keeping a retro style to sci-fi spaceships?

Huge performance difference of the command find with and without using %M option to show permissions

Is there a writing software that you can sort scenes like slides in PowerPoint?

How to politely respond to generic emails requesting a PhD/job in my lab? Without wasting too much time

Store Dynamic-accessible hidden metadata in a cell

Can a flute soloist sit?

Could an empire control the whole planet with today's comunication methods?

How do you keep chess fun when your opponent constantly beats you?

"... to apply for a visa" or "... and applied for a visa"?

Can the Right Ascension and Argument of Perigee of a spacecraft's orbit keep varying by themselves with time?

Why did Peik Lin say, "I'm not an animal"?

Button changing its text & action. Good or terrible?

Match Roman Numerals

Do working physicists consider Newtonian mechanics to be "falsified"?

Deal with toxic manager when you can't quit

What do I do when my TA workload is more than expected?

Example of compact Riemannian manifold with only one geodesic.



What are the motivations for publishing new editions of an existing textbook, beyond new discoveries in a field?



The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are In
Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar ManaraWhat subjects benefit from textbook editions?How do you choose a textbook for a new classWhat unforeseen dangers might exist when choosing an open access textbook for a new subject?What subjects benefit from textbook editions?What open access textbook publishing initiatives are around?What are the benefits of taking textbook notes?What are possible legal ways to obtain a textbook for free?What is the difference between international, economy, and retail editions of textbooks?What is the purpose of international editions of books sometimes omitting some problems, footnotes, or other content?Seeking publishing advice for an academic textbookWhat are the best methods for independently publishing an academic book?










28















In many of my undergraduate classes, professors required up to date editions of textbooks. This was across a number of subjects from Computer Science to Accounting and across introductory and more intermediate levels.



What is motivating new editions of textbooks? Are professors who published contractually obligated to publish new editions? Are they incorporating student feedback?










share|improve this question







New contributor




user3737411 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 4





    Are they incorporating student feedback? Sometimes you can tell by reading the acknowledgements

    – user2768
    Apr 9 at 11:48











  • Related: What subjects benefit from textbook editions?

    – Stephan Kolassa
    2 days ago






  • 2





    Sometimes the rate of people buying the book gets slower and the release of a new version prompts more purchases.

    – dalearn
    2 days ago











  • Fixing typos and errors for example.

    – mathreadler
    2 days ago






  • 3





    if there are no actual objective improvements, greed ...

    – Jarrod Roberson
    2 days ago
















28















In many of my undergraduate classes, professors required up to date editions of textbooks. This was across a number of subjects from Computer Science to Accounting and across introductory and more intermediate levels.



What is motivating new editions of textbooks? Are professors who published contractually obligated to publish new editions? Are they incorporating student feedback?










share|improve this question







New contributor




user3737411 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 4





    Are they incorporating student feedback? Sometimes you can tell by reading the acknowledgements

    – user2768
    Apr 9 at 11:48











  • Related: What subjects benefit from textbook editions?

    – Stephan Kolassa
    2 days ago






  • 2





    Sometimes the rate of people buying the book gets slower and the release of a new version prompts more purchases.

    – dalearn
    2 days ago











  • Fixing typos and errors for example.

    – mathreadler
    2 days ago






  • 3





    if there are no actual objective improvements, greed ...

    – Jarrod Roberson
    2 days ago














28












28








28


5






In many of my undergraduate classes, professors required up to date editions of textbooks. This was across a number of subjects from Computer Science to Accounting and across introductory and more intermediate levels.



What is motivating new editions of textbooks? Are professors who published contractually obligated to publish new editions? Are they incorporating student feedback?










share|improve this question







New contributor




user3737411 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












In many of my undergraduate classes, professors required up to date editions of textbooks. This was across a number of subjects from Computer Science to Accounting and across introductory and more intermediate levels.



What is motivating new editions of textbooks? Are professors who published contractually obligated to publish new editions? Are they incorporating student feedback?







books publishers






share|improve this question







New contributor




user3737411 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question







New contributor




user3737411 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question






New contributor




user3737411 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked Apr 9 at 3:28









user3737411user3737411

15023




15023




New contributor




user3737411 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





user3737411 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






user3737411 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.







  • 4





    Are they incorporating student feedback? Sometimes you can tell by reading the acknowledgements

    – user2768
    Apr 9 at 11:48











  • Related: What subjects benefit from textbook editions?

    – Stephan Kolassa
    2 days ago






  • 2





    Sometimes the rate of people buying the book gets slower and the release of a new version prompts more purchases.

    – dalearn
    2 days ago











  • Fixing typos and errors for example.

    – mathreadler
    2 days ago






  • 3





    if there are no actual objective improvements, greed ...

    – Jarrod Roberson
    2 days ago













  • 4





    Are they incorporating student feedback? Sometimes you can tell by reading the acknowledgements

    – user2768
    Apr 9 at 11:48











  • Related: What subjects benefit from textbook editions?

    – Stephan Kolassa
    2 days ago






  • 2





    Sometimes the rate of people buying the book gets slower and the release of a new version prompts more purchases.

    – dalearn
    2 days ago











  • Fixing typos and errors for example.

    – mathreadler
    2 days ago






  • 3





    if there are no actual objective improvements, greed ...

    – Jarrod Roberson
    2 days ago








4




4





Are they incorporating student feedback? Sometimes you can tell by reading the acknowledgements

– user2768
Apr 9 at 11:48





Are they incorporating student feedback? Sometimes you can tell by reading the acknowledgements

– user2768
Apr 9 at 11:48













Related: What subjects benefit from textbook editions?

– Stephan Kolassa
2 days ago





Related: What subjects benefit from textbook editions?

– Stephan Kolassa
2 days ago




2




2





Sometimes the rate of people buying the book gets slower and the release of a new version prompts more purchases.

– dalearn
2 days ago





Sometimes the rate of people buying the book gets slower and the release of a new version prompts more purchases.

– dalearn
2 days ago













Fixing typos and errors for example.

– mathreadler
2 days ago





Fixing typos and errors for example.

– mathreadler
2 days ago




3




3





if there are no actual objective improvements, greed ...

– Jarrod Roberson
2 days ago






if there are no actual objective improvements, greed ...

– Jarrod Roberson
2 days ago











9 Answers
9






active

oldest

votes


















70














Publishers want new editions so that they can make money selling copies of the new edition and reduce the market for used copies. The new edition might be significantly updated, but in many cases the updates are small. For textbooks in lower division general education courses, new editions come out as often as every three years.



It's quite common for textbook publishing contracts to include clauses that give the authors right of first refusal to produce an updated edition but allow the publisher to add a new coauthor and produce a new edition if the authors are unwilling to do so.






share|improve this answer


















  • 7





    @VladimirF - The motivation is that of the colleges to help sell the books, written by their employees, that they own the rights to. See also, Spaceballs Two: The Search for More Money.

    – Mazura
    Apr 9 at 8:53






  • 10





    @Mazura, sorry, but I don't know of any textbooks that any college has any rights to. The authors don't give up anything to their universities. Or at least I've never heard of any such case.

    – Buffy
    Apr 9 at 9:53






  • 13





    @VladimirF, I think the usual motivation is that new editions have new exercises and the prof wants to assign them by chapter and number. Everyone having the same edition, whether new or not, makes this simple.

    – Buffy
    Apr 9 at 9:54






  • 1





    @Mazura In fact, from a financial standpoint universities would rather their faculty not write books because it detracts from research time, something which does bring them money in the form of overhead. A number of authors I know had to take a sabbatical to work on a book, which is a cost to the university.

    – user71659
    Apr 9 at 18:23






  • 13





    I work in the textbook publishing industry. This answer is 100% correct.

    – barbecue
    Apr 9 at 23:16


















10














There're many possible reasons for writing a new edition:



  • New discoveries in the field (e.g. detection of gravitational waves)

  • Removing outdated material (e.g. if an exercise question involved a lecturer using transparencies, it would make sense to switch to a lecturer using Power Point)

  • Change in syllabus (e.g. new discovery means courses should cover that, and to make room, another topic is removed)

  • Student feedback (as you mentioned)

Authors are not usually obliged contractually to produce a new edition. At most, they might be contractually obliged to publish new editions with the same publisher.






share|improve this answer























  • But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

    – Vladimir F
    Apr 9 at 8:46











  • @VladimirF that's a question for the professor to answer. Presumably he/she thinks the new material is worth it.

    – Allure
    Apr 9 at 9:14












  • @Allure Vladimir seems to have posted the same comment / question in every possible place...

    – Solar Mike
    Apr 9 at 9:15






  • 4





    @VladimirF the question doesn't ask that though? The first sentence isn't a question.

    – Allure
    Apr 9 at 11:02







  • 1





    @VladimirF One major reason is that often the exercises will have been reordered (as well as new ones added), which makes it very impractical to refer to exercises across versions. But there is usually no way to reasonably ask the students to all use an older version, as these will not be available through the usual means, and requiring all students to go through second hand sources for the text book is not reasonable.

    – Tobias Kildetoft
    Apr 9 at 12:01


















7














I am an author currently updating a textbook. It's been out for several years. Many of the exercises are based on "current news" - what was current then is not current now. While updating the exercises I've found more places than I had anticipated where I see ways to say things better.



I am arranging the new version so that a second hand copy of the old version will still work. Exercises I've removed will be available on the web with their original numbers, new exercise numbers start where the old ones left off.



To answer the more general question: I think that the point of many new editions is new revenue.






share|improve this answer























  • "I am arranging the new version so that a second hand copy of the old version will still work" - Bravo!! Will the new questions be published on the web? (so that the poor kid/cheapskate with an old edition can do them when the teacher sets new questions.)

    – Martin Bonner
    yesterday











  • @MartinBonner I hadn't thought of that, figuring instructors could make them available as needed. But it would be easy to do and now I probably will.

    – Ethan Bolker
    yesterday


















5














When sales start to lag on a popular title, publishers want a refresh. They want to try to boost sales back to where they were. Adding a chapter on new material is relatively easy. Adding or changing exercises makes it harder to use older editions for adopters.



Note that authors normally give up copyright to the material so publishers are free to leave authors behind in the preparation of a new edition, but are unlikely to do so even in the absence of a contract. This is because adopters often (usually?) associate the book with its author as much or more than with its title. So including the author has value. But, as Brian Borchers says, there is usually language in the contract about this.



I think it is very unlikely that student feedback is used in the preparation of a new edition, other than from students of the authors. But book representatives (acquisition editors) usually attend professional conferences and ask for feedback on books from attendees. They will also sometimes poll adopters of the book to get feedback and this can be given to the author to aid in the preparation of the next edition. Some of that feedback is contradictory, however, and some is contrary to the ideas of the authors.



In fact, some acquisition editors will ask for feedback on the (popular) books of competitors to learn why those books were chosen instead of their own.






share|improve this answer






























    5














    Have you ever been involved in someone teaching a lecture from a "script"? I don't know if there is a specific English term for this, I mean that the teacher/professor collates the material beforehand without publishing it in a book form, and makes it available to students.



    If you see this being done year afer year, you will see what kind of changes are made.



    • The importance/length of sections is changed relative to each other, due to changing emphasis, the need to make space for new material, and the time needed by the professor and/or students to get through a section


    • practical problems are changed to be more understandable, new problems are added, etc.


    • material that was difficult to bring across is rewritten to be presented in a new way


    • small new discoveries are mentioned, such as using the results of nifty new studies as examples that emphasize a point


    • corrections are made, since there are usually errors at the beginning


    I would say that textbooks go through similar changes between editions. This is entirely normal - a large and complicated artefact like a textbook is best created in an iterative manner, not unlike a software programm.



    Major discoveries in the field are much less likely to trigger a new edition. First, the future impact of many discoveries is not recognizable when they are made, and they linger in some small journal before the discipline notices them and makes something out of them.
    Second, even when something is recognizably new and different, and excites scientists, it is still not "fleshed out" enough to be taught to students, since it doesn't yet have its own ecosystem supporting literature, successful application in large projects, whatever. Third, the kind of professor who gets to publish a textbook is usually old, experienced - and set in his ways. If he dedicated his life to building superconductors out of metal alloys, and some young upshot shows that graphene can be used in a superconductor, the professor will wait for a few years whether that new technology (which is in direct competition to his own research) will establish itself, before starting to give it space in his textbook.



    I think there are a few exceptions to that "discoveries percolate slowly into textbooks" tendency, for example I heard somewhere that CRISPR/CAS entered general genetics textbooks rather quickly. But it is much more typical, especially in undergraduate level textbooks, that changes between editions are incremental improvements of existing material.



    There are also some fields where the changes are very impactful. This happens in fields which study human-created rule systems, typically law, but also accounting. In a law textbook, a subset of laws changes every year, and their interpretation by courts also changes with new case decisions. The new editions of textbooks have to reflect these changes.



    A reason for professors to want the newest edition (beside monetary ones) is simply that it makes it easier to teach. With a class where the students use multiple editions at once, there will be difference in the text, but especially also in the problems. Making sure that everybody reads the same text, or is solving the same problem when homework is given, is a huge headache if students use different editions.






    share|improve this answer
































      3














      They can update a book for several reasons:



      1) new material,



      2) updating material (addition or removal), chapters or sections based on feedback - changing the order of sections



      3) more examples with solutions and/or practice problems with or without solutions



      So technical books are updated as necessary but they are not done for lucrative reasons - fiction authors sell more copies and do make money... technical books don’t sell in the same numbers...






      share|improve this answer




















      • 2





        Textbook publishing can actually be quite lucrative when it comes to textbooks used in lower division general education courses (think "College Algebra" or "Introductory Statiatics". "Calculus" is pretty advanced by this standard.)

        – Brian Borchers
        Apr 9 at 4:17











      • @BrianBorchers so you match copy numbers of someone like Lee Childs? Author of the Jack Reacher books... Also there tend to be several "introductory" texts each competing for the same limited market...

        – Solar Mike
        Apr 9 at 4:20











      • But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

        – Vladimir F
        Apr 9 at 8:46






      • 1





        @VladimirF so when you refer to an example question or set of problems or specific text in a chapter, all students have the same information...

        – Solar Mike
        Apr 9 at 8:57











      • @SolarMike: Quantity is not the sole determinant of profit, the margin on each book is just as important, and margin on textbooks is much higher (especially if the "number of copies" for the fiction work includes mass market paperback)

        – Ben Voigt
        2 days ago


















      2














      • Error corrections. Somebody pointed to a typo or more serious error, this is corrected. Teaching a course can be difficult if some students have the errors and some have the corrections.

      • Media rights. An image might have been licensed for the initial print run, it is not possible to renew the license. Or there never was a license to start with, things were more sloppy in previous decades. An image might have been licensed for print only and now they want a digital edition, too.





      share|improve this answer






























        0














        In something like English, clearly the field is not changing hugely -- incorporating technology has been done pretty well. (Although I want to update a book I used in Tech Writing because it was pre-google docs, and assumed emailing around a single document, taking turns editing.)



        Mostly instructors find other approaches that work, and they want to create a text to allow other instructors to use the same one.



        I often would incorporate a chapter from a textbook I had a sample from, while my main text for the class stayed the same. I didn't outright steal (Xerox or scan it in), but I'd take the organization of the information for that chapter, and make a presentation (PPT) based on that, and come up with my own examples, and find exercises in my existing text that could be adapted. This was a tech-writing class, and that other book went into more depth on layout topics and strategies. To get even a portion of that book for the class (I wrote the publisher and asked for a 2-3 chapter excerpt) would have been $30/copy, and my main book in that class is only $30ish already. If my preferred text lacked adaptable examples though, then I may have switched or added in that supplement fully.



        Some teachers in my department ADORED a text that gave a lot of "models" for how to do academic writing, but I despised it. So I'm glad other people had created books that focused more on the analysis and deep-thinking parts of the writing process. So while not new editions, they were various approaches being represented. (I did stop using one ENGL 100 book when 3rd edition was 250ish pages, but by 6th, it was 550 -- each individual change made sense, but it was overall too overwhelming for a student to cope with.)






        share|improve this answer






























          0














          20 or so years ago while in the army, we had some rule book (The Rules of Military Discipline, printed in 1965 I think) which were erata-ed the hard way: new text written by typing machine, cut and pasted (glued) over the old text.

          As another example, children today learn Mathematics at least one year earlier than I did in the eighties, so new manuals are necessary. Also, the things that MUST be studied (government mandates what) change - if not every year, then at least once every four. While dealing with things that disappear from the manual is easy (just ignore them), the changes are all ADDING things.






          share|improve this answer








          New contributor




          Calin Ceteras is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.


















            protected by Alexandros yesterday



            Thank you for your interest in this question.
            Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



            Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?














            9 Answers
            9






            active

            oldest

            votes








            9 Answers
            9






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            70














            Publishers want new editions so that they can make money selling copies of the new edition and reduce the market for used copies. The new edition might be significantly updated, but in many cases the updates are small. For textbooks in lower division general education courses, new editions come out as often as every three years.



            It's quite common for textbook publishing contracts to include clauses that give the authors right of first refusal to produce an updated edition but allow the publisher to add a new coauthor and produce a new edition if the authors are unwilling to do so.






            share|improve this answer


















            • 7





              @VladimirF - The motivation is that of the colleges to help sell the books, written by their employees, that they own the rights to. See also, Spaceballs Two: The Search for More Money.

              – Mazura
              Apr 9 at 8:53






            • 10





              @Mazura, sorry, but I don't know of any textbooks that any college has any rights to. The authors don't give up anything to their universities. Or at least I've never heard of any such case.

              – Buffy
              Apr 9 at 9:53






            • 13





              @VladimirF, I think the usual motivation is that new editions have new exercises and the prof wants to assign them by chapter and number. Everyone having the same edition, whether new or not, makes this simple.

              – Buffy
              Apr 9 at 9:54






            • 1





              @Mazura In fact, from a financial standpoint universities would rather their faculty not write books because it detracts from research time, something which does bring them money in the form of overhead. A number of authors I know had to take a sabbatical to work on a book, which is a cost to the university.

              – user71659
              Apr 9 at 18:23






            • 13





              I work in the textbook publishing industry. This answer is 100% correct.

              – barbecue
              Apr 9 at 23:16















            70














            Publishers want new editions so that they can make money selling copies of the new edition and reduce the market for used copies. The new edition might be significantly updated, but in many cases the updates are small. For textbooks in lower division general education courses, new editions come out as often as every three years.



            It's quite common for textbook publishing contracts to include clauses that give the authors right of first refusal to produce an updated edition but allow the publisher to add a new coauthor and produce a new edition if the authors are unwilling to do so.






            share|improve this answer


















            • 7





              @VladimirF - The motivation is that of the colleges to help sell the books, written by their employees, that they own the rights to. See also, Spaceballs Two: The Search for More Money.

              – Mazura
              Apr 9 at 8:53






            • 10





              @Mazura, sorry, but I don't know of any textbooks that any college has any rights to. The authors don't give up anything to their universities. Or at least I've never heard of any such case.

              – Buffy
              Apr 9 at 9:53






            • 13





              @VladimirF, I think the usual motivation is that new editions have new exercises and the prof wants to assign them by chapter and number. Everyone having the same edition, whether new or not, makes this simple.

              – Buffy
              Apr 9 at 9:54






            • 1





              @Mazura In fact, from a financial standpoint universities would rather their faculty not write books because it detracts from research time, something which does bring them money in the form of overhead. A number of authors I know had to take a sabbatical to work on a book, which is a cost to the university.

              – user71659
              Apr 9 at 18:23






            • 13





              I work in the textbook publishing industry. This answer is 100% correct.

              – barbecue
              Apr 9 at 23:16













            70












            70








            70







            Publishers want new editions so that they can make money selling copies of the new edition and reduce the market for used copies. The new edition might be significantly updated, but in many cases the updates are small. For textbooks in lower division general education courses, new editions come out as often as every three years.



            It's quite common for textbook publishing contracts to include clauses that give the authors right of first refusal to produce an updated edition but allow the publisher to add a new coauthor and produce a new edition if the authors are unwilling to do so.






            share|improve this answer













            Publishers want new editions so that they can make money selling copies of the new edition and reduce the market for used copies. The new edition might be significantly updated, but in many cases the updates are small. For textbooks in lower division general education courses, new editions come out as often as every three years.



            It's quite common for textbook publishing contracts to include clauses that give the authors right of first refusal to produce an updated edition but allow the publisher to add a new coauthor and produce a new edition if the authors are unwilling to do so.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Apr 9 at 4:16









            Brian BorchersBrian Borchers

            29.3k353107




            29.3k353107







            • 7





              @VladimirF - The motivation is that of the colleges to help sell the books, written by their employees, that they own the rights to. See also, Spaceballs Two: The Search for More Money.

              – Mazura
              Apr 9 at 8:53






            • 10





              @Mazura, sorry, but I don't know of any textbooks that any college has any rights to. The authors don't give up anything to their universities. Or at least I've never heard of any such case.

              – Buffy
              Apr 9 at 9:53






            • 13





              @VladimirF, I think the usual motivation is that new editions have new exercises and the prof wants to assign them by chapter and number. Everyone having the same edition, whether new or not, makes this simple.

              – Buffy
              Apr 9 at 9:54






            • 1





              @Mazura In fact, from a financial standpoint universities would rather their faculty not write books because it detracts from research time, something which does bring them money in the form of overhead. A number of authors I know had to take a sabbatical to work on a book, which is a cost to the university.

              – user71659
              Apr 9 at 18:23






            • 13





              I work in the textbook publishing industry. This answer is 100% correct.

              – barbecue
              Apr 9 at 23:16












            • 7





              @VladimirF - The motivation is that of the colleges to help sell the books, written by their employees, that they own the rights to. See also, Spaceballs Two: The Search for More Money.

              – Mazura
              Apr 9 at 8:53






            • 10





              @Mazura, sorry, but I don't know of any textbooks that any college has any rights to. The authors don't give up anything to their universities. Or at least I've never heard of any such case.

              – Buffy
              Apr 9 at 9:53






            • 13





              @VladimirF, I think the usual motivation is that new editions have new exercises and the prof wants to assign them by chapter and number. Everyone having the same edition, whether new or not, makes this simple.

              – Buffy
              Apr 9 at 9:54






            • 1





              @Mazura In fact, from a financial standpoint universities would rather their faculty not write books because it detracts from research time, something which does bring them money in the form of overhead. A number of authors I know had to take a sabbatical to work on a book, which is a cost to the university.

              – user71659
              Apr 9 at 18:23






            • 13





              I work in the textbook publishing industry. This answer is 100% correct.

              – barbecue
              Apr 9 at 23:16







            7




            7





            @VladimirF - The motivation is that of the colleges to help sell the books, written by their employees, that they own the rights to. See also, Spaceballs Two: The Search for More Money.

            – Mazura
            Apr 9 at 8:53





            @VladimirF - The motivation is that of the colleges to help sell the books, written by their employees, that they own the rights to. See also, Spaceballs Two: The Search for More Money.

            – Mazura
            Apr 9 at 8:53




            10




            10





            @Mazura, sorry, but I don't know of any textbooks that any college has any rights to. The authors don't give up anything to their universities. Or at least I've never heard of any such case.

            – Buffy
            Apr 9 at 9:53





            @Mazura, sorry, but I don't know of any textbooks that any college has any rights to. The authors don't give up anything to their universities. Or at least I've never heard of any such case.

            – Buffy
            Apr 9 at 9:53




            13




            13





            @VladimirF, I think the usual motivation is that new editions have new exercises and the prof wants to assign them by chapter and number. Everyone having the same edition, whether new or not, makes this simple.

            – Buffy
            Apr 9 at 9:54





            @VladimirF, I think the usual motivation is that new editions have new exercises and the prof wants to assign them by chapter and number. Everyone having the same edition, whether new or not, makes this simple.

            – Buffy
            Apr 9 at 9:54




            1




            1





            @Mazura In fact, from a financial standpoint universities would rather their faculty not write books because it detracts from research time, something which does bring them money in the form of overhead. A number of authors I know had to take a sabbatical to work on a book, which is a cost to the university.

            – user71659
            Apr 9 at 18:23





            @Mazura In fact, from a financial standpoint universities would rather their faculty not write books because it detracts from research time, something which does bring them money in the form of overhead. A number of authors I know had to take a sabbatical to work on a book, which is a cost to the university.

            – user71659
            Apr 9 at 18:23




            13




            13





            I work in the textbook publishing industry. This answer is 100% correct.

            – barbecue
            Apr 9 at 23:16





            I work in the textbook publishing industry. This answer is 100% correct.

            – barbecue
            Apr 9 at 23:16











            10














            There're many possible reasons for writing a new edition:



            • New discoveries in the field (e.g. detection of gravitational waves)

            • Removing outdated material (e.g. if an exercise question involved a lecturer using transparencies, it would make sense to switch to a lecturer using Power Point)

            • Change in syllabus (e.g. new discovery means courses should cover that, and to make room, another topic is removed)

            • Student feedback (as you mentioned)

            Authors are not usually obliged contractually to produce a new edition. At most, they might be contractually obliged to publish new editions with the same publisher.






            share|improve this answer























            • But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

              – Vladimir F
              Apr 9 at 8:46











            • @VladimirF that's a question for the professor to answer. Presumably he/she thinks the new material is worth it.

              – Allure
              Apr 9 at 9:14












            • @Allure Vladimir seems to have posted the same comment / question in every possible place...

              – Solar Mike
              Apr 9 at 9:15






            • 4





              @VladimirF the question doesn't ask that though? The first sentence isn't a question.

              – Allure
              Apr 9 at 11:02







            • 1





              @VladimirF One major reason is that often the exercises will have been reordered (as well as new ones added), which makes it very impractical to refer to exercises across versions. But there is usually no way to reasonably ask the students to all use an older version, as these will not be available through the usual means, and requiring all students to go through second hand sources for the text book is not reasonable.

              – Tobias Kildetoft
              Apr 9 at 12:01















            10














            There're many possible reasons for writing a new edition:



            • New discoveries in the field (e.g. detection of gravitational waves)

            • Removing outdated material (e.g. if an exercise question involved a lecturer using transparencies, it would make sense to switch to a lecturer using Power Point)

            • Change in syllabus (e.g. new discovery means courses should cover that, and to make room, another topic is removed)

            • Student feedback (as you mentioned)

            Authors are not usually obliged contractually to produce a new edition. At most, they might be contractually obliged to publish new editions with the same publisher.






            share|improve this answer























            • But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

              – Vladimir F
              Apr 9 at 8:46











            • @VladimirF that's a question for the professor to answer. Presumably he/she thinks the new material is worth it.

              – Allure
              Apr 9 at 9:14












            • @Allure Vladimir seems to have posted the same comment / question in every possible place...

              – Solar Mike
              Apr 9 at 9:15






            • 4





              @VladimirF the question doesn't ask that though? The first sentence isn't a question.

              – Allure
              Apr 9 at 11:02







            • 1





              @VladimirF One major reason is that often the exercises will have been reordered (as well as new ones added), which makes it very impractical to refer to exercises across versions. But there is usually no way to reasonably ask the students to all use an older version, as these will not be available through the usual means, and requiring all students to go through second hand sources for the text book is not reasonable.

              – Tobias Kildetoft
              Apr 9 at 12:01













            10












            10








            10







            There're many possible reasons for writing a new edition:



            • New discoveries in the field (e.g. detection of gravitational waves)

            • Removing outdated material (e.g. if an exercise question involved a lecturer using transparencies, it would make sense to switch to a lecturer using Power Point)

            • Change in syllabus (e.g. new discovery means courses should cover that, and to make room, another topic is removed)

            • Student feedback (as you mentioned)

            Authors are not usually obliged contractually to produce a new edition. At most, they might be contractually obliged to publish new editions with the same publisher.






            share|improve this answer













            There're many possible reasons for writing a new edition:



            • New discoveries in the field (e.g. detection of gravitational waves)

            • Removing outdated material (e.g. if an exercise question involved a lecturer using transparencies, it would make sense to switch to a lecturer using Power Point)

            • Change in syllabus (e.g. new discovery means courses should cover that, and to make room, another topic is removed)

            • Student feedback (as you mentioned)

            Authors are not usually obliged contractually to produce a new edition. At most, they might be contractually obliged to publish new editions with the same publisher.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Apr 9 at 4:54









            AllureAllure

            35k19103158




            35k19103158












            • But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

              – Vladimir F
              Apr 9 at 8:46











            • @VladimirF that's a question for the professor to answer. Presumably he/she thinks the new material is worth it.

              – Allure
              Apr 9 at 9:14












            • @Allure Vladimir seems to have posted the same comment / question in every possible place...

              – Solar Mike
              Apr 9 at 9:15






            • 4





              @VladimirF the question doesn't ask that though? The first sentence isn't a question.

              – Allure
              Apr 9 at 11:02







            • 1





              @VladimirF One major reason is that often the exercises will have been reordered (as well as new ones added), which makes it very impractical to refer to exercises across versions. But there is usually no way to reasonably ask the students to all use an older version, as these will not be available through the usual means, and requiring all students to go through second hand sources for the text book is not reasonable.

              – Tobias Kildetoft
              Apr 9 at 12:01

















            • But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

              – Vladimir F
              Apr 9 at 8:46











            • @VladimirF that's a question for the professor to answer. Presumably he/she thinks the new material is worth it.

              – Allure
              Apr 9 at 9:14












            • @Allure Vladimir seems to have posted the same comment / question in every possible place...

              – Solar Mike
              Apr 9 at 9:15






            • 4





              @VladimirF the question doesn't ask that though? The first sentence isn't a question.

              – Allure
              Apr 9 at 11:02







            • 1





              @VladimirF One major reason is that often the exercises will have been reordered (as well as new ones added), which makes it very impractical to refer to exercises across versions. But there is usually no way to reasonably ask the students to all use an older version, as these will not be available through the usual means, and requiring all students to go through second hand sources for the text book is not reasonable.

              – Tobias Kildetoft
              Apr 9 at 12:01
















            But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

            – Vladimir F
            Apr 9 at 8:46





            But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

            – Vladimir F
            Apr 9 at 8:46













            @VladimirF that's a question for the professor to answer. Presumably he/she thinks the new material is worth it.

            – Allure
            Apr 9 at 9:14






            @VladimirF that's a question for the professor to answer. Presumably he/she thinks the new material is worth it.

            – Allure
            Apr 9 at 9:14














            @Allure Vladimir seems to have posted the same comment / question in every possible place...

            – Solar Mike
            Apr 9 at 9:15





            @Allure Vladimir seems to have posted the same comment / question in every possible place...

            – Solar Mike
            Apr 9 at 9:15




            4




            4





            @VladimirF the question doesn't ask that though? The first sentence isn't a question.

            – Allure
            Apr 9 at 11:02






            @VladimirF the question doesn't ask that though? The first sentence isn't a question.

            – Allure
            Apr 9 at 11:02





            1




            1





            @VladimirF One major reason is that often the exercises will have been reordered (as well as new ones added), which makes it very impractical to refer to exercises across versions. But there is usually no way to reasonably ask the students to all use an older version, as these will not be available through the usual means, and requiring all students to go through second hand sources for the text book is not reasonable.

            – Tobias Kildetoft
            Apr 9 at 12:01





            @VladimirF One major reason is that often the exercises will have been reordered (as well as new ones added), which makes it very impractical to refer to exercises across versions. But there is usually no way to reasonably ask the students to all use an older version, as these will not be available through the usual means, and requiring all students to go through second hand sources for the text book is not reasonable.

            – Tobias Kildetoft
            Apr 9 at 12:01











            7














            I am an author currently updating a textbook. It's been out for several years. Many of the exercises are based on "current news" - what was current then is not current now. While updating the exercises I've found more places than I had anticipated where I see ways to say things better.



            I am arranging the new version so that a second hand copy of the old version will still work. Exercises I've removed will be available on the web with their original numbers, new exercise numbers start where the old ones left off.



            To answer the more general question: I think that the point of many new editions is new revenue.






            share|improve this answer























            • "I am arranging the new version so that a second hand copy of the old version will still work" - Bravo!! Will the new questions be published on the web? (so that the poor kid/cheapskate with an old edition can do them when the teacher sets new questions.)

              – Martin Bonner
              yesterday











            • @MartinBonner I hadn't thought of that, figuring instructors could make them available as needed. But it would be easy to do and now I probably will.

              – Ethan Bolker
              yesterday















            7














            I am an author currently updating a textbook. It's been out for several years. Many of the exercises are based on "current news" - what was current then is not current now. While updating the exercises I've found more places than I had anticipated where I see ways to say things better.



            I am arranging the new version so that a second hand copy of the old version will still work. Exercises I've removed will be available on the web with their original numbers, new exercise numbers start where the old ones left off.



            To answer the more general question: I think that the point of many new editions is new revenue.






            share|improve this answer























            • "I am arranging the new version so that a second hand copy of the old version will still work" - Bravo!! Will the new questions be published on the web? (so that the poor kid/cheapskate with an old edition can do them when the teacher sets new questions.)

              – Martin Bonner
              yesterday











            • @MartinBonner I hadn't thought of that, figuring instructors could make them available as needed. But it would be easy to do and now I probably will.

              – Ethan Bolker
              yesterday













            7












            7








            7







            I am an author currently updating a textbook. It's been out for several years. Many of the exercises are based on "current news" - what was current then is not current now. While updating the exercises I've found more places than I had anticipated where I see ways to say things better.



            I am arranging the new version so that a second hand copy of the old version will still work. Exercises I've removed will be available on the web with their original numbers, new exercise numbers start where the old ones left off.



            To answer the more general question: I think that the point of many new editions is new revenue.






            share|improve this answer













            I am an author currently updating a textbook. It's been out for several years. Many of the exercises are based on "current news" - what was current then is not current now. While updating the exercises I've found more places than I had anticipated where I see ways to say things better.



            I am arranging the new version so that a second hand copy of the old version will still work. Exercises I've removed will be available on the web with their original numbers, new exercise numbers start where the old ones left off.



            To answer the more general question: I think that the point of many new editions is new revenue.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Apr 10 at 0:26









            Ethan BolkerEthan Bolker

            4,1021120




            4,1021120












            • "I am arranging the new version so that a second hand copy of the old version will still work" - Bravo!! Will the new questions be published on the web? (so that the poor kid/cheapskate with an old edition can do them when the teacher sets new questions.)

              – Martin Bonner
              yesterday











            • @MartinBonner I hadn't thought of that, figuring instructors could make them available as needed. But it would be easy to do and now I probably will.

              – Ethan Bolker
              yesterday

















            • "I am arranging the new version so that a second hand copy of the old version will still work" - Bravo!! Will the new questions be published on the web? (so that the poor kid/cheapskate with an old edition can do them when the teacher sets new questions.)

              – Martin Bonner
              yesterday











            • @MartinBonner I hadn't thought of that, figuring instructors could make them available as needed. But it would be easy to do and now I probably will.

              – Ethan Bolker
              yesterday
















            "I am arranging the new version so that a second hand copy of the old version will still work" - Bravo!! Will the new questions be published on the web? (so that the poor kid/cheapskate with an old edition can do them when the teacher sets new questions.)

            – Martin Bonner
            yesterday





            "I am arranging the new version so that a second hand copy of the old version will still work" - Bravo!! Will the new questions be published on the web? (so that the poor kid/cheapskate with an old edition can do them when the teacher sets new questions.)

            – Martin Bonner
            yesterday













            @MartinBonner I hadn't thought of that, figuring instructors could make them available as needed. But it would be easy to do and now I probably will.

            – Ethan Bolker
            yesterday





            @MartinBonner I hadn't thought of that, figuring instructors could make them available as needed. But it would be easy to do and now I probably will.

            – Ethan Bolker
            yesterday











            5














            When sales start to lag on a popular title, publishers want a refresh. They want to try to boost sales back to where they were. Adding a chapter on new material is relatively easy. Adding or changing exercises makes it harder to use older editions for adopters.



            Note that authors normally give up copyright to the material so publishers are free to leave authors behind in the preparation of a new edition, but are unlikely to do so even in the absence of a contract. This is because adopters often (usually?) associate the book with its author as much or more than with its title. So including the author has value. But, as Brian Borchers says, there is usually language in the contract about this.



            I think it is very unlikely that student feedback is used in the preparation of a new edition, other than from students of the authors. But book representatives (acquisition editors) usually attend professional conferences and ask for feedback on books from attendees. They will also sometimes poll adopters of the book to get feedback and this can be given to the author to aid in the preparation of the next edition. Some of that feedback is contradictory, however, and some is contrary to the ideas of the authors.



            In fact, some acquisition editors will ask for feedback on the (popular) books of competitors to learn why those books were chosen instead of their own.






            share|improve this answer



























              5














              When sales start to lag on a popular title, publishers want a refresh. They want to try to boost sales back to where they were. Adding a chapter on new material is relatively easy. Adding or changing exercises makes it harder to use older editions for adopters.



              Note that authors normally give up copyright to the material so publishers are free to leave authors behind in the preparation of a new edition, but are unlikely to do so even in the absence of a contract. This is because adopters often (usually?) associate the book with its author as much or more than with its title. So including the author has value. But, as Brian Borchers says, there is usually language in the contract about this.



              I think it is very unlikely that student feedback is used in the preparation of a new edition, other than from students of the authors. But book representatives (acquisition editors) usually attend professional conferences and ask for feedback on books from attendees. They will also sometimes poll adopters of the book to get feedback and this can be given to the author to aid in the preparation of the next edition. Some of that feedback is contradictory, however, and some is contrary to the ideas of the authors.



              In fact, some acquisition editors will ask for feedback on the (popular) books of competitors to learn why those books were chosen instead of their own.






              share|improve this answer

























                5












                5








                5







                When sales start to lag on a popular title, publishers want a refresh. They want to try to boost sales back to where they were. Adding a chapter on new material is relatively easy. Adding or changing exercises makes it harder to use older editions for adopters.



                Note that authors normally give up copyright to the material so publishers are free to leave authors behind in the preparation of a new edition, but are unlikely to do so even in the absence of a contract. This is because adopters often (usually?) associate the book with its author as much or more than with its title. So including the author has value. But, as Brian Borchers says, there is usually language in the contract about this.



                I think it is very unlikely that student feedback is used in the preparation of a new edition, other than from students of the authors. But book representatives (acquisition editors) usually attend professional conferences and ask for feedback on books from attendees. They will also sometimes poll adopters of the book to get feedback and this can be given to the author to aid in the preparation of the next edition. Some of that feedback is contradictory, however, and some is contrary to the ideas of the authors.



                In fact, some acquisition editors will ask for feedback on the (popular) books of competitors to learn why those books were chosen instead of their own.






                share|improve this answer













                When sales start to lag on a popular title, publishers want a refresh. They want to try to boost sales back to where they were. Adding a chapter on new material is relatively easy. Adding or changing exercises makes it harder to use older editions for adopters.



                Note that authors normally give up copyright to the material so publishers are free to leave authors behind in the preparation of a new edition, but are unlikely to do so even in the absence of a contract. This is because adopters often (usually?) associate the book with its author as much or more than with its title. So including the author has value. But, as Brian Borchers says, there is usually language in the contract about this.



                I think it is very unlikely that student feedback is used in the preparation of a new edition, other than from students of the authors. But book representatives (acquisition editors) usually attend professional conferences and ask for feedback on books from attendees. They will also sometimes poll adopters of the book to get feedback and this can be given to the author to aid in the preparation of the next edition. Some of that feedback is contradictory, however, and some is contrary to the ideas of the authors.



                In fact, some acquisition editors will ask for feedback on the (popular) books of competitors to learn why those books were chosen instead of their own.







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Apr 9 at 10:05









                BuffyBuffy

                57.4k17181277




                57.4k17181277





















                    5














                    Have you ever been involved in someone teaching a lecture from a "script"? I don't know if there is a specific English term for this, I mean that the teacher/professor collates the material beforehand without publishing it in a book form, and makes it available to students.



                    If you see this being done year afer year, you will see what kind of changes are made.



                    • The importance/length of sections is changed relative to each other, due to changing emphasis, the need to make space for new material, and the time needed by the professor and/or students to get through a section


                    • practical problems are changed to be more understandable, new problems are added, etc.


                    • material that was difficult to bring across is rewritten to be presented in a new way


                    • small new discoveries are mentioned, such as using the results of nifty new studies as examples that emphasize a point


                    • corrections are made, since there are usually errors at the beginning


                    I would say that textbooks go through similar changes between editions. This is entirely normal - a large and complicated artefact like a textbook is best created in an iterative manner, not unlike a software programm.



                    Major discoveries in the field are much less likely to trigger a new edition. First, the future impact of many discoveries is not recognizable when they are made, and they linger in some small journal before the discipline notices them and makes something out of them.
                    Second, even when something is recognizably new and different, and excites scientists, it is still not "fleshed out" enough to be taught to students, since it doesn't yet have its own ecosystem supporting literature, successful application in large projects, whatever. Third, the kind of professor who gets to publish a textbook is usually old, experienced - and set in his ways. If he dedicated his life to building superconductors out of metal alloys, and some young upshot shows that graphene can be used in a superconductor, the professor will wait for a few years whether that new technology (which is in direct competition to his own research) will establish itself, before starting to give it space in his textbook.



                    I think there are a few exceptions to that "discoveries percolate slowly into textbooks" tendency, for example I heard somewhere that CRISPR/CAS entered general genetics textbooks rather quickly. But it is much more typical, especially in undergraduate level textbooks, that changes between editions are incremental improvements of existing material.



                    There are also some fields where the changes are very impactful. This happens in fields which study human-created rule systems, typically law, but also accounting. In a law textbook, a subset of laws changes every year, and their interpretation by courts also changes with new case decisions. The new editions of textbooks have to reflect these changes.



                    A reason for professors to want the newest edition (beside monetary ones) is simply that it makes it easier to teach. With a class where the students use multiple editions at once, there will be difference in the text, but especially also in the problems. Making sure that everybody reads the same text, or is solving the same problem when homework is given, is a huge headache if students use different editions.






                    share|improve this answer





























                      5














                      Have you ever been involved in someone teaching a lecture from a "script"? I don't know if there is a specific English term for this, I mean that the teacher/professor collates the material beforehand without publishing it in a book form, and makes it available to students.



                      If you see this being done year afer year, you will see what kind of changes are made.



                      • The importance/length of sections is changed relative to each other, due to changing emphasis, the need to make space for new material, and the time needed by the professor and/or students to get through a section


                      • practical problems are changed to be more understandable, new problems are added, etc.


                      • material that was difficult to bring across is rewritten to be presented in a new way


                      • small new discoveries are mentioned, such as using the results of nifty new studies as examples that emphasize a point


                      • corrections are made, since there are usually errors at the beginning


                      I would say that textbooks go through similar changes between editions. This is entirely normal - a large and complicated artefact like a textbook is best created in an iterative manner, not unlike a software programm.



                      Major discoveries in the field are much less likely to trigger a new edition. First, the future impact of many discoveries is not recognizable when they are made, and they linger in some small journal before the discipline notices them and makes something out of them.
                      Second, even when something is recognizably new and different, and excites scientists, it is still not "fleshed out" enough to be taught to students, since it doesn't yet have its own ecosystem supporting literature, successful application in large projects, whatever. Third, the kind of professor who gets to publish a textbook is usually old, experienced - and set in his ways. If he dedicated his life to building superconductors out of metal alloys, and some young upshot shows that graphene can be used in a superconductor, the professor will wait for a few years whether that new technology (which is in direct competition to his own research) will establish itself, before starting to give it space in his textbook.



                      I think there are a few exceptions to that "discoveries percolate slowly into textbooks" tendency, for example I heard somewhere that CRISPR/CAS entered general genetics textbooks rather quickly. But it is much more typical, especially in undergraduate level textbooks, that changes between editions are incremental improvements of existing material.



                      There are also some fields where the changes are very impactful. This happens in fields which study human-created rule systems, typically law, but also accounting. In a law textbook, a subset of laws changes every year, and their interpretation by courts also changes with new case decisions. The new editions of textbooks have to reflect these changes.



                      A reason for professors to want the newest edition (beside monetary ones) is simply that it makes it easier to teach. With a class where the students use multiple editions at once, there will be difference in the text, but especially also in the problems. Making sure that everybody reads the same text, or is solving the same problem when homework is given, is a huge headache if students use different editions.






                      share|improve this answer



























                        5












                        5








                        5







                        Have you ever been involved in someone teaching a lecture from a "script"? I don't know if there is a specific English term for this, I mean that the teacher/professor collates the material beforehand without publishing it in a book form, and makes it available to students.



                        If you see this being done year afer year, you will see what kind of changes are made.



                        • The importance/length of sections is changed relative to each other, due to changing emphasis, the need to make space for new material, and the time needed by the professor and/or students to get through a section


                        • practical problems are changed to be more understandable, new problems are added, etc.


                        • material that was difficult to bring across is rewritten to be presented in a new way


                        • small new discoveries are mentioned, such as using the results of nifty new studies as examples that emphasize a point


                        • corrections are made, since there are usually errors at the beginning


                        I would say that textbooks go through similar changes between editions. This is entirely normal - a large and complicated artefact like a textbook is best created in an iterative manner, not unlike a software programm.



                        Major discoveries in the field are much less likely to trigger a new edition. First, the future impact of many discoveries is not recognizable when they are made, and they linger in some small journal before the discipline notices them and makes something out of them.
                        Second, even when something is recognizably new and different, and excites scientists, it is still not "fleshed out" enough to be taught to students, since it doesn't yet have its own ecosystem supporting literature, successful application in large projects, whatever. Third, the kind of professor who gets to publish a textbook is usually old, experienced - and set in his ways. If he dedicated his life to building superconductors out of metal alloys, and some young upshot shows that graphene can be used in a superconductor, the professor will wait for a few years whether that new technology (which is in direct competition to his own research) will establish itself, before starting to give it space in his textbook.



                        I think there are a few exceptions to that "discoveries percolate slowly into textbooks" tendency, for example I heard somewhere that CRISPR/CAS entered general genetics textbooks rather quickly. But it is much more typical, especially in undergraduate level textbooks, that changes between editions are incremental improvements of existing material.



                        There are also some fields where the changes are very impactful. This happens in fields which study human-created rule systems, typically law, but also accounting. In a law textbook, a subset of laws changes every year, and their interpretation by courts also changes with new case decisions. The new editions of textbooks have to reflect these changes.



                        A reason for professors to want the newest edition (beside monetary ones) is simply that it makes it easier to teach. With a class where the students use multiple editions at once, there will be difference in the text, but especially also in the problems. Making sure that everybody reads the same text, or is solving the same problem when homework is given, is a huge headache if students use different editions.






                        share|improve this answer















                        Have you ever been involved in someone teaching a lecture from a "script"? I don't know if there is a specific English term for this, I mean that the teacher/professor collates the material beforehand without publishing it in a book form, and makes it available to students.



                        If you see this being done year afer year, you will see what kind of changes are made.



                        • The importance/length of sections is changed relative to each other, due to changing emphasis, the need to make space for new material, and the time needed by the professor and/or students to get through a section


                        • practical problems are changed to be more understandable, new problems are added, etc.


                        • material that was difficult to bring across is rewritten to be presented in a new way


                        • small new discoveries are mentioned, such as using the results of nifty new studies as examples that emphasize a point


                        • corrections are made, since there are usually errors at the beginning


                        I would say that textbooks go through similar changes between editions. This is entirely normal - a large and complicated artefact like a textbook is best created in an iterative manner, not unlike a software programm.



                        Major discoveries in the field are much less likely to trigger a new edition. First, the future impact of many discoveries is not recognizable when they are made, and they linger in some small journal before the discipline notices them and makes something out of them.
                        Second, even when something is recognizably new and different, and excites scientists, it is still not "fleshed out" enough to be taught to students, since it doesn't yet have its own ecosystem supporting literature, successful application in large projects, whatever. Third, the kind of professor who gets to publish a textbook is usually old, experienced - and set in his ways. If he dedicated his life to building superconductors out of metal alloys, and some young upshot shows that graphene can be used in a superconductor, the professor will wait for a few years whether that new technology (which is in direct competition to his own research) will establish itself, before starting to give it space in his textbook.



                        I think there are a few exceptions to that "discoveries percolate slowly into textbooks" tendency, for example I heard somewhere that CRISPR/CAS entered general genetics textbooks rather quickly. But it is much more typical, especially in undergraduate level textbooks, that changes between editions are incremental improvements of existing material.



                        There are also some fields where the changes are very impactful. This happens in fields which study human-created rule systems, typically law, but also accounting. In a law textbook, a subset of laws changes every year, and their interpretation by courts also changes with new case decisions. The new editions of textbooks have to reflect these changes.



                        A reason for professors to want the newest edition (beside monetary ones) is simply that it makes it easier to teach. With a class where the students use multiple editions at once, there will be difference in the text, but especially also in the problems. Making sure that everybody reads the same text, or is solving the same problem when homework is given, is a huge headache if students use different editions.







                        share|improve this answer














                        share|improve this answer



                        share|improve this answer








                        edited Apr 9 at 11:18

























                        answered Apr 9 at 11:12









                        rumtschorumtscho

                        3,2641833




                        3,2641833





















                            3














                            They can update a book for several reasons:



                            1) new material,



                            2) updating material (addition or removal), chapters or sections based on feedback - changing the order of sections



                            3) more examples with solutions and/or practice problems with or without solutions



                            So technical books are updated as necessary but they are not done for lucrative reasons - fiction authors sell more copies and do make money... technical books don’t sell in the same numbers...






                            share|improve this answer




















                            • 2





                              Textbook publishing can actually be quite lucrative when it comes to textbooks used in lower division general education courses (think "College Algebra" or "Introductory Statiatics". "Calculus" is pretty advanced by this standard.)

                              – Brian Borchers
                              Apr 9 at 4:17











                            • @BrianBorchers so you match copy numbers of someone like Lee Childs? Author of the Jack Reacher books... Also there tend to be several "introductory" texts each competing for the same limited market...

                              – Solar Mike
                              Apr 9 at 4:20











                            • But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

                              – Vladimir F
                              Apr 9 at 8:46






                            • 1





                              @VladimirF so when you refer to an example question or set of problems or specific text in a chapter, all students have the same information...

                              – Solar Mike
                              Apr 9 at 8:57











                            • @SolarMike: Quantity is not the sole determinant of profit, the margin on each book is just as important, and margin on textbooks is much higher (especially if the "number of copies" for the fiction work includes mass market paperback)

                              – Ben Voigt
                              2 days ago















                            3














                            They can update a book for several reasons:



                            1) new material,



                            2) updating material (addition or removal), chapters or sections based on feedback - changing the order of sections



                            3) more examples with solutions and/or practice problems with or without solutions



                            So technical books are updated as necessary but they are not done for lucrative reasons - fiction authors sell more copies and do make money... technical books don’t sell in the same numbers...






                            share|improve this answer




















                            • 2





                              Textbook publishing can actually be quite lucrative when it comes to textbooks used in lower division general education courses (think "College Algebra" or "Introductory Statiatics". "Calculus" is pretty advanced by this standard.)

                              – Brian Borchers
                              Apr 9 at 4:17











                            • @BrianBorchers so you match copy numbers of someone like Lee Childs? Author of the Jack Reacher books... Also there tend to be several "introductory" texts each competing for the same limited market...

                              – Solar Mike
                              Apr 9 at 4:20











                            • But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

                              – Vladimir F
                              Apr 9 at 8:46






                            • 1





                              @VladimirF so when you refer to an example question or set of problems or specific text in a chapter, all students have the same information...

                              – Solar Mike
                              Apr 9 at 8:57











                            • @SolarMike: Quantity is not the sole determinant of profit, the margin on each book is just as important, and margin on textbooks is much higher (especially if the "number of copies" for the fiction work includes mass market paperback)

                              – Ben Voigt
                              2 days ago













                            3












                            3








                            3







                            They can update a book for several reasons:



                            1) new material,



                            2) updating material (addition or removal), chapters or sections based on feedback - changing the order of sections



                            3) more examples with solutions and/or practice problems with or without solutions



                            So technical books are updated as necessary but they are not done for lucrative reasons - fiction authors sell more copies and do make money... technical books don’t sell in the same numbers...






                            share|improve this answer















                            They can update a book for several reasons:



                            1) new material,



                            2) updating material (addition or removal), chapters or sections based on feedback - changing the order of sections



                            3) more examples with solutions and/or practice problems with or without solutions



                            So technical books are updated as necessary but they are not done for lucrative reasons - fiction authors sell more copies and do make money... technical books don’t sell in the same numbers...







                            share|improve this answer














                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer








                            edited Apr 9 at 5:11

























                            answered Apr 9 at 4:04









                            Solar MikeSolar Mike

                            14.9k52654




                            14.9k52654







                            • 2





                              Textbook publishing can actually be quite lucrative when it comes to textbooks used in lower division general education courses (think "College Algebra" or "Introductory Statiatics". "Calculus" is pretty advanced by this standard.)

                              – Brian Borchers
                              Apr 9 at 4:17











                            • @BrianBorchers so you match copy numbers of someone like Lee Childs? Author of the Jack Reacher books... Also there tend to be several "introductory" texts each competing for the same limited market...

                              – Solar Mike
                              Apr 9 at 4:20











                            • But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

                              – Vladimir F
                              Apr 9 at 8:46






                            • 1





                              @VladimirF so when you refer to an example question or set of problems or specific text in a chapter, all students have the same information...

                              – Solar Mike
                              Apr 9 at 8:57











                            • @SolarMike: Quantity is not the sole determinant of profit, the margin on each book is just as important, and margin on textbooks is much higher (especially if the "number of copies" for the fiction work includes mass market paperback)

                              – Ben Voigt
                              2 days ago












                            • 2





                              Textbook publishing can actually be quite lucrative when it comes to textbooks used in lower division general education courses (think "College Algebra" or "Introductory Statiatics". "Calculus" is pretty advanced by this standard.)

                              – Brian Borchers
                              Apr 9 at 4:17











                            • @BrianBorchers so you match copy numbers of someone like Lee Childs? Author of the Jack Reacher books... Also there tend to be several "introductory" texts each competing for the same limited market...

                              – Solar Mike
                              Apr 9 at 4:20











                            • But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

                              – Vladimir F
                              Apr 9 at 8:46






                            • 1





                              @VladimirF so when you refer to an example question or set of problems or specific text in a chapter, all students have the same information...

                              – Solar Mike
                              Apr 9 at 8:57











                            • @SolarMike: Quantity is not the sole determinant of profit, the margin on each book is just as important, and margin on textbooks is much higher (especially if the "number of copies" for the fiction work includes mass market paperback)

                              – Ben Voigt
                              2 days ago







                            2




                            2





                            Textbook publishing can actually be quite lucrative when it comes to textbooks used in lower division general education courses (think "College Algebra" or "Introductory Statiatics". "Calculus" is pretty advanced by this standard.)

                            – Brian Borchers
                            Apr 9 at 4:17





                            Textbook publishing can actually be quite lucrative when it comes to textbooks used in lower division general education courses (think "College Algebra" or "Introductory Statiatics". "Calculus" is pretty advanced by this standard.)

                            – Brian Borchers
                            Apr 9 at 4:17













                            @BrianBorchers so you match copy numbers of someone like Lee Childs? Author of the Jack Reacher books... Also there tend to be several "introductory" texts each competing for the same limited market...

                            – Solar Mike
                            Apr 9 at 4:20





                            @BrianBorchers so you match copy numbers of someone like Lee Childs? Author of the Jack Reacher books... Also there tend to be several "introductory" texts each competing for the same limited market...

                            – Solar Mike
                            Apr 9 at 4:20













                            But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

                            – Vladimir F
                            Apr 9 at 8:46





                            But what is the motivation of requiring the most recent editions from students, (except increasing the shares from new sales)?

                            – Vladimir F
                            Apr 9 at 8:46




                            1




                            1





                            @VladimirF so when you refer to an example question or set of problems or specific text in a chapter, all students have the same information...

                            – Solar Mike
                            Apr 9 at 8:57





                            @VladimirF so when you refer to an example question or set of problems or specific text in a chapter, all students have the same information...

                            – Solar Mike
                            Apr 9 at 8:57













                            @SolarMike: Quantity is not the sole determinant of profit, the margin on each book is just as important, and margin on textbooks is much higher (especially if the "number of copies" for the fiction work includes mass market paperback)

                            – Ben Voigt
                            2 days ago





                            @SolarMike: Quantity is not the sole determinant of profit, the margin on each book is just as important, and margin on textbooks is much higher (especially if the "number of copies" for the fiction work includes mass market paperback)

                            – Ben Voigt
                            2 days ago











                            2














                            • Error corrections. Somebody pointed to a typo or more serious error, this is corrected. Teaching a course can be difficult if some students have the errors and some have the corrections.

                            • Media rights. An image might have been licensed for the initial print run, it is not possible to renew the license. Or there never was a license to start with, things were more sloppy in previous decades. An image might have been licensed for print only and now they want a digital edition, too.





                            share|improve this answer



























                              2














                              • Error corrections. Somebody pointed to a typo or more serious error, this is corrected. Teaching a course can be difficult if some students have the errors and some have the corrections.

                              • Media rights. An image might have been licensed for the initial print run, it is not possible to renew the license. Or there never was a license to start with, things were more sloppy in previous decades. An image might have been licensed for print only and now they want a digital edition, too.





                              share|improve this answer

























                                2












                                2








                                2







                                • Error corrections. Somebody pointed to a typo or more serious error, this is corrected. Teaching a course can be difficult if some students have the errors and some have the corrections.

                                • Media rights. An image might have been licensed for the initial print run, it is not possible to renew the license. Or there never was a license to start with, things were more sloppy in previous decades. An image might have been licensed for print only and now they want a digital edition, too.





                                share|improve this answer













                                • Error corrections. Somebody pointed to a typo or more serious error, this is corrected. Teaching a course can be difficult if some students have the errors and some have the corrections.

                                • Media rights. An image might have been licensed for the initial print run, it is not possible to renew the license. Or there never was a license to start with, things were more sloppy in previous decades. An image might have been licensed for print only and now they want a digital edition, too.






                                share|improve this answer












                                share|improve this answer



                                share|improve this answer










                                answered Apr 9 at 7:41









                                o.m.o.m.

                                58434




                                58434





















                                    0














                                    In something like English, clearly the field is not changing hugely -- incorporating technology has been done pretty well. (Although I want to update a book I used in Tech Writing because it was pre-google docs, and assumed emailing around a single document, taking turns editing.)



                                    Mostly instructors find other approaches that work, and they want to create a text to allow other instructors to use the same one.



                                    I often would incorporate a chapter from a textbook I had a sample from, while my main text for the class stayed the same. I didn't outright steal (Xerox or scan it in), but I'd take the organization of the information for that chapter, and make a presentation (PPT) based on that, and come up with my own examples, and find exercises in my existing text that could be adapted. This was a tech-writing class, and that other book went into more depth on layout topics and strategies. To get even a portion of that book for the class (I wrote the publisher and asked for a 2-3 chapter excerpt) would have been $30/copy, and my main book in that class is only $30ish already. If my preferred text lacked adaptable examples though, then I may have switched or added in that supplement fully.



                                    Some teachers in my department ADORED a text that gave a lot of "models" for how to do academic writing, but I despised it. So I'm glad other people had created books that focused more on the analysis and deep-thinking parts of the writing process. So while not new editions, they were various approaches being represented. (I did stop using one ENGL 100 book when 3rd edition was 250ish pages, but by 6th, it was 550 -- each individual change made sense, but it was overall too overwhelming for a student to cope with.)






                                    share|improve this answer



























                                      0














                                      In something like English, clearly the field is not changing hugely -- incorporating technology has been done pretty well. (Although I want to update a book I used in Tech Writing because it was pre-google docs, and assumed emailing around a single document, taking turns editing.)



                                      Mostly instructors find other approaches that work, and they want to create a text to allow other instructors to use the same one.



                                      I often would incorporate a chapter from a textbook I had a sample from, while my main text for the class stayed the same. I didn't outright steal (Xerox or scan it in), but I'd take the organization of the information for that chapter, and make a presentation (PPT) based on that, and come up with my own examples, and find exercises in my existing text that could be adapted. This was a tech-writing class, and that other book went into more depth on layout topics and strategies. To get even a portion of that book for the class (I wrote the publisher and asked for a 2-3 chapter excerpt) would have been $30/copy, and my main book in that class is only $30ish already. If my preferred text lacked adaptable examples though, then I may have switched or added in that supplement fully.



                                      Some teachers in my department ADORED a text that gave a lot of "models" for how to do academic writing, but I despised it. So I'm glad other people had created books that focused more on the analysis and deep-thinking parts of the writing process. So while not new editions, they were various approaches being represented. (I did stop using one ENGL 100 book when 3rd edition was 250ish pages, but by 6th, it was 550 -- each individual change made sense, but it was overall too overwhelming for a student to cope with.)






                                      share|improve this answer

























                                        0












                                        0








                                        0







                                        In something like English, clearly the field is not changing hugely -- incorporating technology has been done pretty well. (Although I want to update a book I used in Tech Writing because it was pre-google docs, and assumed emailing around a single document, taking turns editing.)



                                        Mostly instructors find other approaches that work, and they want to create a text to allow other instructors to use the same one.



                                        I often would incorporate a chapter from a textbook I had a sample from, while my main text for the class stayed the same. I didn't outright steal (Xerox or scan it in), but I'd take the organization of the information for that chapter, and make a presentation (PPT) based on that, and come up with my own examples, and find exercises in my existing text that could be adapted. This was a tech-writing class, and that other book went into more depth on layout topics and strategies. To get even a portion of that book for the class (I wrote the publisher and asked for a 2-3 chapter excerpt) would have been $30/copy, and my main book in that class is only $30ish already. If my preferred text lacked adaptable examples though, then I may have switched or added in that supplement fully.



                                        Some teachers in my department ADORED a text that gave a lot of "models" for how to do academic writing, but I despised it. So I'm glad other people had created books that focused more on the analysis and deep-thinking parts of the writing process. So while not new editions, they were various approaches being represented. (I did stop using one ENGL 100 book when 3rd edition was 250ish pages, but by 6th, it was 550 -- each individual change made sense, but it was overall too overwhelming for a student to cope with.)






                                        share|improve this answer













                                        In something like English, clearly the field is not changing hugely -- incorporating technology has been done pretty well. (Although I want to update a book I used in Tech Writing because it was pre-google docs, and assumed emailing around a single document, taking turns editing.)



                                        Mostly instructors find other approaches that work, and they want to create a text to allow other instructors to use the same one.



                                        I often would incorporate a chapter from a textbook I had a sample from, while my main text for the class stayed the same. I didn't outright steal (Xerox or scan it in), but I'd take the organization of the information for that chapter, and make a presentation (PPT) based on that, and come up with my own examples, and find exercises in my existing text that could be adapted. This was a tech-writing class, and that other book went into more depth on layout topics and strategies. To get even a portion of that book for the class (I wrote the publisher and asked for a 2-3 chapter excerpt) would have been $30/copy, and my main book in that class is only $30ish already. If my preferred text lacked adaptable examples though, then I may have switched or added in that supplement fully.



                                        Some teachers in my department ADORED a text that gave a lot of "models" for how to do academic writing, but I despised it. So I'm glad other people had created books that focused more on the analysis and deep-thinking parts of the writing process. So while not new editions, they were various approaches being represented. (I did stop using one ENGL 100 book when 3rd edition was 250ish pages, but by 6th, it was 550 -- each individual change made sense, but it was overall too overwhelming for a student to cope with.)







                                        share|improve this answer












                                        share|improve this answer



                                        share|improve this answer










                                        answered 2 days ago









                                        AprilApril

                                        1114




                                        1114





















                                            0














                                            20 or so years ago while in the army, we had some rule book (The Rules of Military Discipline, printed in 1965 I think) which were erata-ed the hard way: new text written by typing machine, cut and pasted (glued) over the old text.

                                            As another example, children today learn Mathematics at least one year earlier than I did in the eighties, so new manuals are necessary. Also, the things that MUST be studied (government mandates what) change - if not every year, then at least once every four. While dealing with things that disappear from the manual is easy (just ignore them), the changes are all ADDING things.






                                            share|improve this answer








                                            New contributor




                                            Calin Ceteras is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                            Check out our Code of Conduct.
























                                              0














                                              20 or so years ago while in the army, we had some rule book (The Rules of Military Discipline, printed in 1965 I think) which were erata-ed the hard way: new text written by typing machine, cut and pasted (glued) over the old text.

                                              As another example, children today learn Mathematics at least one year earlier than I did in the eighties, so new manuals are necessary. Also, the things that MUST be studied (government mandates what) change - if not every year, then at least once every four. While dealing with things that disappear from the manual is easy (just ignore them), the changes are all ADDING things.






                                              share|improve this answer








                                              New contributor




                                              Calin Ceteras is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                              Check out our Code of Conduct.






















                                                0












                                                0








                                                0







                                                20 or so years ago while in the army, we had some rule book (The Rules of Military Discipline, printed in 1965 I think) which were erata-ed the hard way: new text written by typing machine, cut and pasted (glued) over the old text.

                                                As another example, children today learn Mathematics at least one year earlier than I did in the eighties, so new manuals are necessary. Also, the things that MUST be studied (government mandates what) change - if not every year, then at least once every four. While dealing with things that disappear from the manual is easy (just ignore them), the changes are all ADDING things.






                                                share|improve this answer








                                                New contributor




                                                Calin Ceteras is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                Check out our Code of Conduct.










                                                20 or so years ago while in the army, we had some rule book (The Rules of Military Discipline, printed in 1965 I think) which were erata-ed the hard way: new text written by typing machine, cut and pasted (glued) over the old text.

                                                As another example, children today learn Mathematics at least one year earlier than I did in the eighties, so new manuals are necessary. Also, the things that MUST be studied (government mandates what) change - if not every year, then at least once every four. While dealing with things that disappear from the manual is easy (just ignore them), the changes are all ADDING things.







                                                share|improve this answer








                                                New contributor




                                                Calin Ceteras is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                                share|improve this answer



                                                share|improve this answer






                                                New contributor




                                                Calin Ceteras is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                                answered yesterday









                                                Calin CeterasCalin Ceteras

                                                101




                                                101




                                                New contributor




                                                Calin Ceteras is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                Check out our Code of Conduct.





                                                New contributor





                                                Calin Ceteras is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                Check out our Code of Conduct.






                                                Calin Ceteras is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                                Check out our Code of Conduct.















                                                    protected by Alexandros yesterday



                                                    Thank you for your interest in this question.
                                                    Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



                                                    Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?



                                                    Popular posts from this blog

                                                    getting Checkpoint VPN SSL Network Extender working in the command lineHow to connect to CheckPoint VPN on Ubuntu 18.04LTS?Will the Linux ( red-hat ) Open VPNC Client connect to checkpoint or nortel VPN gateways?VPN client for linux machine + support checkpoint gatewayVPN SSL Network Extender in FirefoxLinux Checkpoint SNX tool configuration issuesCheck Point - Connect under Linux - snx + OTPSNX VPN Ububuntu 18.XXUsing Checkpoint VPN SSL Network Extender CLI with certificateVPN with network manager (nm-applet) is not workingWill the Linux ( red-hat ) Open VPNC Client connect to checkpoint or nortel VPN gateways?VPN client for linux machine + support checkpoint gatewayImport VPN config files to NetworkManager from command lineTrouble connecting to VPN using network-manager, while command line worksStart a VPN connection with PPTP protocol on command linestarting a docker service daemon breaks the vpn networkCan't connect to vpn with Network-managerVPN SSL Network Extender in FirefoxUsing Checkpoint VPN SSL Network Extender CLI with certificate

                                                    대한민국 목차 국명 지리 역사 정치 국방 경제 사회 문화 국제 순위 관련 항목 각주 외부 링크 둘러보기 메뉴북위 37° 34′ 08″ 동경 126° 58′ 36″ / 북위 37.568889° 동경 126.976667°  / 37.568889; 126.976667ehThe Korean Repository문단을 편집문단을 편집추가해Clarkson PLC 사Report for Selected Countries and Subjects-Korea“Human Development Index and its components: P.198”“http://www.law.go.kr/%EB%B2%95%EB%A0%B9/%EB%8C%80%ED%95%9C%EB%AF%BC%EA%B5%AD%EA%B5%AD%EA%B8%B0%EB%B2%95”"한국은 국제법상 한반도 유일 합법정부 아니다" - 오마이뉴스 모바일Report for Selected Countries and Subjects: South Korea격동의 역사와 함께한 조선일보 90년 : 조선일보 인수해 혁신시킨 신석우, 임시정부 때는 '대한민국' 국호(國號) 정해《우리가 몰랐던 우리 역사: 나라 이름의 비밀을 찾아가는 역사 여행》“남북 공식호칭 ‘남한’‘북한’으로 쓴다”“Corea 대 Korea, 누가 이긴 거야?”국내기후자료 - 한국[김대중 前 대통령 서거] 과감한 구조개혁 'DJ노믹스'로 최단기간 환란극복 :: 네이버 뉴스“이라크 "韓-쿠르드 유전개발 MOU 승인 안해"(종합)”“해외 우리국민 추방사례 43%가 일본”차기전차 K2'흑표'의 세계 최고 전력 분석, 쿠키뉴스 엄기영, 2007-03-02두산인프라, 헬기잡는 장갑차 'K21'...내년부터 공급, 고뉴스 이대준, 2008-10-30과거 내용 찾기mk 뉴스 - 구매력 기준으로 보면 한국 1인당 소득 3만弗과거 내용 찾기"The N-11: More Than an Acronym"Archived조선일보 최우석, 2008-11-01Global 500 2008: Countries - South Korea“몇년째 '시한폭탄'... 가계부채, 올해는 터질까”가구당 부채 5000만원 처음 넘어서“‘빚’으로 내몰리는 사회.. 위기의 가계대출”“[경제365] 공공부문 부채 급증…800조 육박”“"소득 양극화 다소 완화...불평등은 여전"”“공정사회·공생발전 한참 멀었네”iSuppli,08年2QのDRAMシェア・ランキングを発表(08/8/11)South Korea dominates shipbuilding industry | Stock Market News & Stocks to Watch from StraightStocks한국 자동차 생산, 3년 연속 세계 5위자동차수출 '현대-삼성 웃고 기아-대우-쌍용은 울고' 과거 내용 찾기동반성장위 창립 1주년 맞아Archived"중기적합 3개업종 합의 무시한 채 선정"李대통령, 사업 무분별 확장 소상공인 생계 위협 질타삼성-LG, 서민업종인 빵·분식사업 잇따라 철수상생은 뒷전…SSM ‘몸집 불리기’ 혈안Archived“경부고속도에 '아시안하이웨이' 표지판”'철의 실크로드' 앞서 '말(言)의 실크로드'부터, 프레시안 정창현, 2008-10-01“'서울 지하철은 안전한가?'”“서울시 “올해 안에 모든 지하철역 스크린도어 설치””“부산지하철 1,2호선 승강장 안전펜스 설치 완료”“전교조, 정부 노조 통계서 처음 빠져”“[Weekly BIZ] 도요타 '제로 이사회'가 리콜 사태 불러들였다”“S Korea slams high tuition costs”““정치가 여론 양극화 부채질… 합리주의 절실””“〈"`촛불집회'는 민주주의의 질적 변화 상징"〉”““촛불집회가 민주주의 왜곡 초래””“국민 65%, "한국 노사관계 대립적"”“한국 국가경쟁력 27위‥노사관계 '꼴찌'”“제대로 형성되지 않은 대한민국 이념지형”“[신년기획-갈등의 시대] 갈등지수 OECD 4위…사회적 손실 GDP 27% 무려 300조”“2012 총선-대선의 키워드는 '국민과 소통'”“한국 삶의 질 27위, 2000년과 2008년 연속 하위권 머물러”“[해피 코리아] 행복점수 68점…해외 평가선 '낙제점'”“한국 어린이·청소년 행복지수 3년 연속 OECD ‘꼴찌’”“한국 이혼율 OECD중 8위”“[통계청] 한국 이혼율 OECD 4위”“오피니언 [이렇게 생각한다] `부부의 날` 에 돌아본 이혼율 1위 한국”“Suicide Rates by Country, Global Health Observatory Data Repository.”“1. 또 다른 차별”“오피니언 [편집자에게] '왕따'와 '패거리 정치' 심리는 닮은꼴”“[미래한국리포트] 무한경쟁에 빠진 대한민국”“대학생 98% "외모가 경쟁력이라는 말 동의"”“특급호텔 웨딩·200만원대 유모차… "남보다 더…" 호화病, 고질병 됐다”“[스트레스 공화국] ① 경쟁사회, 스트레스 쌓인다”““매일 30여명 자살 한국, 의사보다 무속인에…””“"자살 부르는 '우울증', 환자 중 85% 치료 안 받아"”“정신병원을 가다”“대한민국도 ‘묻지마 범죄’,안전지대 아니다”“유엔 "학생 '성적 지향'에 따른 차별 금지하라"”“유엔아동권리위원회 보고서 및 번역본 원문”“고졸 성공스토리 담은 '제빵왕 김탁구' 드라마 나온다”“‘빛 좋은 개살구’ 고졸 취업…실습 대신 착취”원본 문서“정신건강, 사회적 편견부터 고쳐드립니다”‘소통’과 ‘행복’에 목 마른 사회가 잠들어 있던 ‘심리학’ 깨웠다“[포토] 사유리-곽금주 교수의 유쾌한 심리상담”“"올해 한국인 평균 영화관람횟수 세계 1위"(종합)”“[게임연중기획] 게임은 문화다-여가활동 1순위 게임”“영화속 ‘영어 지상주의’ …“왠지 씁쓸한데””“2월 `신문 부수 인증기관` 지정..방송법 후속작업”“무료신문 성장동력 ‘차별성’과 ‘갈등해소’”대한민국 국회 법률지식정보시스템"Pew Research Center's Religion & Public Life Project: South Korea"“amp;vwcd=MT_ZTITLE&path=인구·가구%20>%20인구총조사%20>%20인구부문%20>%20 총조사인구(2005)%20>%20전수부문&oper_YN=Y&item=&keyword=종교별%20인구& amp;lang_mode=kor&list_id= 2005년 통계청 인구 총조사”원본 문서“한국인이 좋아하는 취미와 운동 (2004-2009)”“한국인이 좋아하는 취미와 운동 (2004-2014)”Archived“한국, `부분적 언론자유국' 강등〈프리덤하우스〉”“국경없는기자회 "한국, 인터넷감시 대상국"”“한국, 조선산업 1위 유지(S. Korea Stays Top Shipbuilding Nation) RZD-Partner Portal”원본 문서“한국, 4년 만에 ‘선박건조 1위’”“옛 마산시,인터넷속도 세계 1위”“"한국 초고속 인터넷망 세계1위"”“인터넷·휴대폰 요금, 외국보다 훨씬 비싸”“한국 관세행정 6년 연속 세계 '1위'”“한국 교통사고 사망자 수 OECD 회원국 중 2위”“결핵 후진국' 한국, 환자가 급증한 이유는”“수술은 신중해야… 자칫하면 생명 위협”대한민국분류대한민국의 지도대한민국 정부대표 다국어포털대한민국 전자정부대한민국 국회한국방송공사about korea and information korea브리태니커 백과사전(한국편)론리플래닛의 정보(한국편)CIA의 세계 정보(한국편)마리암 부디아 (Mariam Budia),『한국: 하늘이 내린 한 폭의 그림』, 서울: 트랜스라틴 19호 (2012년 3월)대한민국ehehehehehehehehehehehehehehWorldCat132441370n791268020000 0001 2308 81034078029-6026373548cb11863345f(데이터)00573706ge128495

                                                    Cannot Extend partition with GParted The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are In Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern) 2019 Community Moderator Election ResultsCan't increase partition size with GParted?GParted doesn't recognize the unallocated space after my current partitionWhat is the best way to add unallocated space located before to Ubuntu 12.04 partition with GParted live?I can't figure out how to extend my Arch home partition into free spaceGparted Linux Mint 18.1 issueTrying to extend but swap partition is showing as Unknown in Gparted, shows proper from fdiskRearrange partitions in gparted to extend a partitionUnable to extend partition even though unallocated space is next to it using GPartedAllocate free space to root partitiongparted: how to merge unallocated space with a partition