I' THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 23.1962 loss Views Chances [)f Aiding Candidates By MARTHA MacNEAL ----;-A EDUCATIONAL REVOLUTION: . Drastic Changes Hit Textbook Field I "There is a growing feeling among Voice Political Party mem- bers that if a local candidate for Congress would adopt a platform calling for significant initiatives in disarmament and the reduction of cold war tensions, Voice would contribute to his campaign in the form of active political work," Robert Ross, '63, chairman of Voice said yesterday. This issue was discussed at the open executive meeting of Voice, held Tuesday and Thursday at the Student Activities Bldg. Mem- bers of the Executive Committee attending were Martha Prescott, '65, Nancy Hollander, '65, Richard Magidoff, '63, Sharon Jeffrey, '63, and Ross. In addition, Ross said that an Ann Arbor community group, Vot- ers' Voice for Peace, has been at- tempting to encourage a local candidate to take such a position. Discussion Group Voice is planning to organize two internal education studies The first will be a discussion group of Voice members meeting twice monthly to consider the "Port Huron Statement" issued by the Students for a Democratic Society. The 65-page statement at- tempts to analyze the American political and social system in such a way as to help build a democrat- ic, liberal, and radical social move- ment. Group To. Stage Housing Protest The Ann Arbor Fair Housing Association will sponsor a vigil at Monday's City Council meeting to demonstrate support for the passage of a fair housing ordi- nance. The demonstration will be held in front of the City Hall at 7:00 p.m., continuing until the meeting is adjourned. The second study will be carried out by a research group working on the problem of re-alignment of the National political party sys- tem. The findings' of this group will be used by former' Daily Editor Thomas Hayden, Grad., and Rob- ert Haber, Spec., as material for a book which they hope to pub- lish next year in order to affect the 1964 conventions. Education Reform The Committee on the Univer- sity will continue to study the problem of reform of higher edu- cation at Michigan, and will con- centrate particularly on aiding members of Voice who are on Student Government Council in the preparation of legislation. Projects on civil liberties, stu- dent rights, and speaker bans will be continued. Voice will attempt to demonstrate publicly the faults of the present speaker policy by bringing controversial speakers to the University campus, and will continue to spread literature con- cerning the House Un-American Activities Committee and civil rights. In the area of civil rights, some Unievrsity students and Ann Arbor residents are working on a tutor- ial program for Negro and white teenagers. Voice will probably join the project once it has become firmly established, Ross said. Fair Housing On the same issue, a demonstra- tion for fair housing legislation will be held by the Ann Arbor Fair Housing Association outside the Ann Arbor town hall at 7 p.m. on Monday. Voice will also be selling recordings of songs from Albany, Ga., to raise money for the Stu- dent Non-Violent Coordinating Committee and its civil rights projects., Some individual Voice members are doing research on the possi- bility of working with other state! groups on the problem of migrant workers. By FRED M. HECHINGER New York Times Education Writer The textbook publishing indus- try today is in a position compar- able to that of the air craft indus- try when it was confronted by the changeover from piston engines to jets. Nationwide school reforms and educational discoveries have pushed textbook publishers to the point of drastic changes. Demands for higher standards of teachingI have caused textbook innovations that, according to one publisher, might normally have taken at least a generation. There appears to be agreement on only one point: the American textbook and its market never again will be as uncomplicated and standardized as it has been for the last thirty years. Instead of mas- sive, profitable sales of a number of so-called "basic" books, the market will be fragmented, fast- changing and far less predictbble. Government Money Individual publishers see these changes either as a threat or an opportunity. While all agree that government research money will have a decisive impact, they are sharply divided on whether this is a potential menace or a boon. They point to the large number of pre-school children who some day will be captive customers, but they also know that they may have to spend larger sums than ever before on research and the replacement of obsolete books if they are to survive the stiffening competition. For they are com- peting not only with one another but with new technological teach- ing aids, from television to teach- ing machines. Textbook publishers face all these uncertainties with a back- log of harsh criticism, ranging from right-wing attacks on books as too liberal to liberal charges that publishers' fears of financial : loss have drained the texts of sub- stance and controversy. Most of all, publishers' repre- sentatives complain, they face stiff competition for - the budget dollar at a time when classroom shortages and inadequate teach- ers' salaries are also making heavy demands on taxpayers. Today there are 172 textbook publishing companies competing for a total annual business of about $336.6 million. Of this, the elementary and high school busi- ness, where the most important and immediate changes are anti- cipated, account for about $232 million. While the total expenditure has more than doubled in the last ten years, the percentage of the total school expenditure for textbooks, though always small, has de- creased as enrollments and costs rose. At present it is just above one per cent of the total, al- though this public allotment is often augmented by students' own purchases. Serious Complaints Whatever the future, publishers admit that they face it against a background of serious com- plaints. Such critics as Albert Alexander, until recently a textbook analyst for the New York City schools, have charged that books on his- tory and other social studies have avoided controversial issues so carefully that they have "followed a virtual manual for blandness." These critics cite the gingerly treatment of the Civil War, indi- cated by the superficial fact that most books refer to it as the War Between the States, and to the evasion of such national contro- versies as the New Deal or the conflict over the late Senator Jo- seph R. McCarthy. Teachers of English have said that anthologies tend to omit playwrights Arthur Miller and Tennessee Williams as too controversial. Horse Opera In a recent critical analysis of the coverage of the Reconstruc- tion Period in high school text- books, Mark M. Krug of the Uni- versity of Chicago charged that the presentation resembled West- ern horse opera rather than schol- arship. Other critics have complained that too many books are written by authors or "teams" who mere- ly imitate commercially success- ful books put out by other publish- ers, with resulting sameness among most available books. Such groups as the American Economic Asso- ciation have criticized the loss of solid economic content in books that try to combine and, they charge, water down all the social studies. Geographers voice similar complaints. In reply, publishers say they are being held responsible for the lack of courage of their customers - school boards and educators. Wil- liam I. Jovanovich, president of the Harcourt Brace & World Book Co., said textbooks represented the most convenient target for critics, partly because they were "alien products," made outside the com- munity, and partly because they were portable and easy to shoot at.s Durability Is Objective r Many industries have intro-X duced built-in obsolescence intos their product, but textbooks haver been produced largely with ank eye to durability. And many havet outlasted their subject-matter use-E fulness. Recent surveys by thef United Parents Association in New York City found science and math-x ematics texts dating to 1935 still in use. Lee C. Deighton, vice president of the Macmillan Co., said books are adopted because they havet more colored pictures than com- peting books, because of the color of the paper, the depth of the margins, the attractiveness of theI covers, the strength of the bind- ing. At one point, said anothert publisher, books with nylon bind-1 ing were turned down by the cotton-producing South. "The pressure is on," said War- ren Blaisdell, president of Blaisdell1 Publishing Company, a division ofe Random House. "Parents demand to know why their children are not allowed to use good books, which help get children in other statesi into college." New Day Dawning1 "The day when textbooks are dominated by lay school board members and political pressures are coming to a close," he said. The driving force behind this change is curriculum reform. Since the establishment of the Commission on Mathematics in 1955 by the Carnegie Corp. of1 New York, reform groups have been presenting the schools with new approaches to mathematics teaching. Jerrold Zacharias, phy- sicist at the Massachusetts In- stitute of Technology, has set sim- ilar reform plans in motion in physics. Two large national groups are at work on chemistry and another in biology. More recently, economics teach- ing and English instruction have joined the movement. Foreign languages have been in a con- stant state of flux, ever since the' armed. forces, during the war in- troduced the "new American method" of teaching largely through the spoken word, at least for beginners. Variety Indicated Most of the publishers agreed that textbooks of the future must implement the various reform trends, satisfy the more conserva- tive, the experimental and the "far-out" teachers of varying abilities. The compromise appears to be the use of basic textbooks, ac- companied by clusters of special books, usually paperbacks specially prepared to accompany the text. Doubleday and Company has pro- vided a "cluster" of paperbacks to supplement new science cur- riculums. This "cluster" system also may provide the answer to controver- sial issues. Edward Booher, presi- dent of McGraw-Hill, pointed to a new basic text on American politics, just published by his com- pany, which is accompanied by twenty five separate case study pamphlets. They include "An All- Negro Ticket in Baltimore," "The Nomination of 'Chip' Bohlen" and "Oklahoma Goes Wet," along with other controvery-charged cases. Schools may take them or leave them. Bitter Feud In some areas the change is likely to be accompanied by bitter feuds, partly because the profes- sional educators are resisting change, partly because long prac- tice has entrenched existing books and methods. I IMELITEIISI Reading instruction may ' be e among the most explosive. In ar recent analysis, Bruno Bettelheim,r psycologist and education expertt at the University of Chicago, sum-t med up criticism of current booksk by saying that many contain no- thing the child has not knownk all along without having to readr about it." The phrase "Jump, Ted. Jump! Jump! Jump." is hardly8 news to the child."c Since the majority of early read-r ing books are based on a standard word list, imposed by educators on publishers, mass-obsolesence of this entire category of books maya become even more drastic than in other fields. Some impatient teachers havet published their own textbooks to implement experiments in the teaching of reading. Book pub- lishers are getting ready fore change. "We are watching them1 very intently," said Craig T. Senft,t executive vice president of Holt,I Rinehart and Winston, Inc. "WeI expect to produce books, regard--1 less of past methods, as soon as< the new methods seem successful." Senft said "the next volcano" in the schools-and therefore in the textbook industry- will be1 in the social studies. "The Birchers merely scratched the surface," with criticism along super-patriot- ism lines, he said. The real changes will come about because "stress on specific subject matter will return," he predicted. Leadership Predicted "Attempts in the past to blend the various social studies-history,, geography, economics-were not very successful," he said. "Geo- graphy is in for a resurgence, and, the universities are beginning to correct the lack of competent geo- graphers." More, than in the past, he said, publishers, to remain competitive, will have to try to anticipate the direction education is going to take, instead of following trends. One publisher referred to such new materials as educational films and "programmed instruction" for use in so-called teaching machines or self-teaching books, such as Doubleday's TutorTexts, a book version of the machine. Program- med learning presents to the stu- dent carefully prepared sequences and offers various ways, some mechanical or even electronic, of finding out whether he is giving the right answers. Hardware Idea Although book publishers are skeptical of the machine or "hard- ware" idea, they are afraid not to keep up with it. But the most controversial as- pect of the problem is the role of government and the foundations. Jovanovich is openly critical. "Most of the reforms sponsored by these funds," he said, "aim at the upper 20 per cent of students and forget the great mass of children." Outside dollars, he said, "make publishers compete with production of materials which are not in the public domain, and if we do, there remains the question whether communities will pick up the tab for the experimental ma- terials after the government pulls out." Provide Consultants He pointed to the expense in- volved in the re-training of teach- ers, where the government does not pay for it, and the question whether publishers can afford, and should be required to provide con- sultants to schools. "In the end, we'll have some 'excellence texts' and others for the mass of students, and critics will point at the latter to show- rightly-that they are not scholar- ly," he said. Involved in the controversy are these facts: Revise Course The Government, through the National Defense Education Act and the National Science Founda- tion, and private foundations have spent millions of dollars on the establishment of commissions to revise the curriculum and, later, to retain teachers. In most instances textbooks, experimentally rather than commercially produced, have been the result. Some of the experimental books have been taken over by com- mercial publishers, giving them the benefit of publicly financed re- search. In the case of the biology curriculum revision, three experi- mental books have been put out. At present, with the American Textbook Publishers Institute act- ing as the broker, the biologists are accepting open bids. "Only three publishers will get the texts," Jovanovich said." "Isn't this government interference?" Public Finance By contrast, the various math- ematics reform groups, also pub- licly financed, have thrown all their experimental work in the public domain. This has led to the publication of a great many new books and less hostility on the part of the publishers. The government and foundation role, however, also has strong sup- porters. "It had to be done, and nobody but the government could have done it," Blaisdell said. "For one thing, educators don't listen to publishers." Teacher-Prof Rourke calls this the process of making new books and metiods "teacher-proof." One of the grav- est dangers to school reform is merely giving in to public pressure for "something new" without mak- ing sure that the teachers under- stand what they are doing, he said. Otherwise, he warned, the reforms will fail and the reformers, through no fault of their own, will be blamed. "It's very easy to say, 'Let them study calculus in high school," but the fact is that many high school mathematics teachers have never studied calculus," he said. Whatever the disagreements, the consensus is that, as education be- comes more quality minded, suc- cessful book publishing must keep this in mind. Copyright, 1962, The New York Times Compare Retail Text Prices Of 'U,WSU Booksellers (Continued from Page 1) Moll ii! Out-of-Stock Books N Arriving Daily AEW and USEE at ULRICH'is Ann Arbor's Busy Book Store ) three blocks apart, is able to sat- isfy about 98 pir cent of student textbook needs, Haskins estimates. They run short (during registra- tion period) on about seven per cent of the 2,600 titles stocked. The store is open only to WSU students and faculty. The WSU bookstore grew out of a one-time high school book- store that existed before WSU on the same location. The book- store simply switched to college operation when WSU moved into the spot. In addition to the university op- erated bookstore, there is another privately owned store nearby that caters to students' non-course re- quired reading and handles the overflow textbook business. Handles Used Books At the University,thekclosest thing to a bookstore is the Stu- dent Book Exchange, operated by Student Government Council, which handles only used books. The major problem in the SBX, however, is that students want their money the moment they sell their books, Christopher Cohen, '64, SBX manager, said. The SBX does not pay for books until they are sold. But students both buying and' selling texts can save substantial amounts over bookstore prices, according to Co- hen. Sell Book Taking the example of a $10 book (which costs $10.40 with sales tax) Cohen pointed out that a student could probably sell the book for about two-thirds the cost, $6.00, after the SBX's 10 per cent fee. The buyer would probably pay $6.67 with no sales tax. In contrast, Cohen noted that the bookstores usually pay only about 50 per cent of $5 on a $10 book and sell it for three quarters of the price plus sales tax or $7.80. Thus the seller at SBX would like- ly make $1 and the buyer save $1.13. But the seller must wait un- til the book is sold before he can collect his money. On pricing policies in general, one bookstore manager comment- ed, "We work on a very small profit margin and there is tre- mendous competition. Charge Same Price "We all charge the same prices for new books. We have to; it's required by the publisher." Another full-time bookstore em- ployee said that variation in the prices of books from store to store is largely due to price changes from one semester to the next. If one store has a stock of books purchased at the former price, it sells the books at the lower, old price until the stock is exhausted. The book store manager point- ed to a recent article in a trade journal praising Ann Arbor book- stores for their stock and service and calling the city one of the best-serviced book centers in the country. Small Profit Margin Cohen, who has done research into the possibility of establishing a student bookstore, said, "These bookstores do work on a small profit margin. I've seen some of the textbook invoices and the mar- gin isn't very great, usually around 20 per cent out of which they have to pay all their expenses, includ- ing freight from the publisher to them., "But any means that would low- er the cost of books to students is justified. "A University bookstore could confine itself to just selling those books for courses where several hundred students are enrolled," he added. Used To Exclude Cohen, viewing the Regental policy, noted that it has been used only to exclude a student book- store and that other businesses function within the University de- spite the bylaw. He pointed to the Michigan Union, which, he said, offers tax free competition to local restaurants as do the snack bars in Mary Markley Hall and South Quadrangle. He also noted the sale of drugs by University Health Service. "A student bookstore is the only thing I know of that has been re- jected by the Regents on these grounds." Group Attends Annual Retreat Twenty-seven University facul- ty members and their guests at- tended the ninth annual Univer- sity Cancer Retreat at Baldwin, Mich., Friday. During the two-day retreat, the group heard professional lectures on cancer and participated in day- and-night discussions of the prob- lem areas presented. Guest speakers were Dr. Jacob Furth of Columbia University's College of Physicians and Sur- geons; Dr. Walter E. Heston of the National Cancer Institute. .1 =j I I Er .11 4 PETITIONING OPEN for S.G.C. Standing Committees Committee on the National Student Assn. One seat Committee on Student Concerns Three seats Committee on Student Activities Two Seats Petitions will be available from the Administrative Secretary, 1546 Student Activities Building on Monday Sept. 24. a1 Sunday, October 14, 1962 Hill Auditorium --8:00 p.m.- TICKETS: $1.50-$2.50-$3.50 -------------_- a I