{"title":"教科书的问题在于科学的货币化","authors":"M. D. Rutherford","doi":"10.22330/he/35/049-052","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The New York Times recently published an exposé, revealing that two versions of the same US History textbook differ in different parts of the country. In a California classroom, the book explains that the Second Amendment, articulating “the right of the people to keep and bear Arms”, allows for some regulation of gun sales. The same textbook found in a Texas classroom has a blank space where that annotation would appear. Both versions describe the literature that African American authors produced during the Harlem Renaissance, but only students in Texas read that some critics “dismissed the quality of the literature.” The Texas textbook celebrates entrepreneurs and the industries they created, but only the California textbook adds a description of “The pollution they belched into the atmosphere” (Goldstein, 2020). Why does the academic record differ across geographic regions? In order to maximize sales. One version of the story is more palatable in California, while another version will sell in Texas. This phenomenon is not unique to the United States, nor to any specific academic area: A recent analysis of English as a Foreign Language textbooks written for Turks and Persians concluded that coverage of gender, poverty, slavery and racism varied dramatically depending on the intended audience. The authors characterized such topics as “too risky” (Ulum, Köksal, 2019). The textbook industry is a commercial enterprise. Textbook publishers are businesses, and the function of any business is to make money. The job of an acquisitions editor is to find new books that will do well in the market, and to coax new editions out of authors who have written books that sell. Textbook prices have been increasing steadily, following an early dramatic increase in the 1970s when textbook publishers Rutherford, M.D. (2020). The trouble with textbooks is the monetization of science. Human Ethology, 35, 49-52. https://doi.org/10.22330/he/35/049-052","PeriodicalId":91082,"journal":{"name":"Human ethology bulletin","volume":"153 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The trouble with textbooks is the monetization of science\",\"authors\":\"M. D. Rutherford\",\"doi\":\"10.22330/he/35/049-052\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"The New York Times recently published an exposé, revealing that two versions of the same US History textbook differ in different parts of the country. In a California classroom, the book explains that the Second Amendment, articulating “the right of the people to keep and bear Arms”, allows for some regulation of gun sales. The same textbook found in a Texas classroom has a blank space where that annotation would appear. Both versions describe the literature that African American authors produced during the Harlem Renaissance, but only students in Texas read that some critics “dismissed the quality of the literature.” The Texas textbook celebrates entrepreneurs and the industries they created, but only the California textbook adds a description of “The pollution they belched into the atmosphere” (Goldstein, 2020). Why does the academic record differ across geographic regions? In order to maximize sales. One version of the story is more palatable in California, while another version will sell in Texas. This phenomenon is not unique to the United States, nor to any specific academic area: A recent analysis of English as a Foreign Language textbooks written for Turks and Persians concluded that coverage of gender, poverty, slavery and racism varied dramatically depending on the intended audience. The authors characterized such topics as “too risky” (Ulum, Köksal, 2019). The textbook industry is a commercial enterprise. Textbook publishers are businesses, and the function of any business is to make money. The job of an acquisitions editor is to find new books that will do well in the market, and to coax new editions out of authors who have written books that sell. Textbook prices have been increasing steadily, following an early dramatic increase in the 1970s when textbook publishers Rutherford, M.D. (2020). The trouble with textbooks is the monetization of science. 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The trouble with textbooks is the monetization of science
The New York Times recently published an exposé, revealing that two versions of the same US History textbook differ in different parts of the country. In a California classroom, the book explains that the Second Amendment, articulating “the right of the people to keep and bear Arms”, allows for some regulation of gun sales. The same textbook found in a Texas classroom has a blank space where that annotation would appear. Both versions describe the literature that African American authors produced during the Harlem Renaissance, but only students in Texas read that some critics “dismissed the quality of the literature.” The Texas textbook celebrates entrepreneurs and the industries they created, but only the California textbook adds a description of “The pollution they belched into the atmosphere” (Goldstein, 2020). Why does the academic record differ across geographic regions? In order to maximize sales. One version of the story is more palatable in California, while another version will sell in Texas. This phenomenon is not unique to the United States, nor to any specific academic area: A recent analysis of English as a Foreign Language textbooks written for Turks and Persians concluded that coverage of gender, poverty, slavery and racism varied dramatically depending on the intended audience. The authors characterized such topics as “too risky” (Ulum, Köksal, 2019). The textbook industry is a commercial enterprise. Textbook publishers are businesses, and the function of any business is to make money. The job of an acquisitions editor is to find new books that will do well in the market, and to coax new editions out of authors who have written books that sell. Textbook prices have been increasing steadily, following an early dramatic increase in the 1970s when textbook publishers Rutherford, M.D. (2020). The trouble with textbooks is the monetization of science. Human Ethology, 35, 49-52. https://doi.org/10.22330/he/35/049-052