Campus Technology: Students in the University of Missouri System have access to more affordable course materials, thanks to a new agreement with McGraw-Hill Education that lowers the cost of the company's electronic textbooks by 38 percent. The books will be offered through the university's AutoAccess program, which provides e-books through UM's learning management system as part of its Affordable & Open Education Resources initiative.
Materials in the AutoAccess system are categorized by two discount options: "savings" and "low-cost." The latter is defined as materials that cost $40 or less. McGraw-Hill Education is now offering its full higher ed e-book catalog through the "low-cost" option. Students can access the books they purchase for five years.
The UM System partnered with McGraw-Hill Education to launch AutoAccess in 2014, initially serving a single course section and 50 students. The program has now grown to 300 courses, 700 sections and 40,000 students across the university, saving students approximately $9.7 million to date, according to a news announcement.
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