Things to Consider
Before Agreeing to Publisher-Direct Or Third-Party Materials
Under Foothill-De Anza district policies, publishing reps are not to sell in your classrooms nor are they allowed to solicit directly on campus. They must check in and be granted permission to be on campus.
Federal law requires that higher education institutions that receive federal funding (think financial aid and grants) make all instructional materials accessible to all students. Unfortunately, publishers are not governed by these same laws. So content or tools on a publisher's homework website (that comes bundled with the textbook), could present accessibility problems. De Anza College cannot make changes to the publishers' websites. So if barriers exist, an accessibility plan will need to be developed to ensure all students can achieve the course's outcomes. This may mean extra work for the instructor, so choose carefully.
Here are some additional points you should consider
Security
Accessibility
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Are videos captioned and audio recordings transcribed?
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Can all of the text that is displayed on the screen be read aloud by text-to-speech software?
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How accessible are the E-books?
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Can all interactivity (media players, quizzes, flashcards, etc.) be completed by keyboard alone (no mouse required)?
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Is there any documentation available (VPAT or white paper for example) that confirms accessibility or usability testing results?
Usability And Interoperability
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Is your multimedia (Adobe) Flash or (Oracle) Java-based? (Another way to put this, is "Can your materials be watched on an iPad?")
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Does any software need to be installed on student or De Anza College computer?
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What are the computer requirements for using their materials? Will the materials work on mobile devices?
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How will students get access to the materials?
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Can the electronic content be made available for purchase through the campus bookstore?