WJHG - Medical Minute - Headlines

EBook Stampede

Ebooks are the wave of the future in Florida education. The only question is when will the state make the switch from hardcover textbooks. The state Board of Education is trying to speed up the process. The board wants to get rid of textbooks and go all digital by 2015.

Rob Weissert is an avid reader. He’s known for reading five books at any given time. Before he bought an IPad that meant hauling around lots of paperbacks. “If I get Enterprise Florida’s 2010 economic indicators report and I want to switch from that to a Malcolm Gladwell book or Jeffery Toobin’s “The Nine”, I can do that instantly.”

One office over Katie Haden of Florida TaxWatch uses a Kindle to store her novels. “I find it tougher to go pick up the paperback books I was reading in lieu of the Kindle.”

Both Rob and Katie work for Florida TaxWatch. The nonprofit research group advocates a switch from textbooks to ebooks as a way to improve education in Florida Schools. “The fact is we all know technology is improving by the day, so the idea is these books can be updated more quickly and can be better tailored to individual elements.”

The switch may also save the state money in the long run. This is a library of 150 books. They are Encyclopedias, science books and novels. This e-reader can hold all this information forty times over.

During last months Board of Education meeting members, including John Padget, acted with a sense of urgency over the possibility of a transition to ebooks. “Tell us how fast it could be done technically and tell us what it would cost.”

Schools get new textbooks every six years. Science books are scheduled to be ordered later this year. The board of education may delay the order if a move to ebooks is more cost effective.

A report on the cost effectiveness of switching to ebooks will be delivered at the Board’s February 15th meeting. If the board finds the move feasible they’ll ask lawmakers to pass legislation to begin the transition. There may also be 51 million Race to the Top dollars to help speed us the move.


Comments are posted from viewers like you and do not always reflect the views of this station.
powered by Disqus

Medical News

  • Report questioning salt guidelines riles heart experts
    An unusual medical brawl erupted on Tuesday when the influential Institute of Medicine issued a report questioning the basis of years of advice for Americans to cut their salt intake in half.
  • Chris Christie's weight-loss procedure doesn't always work

    New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie revealed that he's had gastric-band weight-loss surgery, which experts say has the least amount of short-term risk but also yields the least amount of weight loss.New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie revealed that he's had gastric-band weight-loss surgery, which experts say has the least amount of short-term risk but also yields the least amount of weight loss.


  • Caffeinated gum raises health buzz

    A new line of caffeinated chewing gum is causing jitters among health advocates and prompting federal officials to take a new look at the proliferation of jolt-infused foods, including those marketed to children and teens.A new line of caffeinated chewing gum is causing jitters among health advocates and prompting federal officials to take a new look at the proliferation of jolt-infused foods, including those marketed to children and teens.


  • Dr. Oz's tips for losing those last 10 pounds

    Stress, the slowing of metabolism of middle age, and hormone changes after having a baby are three main reasons why many people see the numbers on the scale going up. Dr. Mehmet Oz shares tips on how to shed those final 10 pounds. Stress, the slowing of metabolism of middle age, and hormone changes after having a baby are three main reasons why many people see the numbers on the scale going up. Dr. Mehmet Oz shares tips on how to shed those final 10 pounds.


  • How First Lady won over Miss. on school lunches
    Despite its deeply red political leanings, it was Mississippi that early on embraced the first lady’s ideas about healthy food, and was the site where Mrs. Obama kicked off a two day, three-city tour touting the three-year anniversary of her “Let’s Move” initiative, which encourages kids to get and stay fit.
  • Anger may raise heart attack risk, study finds
    Bottling up emotions is thought to harm both mind and body, but a new study suggests that the opposite extreme may be no better.
  • Just one daily soda can raise diabetes risk
    Drinking just one 12-ounce soda a day may increase the risk of Type 2 diabetes, a new study from Europe suggests.
  • Gut bugs linked to heart attacks, strokes
    Thousands of heart attack victims every year have none of the notorious risk factors before their crisis - not high cholesterol, not unhealthy triglycerides.
  • 12 school football players die each year, study finds
    Each year in the U.S. an average of a dozen high school and college football players die during practices and games, according to a new study that finds heart conditions, heat and other non-traumatic causes of death are twice as common as injury-related ones.
  • Chelation little help for heart disease: study
    NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Removing metals from the body through a controversial treatment has little effect on the long-term health of people who've previously suffered a heart attack, according to the results of a government-funded trial released Tuesday.
8195 Front Beach Road Panama City Beach, FL 32407 Station: 850-234-7777 News: 850-230-5221 Fax: 850-233-6647
Gray Television, Inc. - Copyright © 2002-2013 - Designed by Gray Digital Media - Powered by Clickability
User Agent: CCBot/2.0 - 115319929