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Online and Distance Learning at QMU: E-book availability, ownership and prices

This guide is designed to support students on QMU programmes who study entirely or mainly online, including students on international collaborations programmes. It provides information about how to access library resources online, and other important info

E-book availability, ownership and prices

When buying a print book, libraries own it outright and are free to lend it as they wish to library users. This is not the case with e-books. Publishers do not sell e-book ownership to institutions, they only sell e-book licences to access e-books. Therefore libraries do not own them outright and it is only the publishers who decide how e-books can be used e.g. they control and impose access restrictions on borrowing, scanning, copying, etc.

Only around 10% of academic titles are available as e-books at the time of writing. Many e-book titles cost several times their print equivalent or more. Many publishers withdraw e-book titles from sale to institutions and only allow private individuals to purchase e-books via platforms such as Kindle, Nook, Kobo etc.  Therefore, if a title appears to be available as an e-book, a lot of the times, it may only be so for individuals, not institutions. Some e-book licences are only sold within specific countries which means that we cannot buy them.

Apart from when an e-book is open access (freely online to anyone and with no restrictions) which is the most helpful publication model for both universities and students, paid-for e-book licences can be:

  • Unlimited access DRM-free e-book licences which include unlimited access to users: practice up to 9,999 users can access a title at any one time (which is unlikely to happen so virtually unlimited) with no DRM (Digital Rights Management) restrictions on printing, saving, copying, etc. – this is the best licence type.
  • Unlimited access as above but with restrictions on copying, saving, printing, etc. – next best model.
  • Three-user licences where only three users can access a title at any one time with restrictions on copying, saving, printing, etc.
  • Single-user access where only one user can access a title at any one time, again with restrictions on copying, saving, printing, etc.
  • Credit model licences varying from 200 to 400 credits per year where one credit is used every time an individual accesses a book (in a 24 hr period).
  • E-textbook model is a fee per student subscription-based model used by some publishers especially with key titles where a publisher quotes a price according to the number of students at an institution – usually many hundreds or thousands of pounds per year per title. This is a very unsustainable model for most university libraries since a yearly subscription running into hundreds or thousands each year for one title is beyond many library budgets.

Some e-books titles are available through a variety of licence models while others have only one model.  The library aims to buy the best licence types where budgets allow. If not possible, multiple single-user licences can be bought, depending on whether a title is in on essential, recommnede or background reading and how many modules use it.

Some e-books are only available to be purchased in bundles with other e-book titles which may not be needed. Some e-book models charge a fee per student per year which means that costs quickly add up to hundreds or thousands of pounds every year for one e-book licence.  Learn more about these from the #ebookSOS campaign and sign the open letter.