Category Archives: By License Type

►TBQ Editors, "College Biology" Volume 1 of 3 (2014)

Page Updated 10/06/2015)

“College Biology” Volume 1 of 3 “The Chemistry of Life” through “Genomic Proteomics”

Download PDF (free)

Buy Print Version   USD $39.20 (paperback, grayscale, 513 pages) Lulu.com ISBN: 978-1-312-39233-5

Contents Volume 1

Unit 1. The Chemistry of Life

Chapter 1: The Study of Life
Chapter 2: The Chemical Foundation of Life
Chapter 3: Biological Macromolecules

Unit 2. The Cell

Chapter 4: Cell Structure
Chapter 5: Structure and Function of Plasma Membranes
Chapter 6: Metabolism
Chapter 7: Cellular Respiration
Chapter 8: Photosynthesis
Chapter 9: Cell Communication
Chapter 10: Cell Reproduction

Unit 3. Genetics

Chapter 11: Meiosis and Sexual Reproduction
Chapter 12: Mendel’s Experiments and Heredity
Chapter 13: Modern Understandings of Inheritance
Chapter 14: DNA Structure and Function
Chapter 15: Genes and Proteins
Chapter 16: Gene Expression
Chapter 17: Biotechnology and Genomics


Advantages of Adopting this Textbook

  • Price. PDFs are free. Printed books only $39.00*.    Funds beyond costs go to the evaluation and creation of additional free and inexpensive printed open textbooks.
  • Comparable biology textbooks cost $180 – $225.**
  • Class relevant. Adopt only the volumes you need.  Make the textbook yours.
  • Comprehensive with current content.
  • Pedagogically enhanced.
  • Authored and reviewed by the academic community.
  • Original textbook prepared, published, copyrighted, and released with an open license (CC BY) by Rice University’s Openstax College.
  • Text is available in various e-formats at Rice University’s Connexions (cnx.org)
  • Open licensed. Fearlessly copy, print, remix. Add to it. Take away.  Rearrange. Create class-specific content. (Textbook Equity can help you with that.)

Advantages of Buying a PRINTED Copy

  • Easier to read and navigate.
  • You have the right to give or sell the book to others.
  • You can mark  it, copy pages, tear out pages, and use it for kindling.
  • It looks more impressive on your bookshelf than a blank, dusty space.
  • You can read it anytime you wish, even decades later.
  • There may be a secondary market.
  • Honestly, you know the benefits of having a ” hard copy.”

Features of All Volumes

  • Chapter summaries.
  • Review questions.
  • Critical thinking questions.
  • Answer keys.
  • Key terms by chapter.
  • Embedded supplemental learning links.
  • Attributions, credits, and textbook provenance.

 


*Price at Lulu.com  Other sources may be higher.

** For textbook price comparisons see “Anatomy of a Textbook“.
***Printed in high quality grayscale to keep costs low.

►TBQ Editors, "College Biology" Volume 2 of 3 (2014)

(Page last updated October 6, 2015)

“College Biology” Volume 2 of 3

Chapters 18  –  32  “Evolution and the Origin of Species” through “Asexual Reproduction ” 

Buy Print Version   USD $39.20 (paperback, grayscale, 515 pages) Lulu.com ISBN: 978-1-312-39533-6

Download PDF (free)

Contents Volume 2

Chapter 18: Evolution and the Origin of Species
Chapter 19: The Evolution of Populations
Chapter 20: Phylogenies and the History of Life
Chapter 21: Viruses
Chapter 22: Prokaryotes: Bacteria and Archaea
Chapter 23: Protists
Chapter 24: Fungi
Chapter 25: Seedless Plants
Chapter 26: Seed Plants
Chapter 27: Introduction to Animal Diversity
Chapter 28: Invertebrates
Chapter 29: Vertebrates
Chapter 30: Plant Form and Physiology
Chapter 31: Soil and Plant Nutrition
Chapter 32: Plant Reproduction
Plus chapter summaries, review questions, critical thinking questions, answer keys, key terms by chapter, embedded supplemental learning links.


 


Advantages of Adopting this Textbook:

  • Price. PDFs are free. Printed books only $39.00*.    Funds beyond costs go to the evaluation and creation of additional free and inexpensive printed open textbooks.
  • Comparable biology textbooks cost $180 – $225.**
  • Class relevant. Adopt only the volumes you need.  Make the textbook yours.
  • Comprehensive with current content.
  • Pedagogically enhanced.
  • Authored and reviewed by the academic community.
  • Original textbook prepared, published, copyrighted, and released with an open license (CC BY) by Rice University’s Openstax College.
  • Text is available in various e-formats at Rice University’s Connexions (cnx.org)
  • Open licensed. Fearlessly copy, print, remix. Add to it. Take away.  Rearrange. Create class-specific content. (Textbook Equity can help you with that.)

Advantages of Buying a PRINTED Copy

  • Easier to read and navigate.
  • You have the right to give or sell the book to others.
  • You can mark  it, copy pages, tear out pages, and use it for kindling.
  • It looks more impressive on your bookshelf than a blank, dusty space.
  • You can read it anytime you wish, even decades later.
  • There may be a secondary market.
  • Honestly, you know the benefits of having a ” hard copy.”

Features of All Volumes

  • Chapter summaries.
  • Review questions.
  • Critical thinking questions.
  • Answer keys.
  • Key terms by chapter.
  • Embedded supplemental learning links.
  • Attributions, credits, and textbook provenance.

►TBQ Editors, "College Biology" Volume 3 of 3 (2014)

collegebiologyvol3“College Biology” Volume 3 of 3

Chapters 33 – 47  Animal Structure and Function” through “Preserving Biodiversity”

Buy Print Version USD $39.00 (paperback, grayscale***, 556  pages) via Lulu.com
ISBN: 978-1-312-40299-7

Free: Volume 3 Download PDF Full color, 556 pages, 101 MB

Contents Volume 3

Chapter 33: The Animal Body: Basic Form and Function
Chapter 34: Animal Nutrition and the Digestive System
Chapter 35: The Nervous System
Chapter 36: Sensory Systems
Chapter 37: The Endocrine System
Chapter 38: The Musculoskeletal System
Chapter 39: The Respiratory System
Chapter 40: The Circulatory System
Chapter 41: Osmotic Regulation and Excretion
Chapter 42: The Immune System
Chapter 43: Animal Reproduction and Development
Chapter 44: Ecology and the Biosphere
Chapter 45: Population and Community Ecology
Chapter 46: Ecosystems
Chapter 47: Conservation Biology and Biodiversity
Plus  Chapter summaries, Review questions, Critical thinking questions, Answer keys, Key terms by chapter, Embedded supplemental learning links.

Buy Print Version USD $39.20 (paperback, grayscale, 556 pages) Lulu.com ISBN: 978-1-312-40299-7

►TBQ Editors, Accounting Principles: A Business Perspective, Financial Accounting (Chapt 1-8) (2011)

accountingprinciplesthumb480+ MULTIPLE CHOICE AND T/F TEST QUESTIONS COVERING BOTH VOLUMES (Chapters 2 – 18). More details at Textbook Equity’s Tests Online.

Order Printed Copies (Chapters 1 – 8) Buy via Amazon.com  $39.95

Download Here (Chapters 1 – 8 ) (free pdf, 4.9MB, 433 pages)

ERRATA: Download  The Limited, Inc. Financial Statements used in the textbook exercises.  It is already included in the current PDF textbook above.

View Textbook Reputation, Original Author Information, Acknowledgments

Related Texts by the same authors Vol 2, Chapters 9 – 18  and Managerial Accounting

Publication Date: Apr 14 2011
ISBN/EAN13: 1461088186 / 9781461088189
Page Count: 434
Binding Type: US Trade Paper
Trim Size: 8″ x 10″
Language: English
Color: Black and White
Related Categories: Business & Economics / Accounting / Managerial

Key Features

Demonstration problems
Solutions to demonstration problems
Key terms
Self-tests

Table of Contents

1 The Accounting Environment

Learning objectives
Accounting Defined
Employment opportunities in accounting
Financial accounting versus managerial accounting
Development of financial accounting standards
Ethical behavior of accountants
Critical thinking and communication skills
Internet skills
How to study the chapters in this text

2 Accounting and its use in business decisions

Learning objectives
A career as an entrepreneur
Forms of business organizations
Types of activities performed by business organizations
Financial statements of business organizations
The financial accounting process
Underlying assumptions or concepts
Transactions affecting only the balance sheet
Transactions affecting the income statement and/or balance sheet
Summary of balance sheet and income statement transactions
Dividends paid to owners (stockholders)
Analyzing and using the financial results—the equity ratio
Understanding the learning objectives
Appendix: A comparison of corporate accounting with accounting for a sole
proprietorship and a partnership
Demonstration problem
Solution to demonstration problem
Key terms
Self-test

3 Recording business transactions

Learning objectives
Salary potential of accountants
The account and rules of debit and credit
Recording changes in assets, liabilities, and stockholders’ equity
The accounting cycle
The journal
The ledger
The accounting process in operation
The use of ledger accounts
Analyzing and using the financial results— Horizontal and vertical analyses
Key terms
Self-test

4 Adjustments for financial reporting

Learning objectives
A career as a tax specialist
Cash versus accrual basis accounting
The need for adjusting entries
Classes and types of adjusting entries
Adjustments for deferred items
Adjustments for accrued items
Effects of failing to prepare adjusting entries
Analyzing and using the financial results—trend percentages
Understanding the learning objectives

5 Completing the accounting cycle

Learning objectives
A career in information systems
The accounting cycle summarized
The work sheet
Preparing financial statements from the work sheet
Journalizing adjusting entries
The closing process
Accounting systems: From manual to computerized
A classified balance sheet
Analyzing and using the financial results — the current ratio
Understanding the learning objectives

6 Accounting theory

Learning objectives
A career as an accounting professor
Traditional accounting theory
Underlying assumptions or concepts
Other basic concepts
The measurement process in accounting
The major principles
Modifying conventions (or constraints)
The financial accounting standards board’s conceptual framework project
Objectives of financial reporting
Qualitative characteristics
The basic elements of financial statements
Recognition and measurement in financial statements
Summary of significant accounting policies
Significant accounting policies
Understanding the learning objectives

7 Introduction to inventories and the classified income statement

Learning objective
A career as a CEO
Sales revenues
Cost of goods sold
Classified income statement
Analyzing and using the financial results—Gross margin percentage
Understanding the learning objectives
Appendix: The work sheet for a merchandising company
Key terms
Self-test

8 Measuring and reporting inventories

Learning objectives
Choosing an accounting career
Inventories and cost of goods sold
Importance of proper inventory valuation
Determining inventory cost
Departures from cost basis of inventory measurement
Analyzing and using financial results—inventory turnover ratio
Understanding the learning objectives
Alphabetical Index

Alphabetical Index

academic accountants
accounting cycle
Accounting Education Change Commission
accounting equation
Accounting period
Accounting Principles Board (APB)
Accounting Review
Accounting Review The
accounting system
accounting theory
Accounting year
Accounts Payable
Accounts Receivable
accrual basis
Accrual basis of accounting
accrued assets and liabilities
Accrued revenues and expenses
Accumulated amortization
Accumulated Depreciation
Accumulated Depreciation account
Adjunct account
adjusting entries
administrative expenses
AECC
AICPA
Allowances account
American Accounting Association
assets
balance sheet
bias
bonds payable
book value
Buildings
Business emphasis
business entity concept
Business transactions
calendar year
capital stock
cash basis of accounting
cash discount
cash equivalents
Certified Internal Auditor
Certified Management Accountants
Certified Public Accountant
Chain discount
Chart of accounts
CIA
classified balance sheet
classified income statement
closing process
Comparability
completed-contract method
Compound journal entry
Conservatism
Consigned goods
consistency
Construction in progress
continuity
contra asset account
Copyright
Corporation
cost
cost of goods available for sale
cost of goods sold
cost principle
Cost-benefit consideration
CPA
Credit balance
Creditors and lenders
Cross-indexing
current assets
Current liabilities
current ratio
Curriculum concerns
customers
Debit balance
deferred items
Delivery Expense
Depreciable amount
Depreciable asset
depreciation accounting
Depreciation expense
depreciation formula
Dividend
Dividends payable
Double entry procedure
Earning principle
Edwards
Employees and their unions
End of Volume Chapters
entity
entrepreneur
equities
equity ratio
estimated useful life
ethical behavior
ethics
exchange-price
exchange-price (or cost) principle
expenses
Exposure Drafts
FASB
Fearless copy print remix(tm)
feedback value
Financial Accounting
Financial Accounting Standards Board
Financial Analysts Federation
Financial Executives Institute
financial reporting objectives
financial statements
fiscal year
FOB destination
FOB shipping point
for Volume Chapters and all of Volume
freight collect
freight prepaid
full disclosure principle
GAAP
Gain and loss recognition principle
Gains
GASB
general public
generally accepted accounting principles
Global Text Project
Going-concern
goodwill
Governmental Accounting Standards Board
Governmental units
gross margin
gross margin percentage
gross profit
gross selling price
Hermanson
historical cost
Horizontal analysis
IASB
IASC
IFRS
Income from operations
income statement
Income Summary account
Income taxes payable
installment basis
Institute of Certified Management Accountants
Institute of Chartered Accountants of India
Institute of Management Accountants
intangible assets
Interest Payable
Interest Receivable
Internal Auditors
International Accounting Standards
International Financial Reporting Standards
invoice
invoice price
Journal entry
Journal of Accountancy
Land
Leasehold improvements
Leaseholds
Ledger
liabilities
liquidation
long-term assets
Long-term investment
Long-term liabilities
losses
Maher
management advisory
Manufacturers
manufacturing companies
marketable securities
matching principle
Materiality
McCubbrey
Merchandise in transit
Merchandise Inventory
Merchandising companies
Modifying conventions
Money measurement
Net cost of purchases
net income
net purchases
net sales
neutrality
Nominal accounts
Non-operating expenses
Non-operating revenues
Note
notes payable
Objectives and overall approach of the eighth edition
office equipment
office furniture
operating cycle
Operating expenses
Operating revenues
Owners and prospective owners
Pacioli
Paid-in Capital
partnership
Passage of title
Patent
Pedagogy
percentage-of-completion
Period costs
periodic inventory procedure
Periodicity
Permanent accounts
perpetual inventory procedure
Philosophy and purpose
physical inventory
post-closing trial balance
Predictive value
Prepaid expense
prepaid expenses
private sector
Product costs
profitability
Property plant and equipment
Purchase bound textbooks and download free PDFs
purchase discount
Purchase Discounts account
Purchase returns
Purchases account
qualitative characteristics
real accounts
Realization principle
Relevance
reliability
representational faithfulness
retailers
Retained Earnings
retained earnings
revenue recognition principle
revenues
revenues received in advance
Salaries Payable
sales allowance
sales discount
Sales Discounts account
Sales Return
Sales returns
scrap value
SEC
Securities and Exchange Act of
Securities and Exchange Commission
selling expenses
service companies
service potential
shareholders
Simple journal entry
Single proprietorship
solvency
stable dollar assumption
statement of cash flows
statement of retained earnings
stockholders
stockholders’ equity
stockholders’ equity
straight-line
Summa de Arithmetica
summary of transactions
T-account
Tax services
Taxes withheld from employees
Temporary accounts
Textbook Equity
time periods
Timeliness
Trade Discount
transaction
Transportation In account
unclassified balance sheet
unclassified income statement
unearned revenue
Unearned revenues
verifiability
wholesalers
work sheet
www.textbookequity.org

►TBQ Editors, “Principles of Economics” (2014) Volumes 1 and 2

Originally provided by by Openstax College (Rice University) in PDF and online format in one volume.

Download volumes 1 and 2 in one  free PDF (824 pages, 114 Mb)

Purchase print:  Principles of Economics, Vol 1 Chapters 1 – 23 (493 pages)  $39.95 USD

Purchase print: Principles of Economics, Vol 2 Chapters 24-34 and appendices. (350 pages)  $34.95 USD

Principles of Economics covers the scope and sequence for a two-semester principles of economics course. The text also includes many current examples, including; discussions on the great recession, the controversy among economists over the Affordable Care Act (Obamacare), the recent government shutdown, and the appointment of the United States’ first female Federal Reserve chair, Janet Yellen.

The pedagogical choices, chapter arrangements, and learning objective fulfillment were developed and vetted with feedback from educators dedicated to the project. The outcome is a balanced approach to micro and macro economics, to both Keynesian and classical views, and to the theory and application of economics concepts. Current events are treated in a politically-balanced way, as well.

Table of Contents

Volume 1 Chapter 1 – 23
Welcome to Economics!
Choice in a World of Scarcity
Demand and Supply
Labor and Financial Markets
Elasticity
Consumer Choices
Cost and Industry Structure
Perfect Competition
Monopoly
Monopolistic Competition and Oligopoly
Monopoly and Antitrust Policy
Environmental Protection and Negative Externalities
Positive Externalities and Public Goods
Poverty and Economic Inequality
Issues in Labor Markets: Unions, Discrimination, Immigration
Information, Risk, and Insurance
Financial Markets
Public Choice
The Macroeconomic Perspective
Economic Growth
Unemployment
Inflation
The International Trade and Capital Flows

Volume 2 Chapters 24 – 34 and Appendices
The Aggregate Supply-Aggregate Demand Model
The Keynesian Perspective
The Neoclassical Perspective
Money and Banking
Monetary Policy and Bank Regulation
Exchange Rates and International Capital Flows
Government Budgets and Fiscal Policy
The Macroeconomic Impacts of Government Borrowing
Macroeconomic Policy Around the World
International Trade
Globalization and Protectionism
The Use of Mathematics in Principles of Economics
Demand, Supply, and Efficiency
Indifference Curves
Present Discounted Value
The Expenditure-Output Model

§ Openstax, "Introduction to Sociology" (2012)

medium_covers_Page_1Provided by Openstax College (Rice University)

Download free PDF (508 pages, 34MB)

Print version from Openstax College (~$30.00 USD)

From their website: “Introduction to Sociology is intended for a one-semester introductory sociology course. Conceived of and developed by active sociology instructors,. This online, fully editable and customizable title includes sociology theory and research; real-world applications; simplify and debate features; and learning objectives for each chapter.”

Peer reviewed plus faculty supplements.

Table of Contents
Preface
An Introduction to Sociology
Sociological Research
Culture
Society and Social Interaction
Socialization
Groups and Organization
Deviance, Crime, and Social Control
Media and Technology
Social Stratification in the United States
Global Inequality
Race and Ethnicity
Gender, Sex, and Sexuality
Aging and the Elderly
Marriage and Family
Religion
Education
Government and Politics
Work and the Economy
Health and Medicine
Population, Urbanization, and the Environment
Social Movements and Social Change

►Bonaventure, “Computer Networking : Principles, Protocols and Practice” (2011)

18957436_cover-page-001“Computer Networking : Principles, Protocols and Practice”

Complementary textbook to Saylor Academy’s “Computer Communications and Networks” (CS402)

Original textbook © October 31, 2011 by Olivier Bonaventure, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license made possible by funding from The Saylor Foundation’s Open Textbook Challenge in order to be incorporated into Saylor’s collection of open courses available at: http://www.saylor.org.

Print $29.95 USD, 282 pages, B&W

ISBN: 978-1-365-18583-0

Free PDF  Color, 282 pages, 8.6 MB

This open textbook aims to fill the gap between the open-source implementations and the open-source network specifications by providing a detailed but pedagogical description of the key principles that guide the operation of the Internet. The book is released under a creative commons licence. Such an open-source license is motivated by two reasons. The first is that we hope that this will allow many students to use the book to learn computer networks. The second is that I hope that other teachers will reuse, adapt and improve it. Time will tell if it is possible to build a community of contributors to improve and develop the book further. As a starting point, the first release contains all the material for a one-semester first upper undergraduate or a graduate networking course.

Table of Contents
1 Preface
2 Introduction
2.1 Services and protocols
2.2 The reference models
2.3 Organisation of the book
3 The application Layer
3.1 Principles
3.2 Application-level protocols
3.3 Writing simple networked applications
4 The transport layer
4.1 Principles of a reliable transport protocol
4.2 The User Datagram Protocol
4.3 The Transmission Control Protocol
5 The network layer
5.1 Principles
5.2 Internet Protocol
5.3 Routing in IP networks
6 The datalink layer and the Local Area Networks
6.1 Principles
6.2 Medium Access Control
6.3 Datalink layer technologies
7 Glossary
8 Bibliography

►Bourgeois, “Information Systems for Business and Beyond” (2014)

product_thumbnail.phpA college-level open education resource (CC BY) thanks to the Saylor Foundation and David T. Bourgeois, Ph.D.

This text is used in Saylor’s free course “Management Information Systems”  at  https://learn.saylor.org/course/view.php?id=41

Purchase a print copy (167 pages, b&w) $22.95

Download the PDF (free, 167 pages, 4.3 Mb)

The Saylor Academy also offers several e-book  formats of this open textbook.

 

ISBN: 978-1-304-94348-4

“This book is written as an introductory text, meant for those with little or no experience with computers or information systems. While sometimes the descriptions can get a little bit technical, every effort has been made to convey the information essential to understanding a topic while not getting bogged down in detailed terminology or esoteric discussions.  . . . At the end of each chapter, there is a set of study questions and exercises (except for chapter 1, which only offers study questions). The study questions can be assigned to help focus students’ reading on the learning objectives. The exercises are meant to be a more in-depth, experiential way for students to learn chapter topics. It is recommended that you review any exercise before assigning it, adding any detail needed (such as length, due date) to complete the assignment.”

Contents
Introduction
Part 1: What Is an Information System?
Chapter 1: What Is an Information System?
Chapter 2: Hardware
Chapter 3: Software
Chapter 4: Data and Databases
Chapter 5: Networking and Communication
Chapter 6: Information Systems Security
Part 2: Information Systems for Strategic Advantage
Chapter 7: Does IT Matter?
Chapter 8: Business Processes
Chapter 9: The People in Information Systems
Chapter 10: Information Systems Development
Part 3: Information Systems Beyond the Organization
Chapter 11: Globalization and the Digital Divide
Chapter 12: The Ethical and Legal Implications of Information Systems
Chapter 13: Future Trends in Information Systems
Answers to Study Questions 150
Bibliography 162

►Kuttler, "Linear Algebra, Theory And Applications" (2012)

A open education resource (CC BY) thanks to the Saylor Foundation and Kenneth Kuttler, PhD.

Purchase a print copylinear2_product_thumbnail.php (503 pages) $39.95

Download the PDF (free, 503 pages, 6 Mb)
ISBN: 9781304912794

This is a book on linear algebra and matrix theory. While it is self contained, it will work best for those who have already had some exposure to linear algebra. It is also assumed that the reader has had calculus. Some optional topics require more analysis than this, however. I think that the subject of linear algebra is likely the most significant topic discussed in undergraduate mathematics courses. Part of the reason for this is its usefulness in unifying so many different topics. Linear algebra is essential in analysis, applied math, and even in theoretical mathematics. This is the point of view of this book, more than a presentation of linear algebra for its own sake. This is why there are numerous applications, some fairly unusual.