OER Knowledge CloudJournal ArticleTextbook Broke: Textbook Affordability as a Social Justice IssueTextbook Broke: Textbook Affordability as a Social Justice IssueJenkins, J. JacobSánchez, Luis A.Schraedley, Megan A. K.Hannans, JaimeNavick, NitzanYoung, JadeIn light of rising textbook prices, open education resources (OER) have been shown to decrease non-tuition costs, while simultaneously increasing academic access, student performance, and time-to-graduation rates. Yet very little research to date has explored OER’s specific impact on those who are presumed to benefit most from this potential: historically underserved students. This reality has left a significant gap of understanding in the current body of literature, resulting in calls for more empirically-based examinations of OER through a social justice lens. For each of these reasons, this study explored the impact of OER and textbook pricing among racial/ethnic minority students, low-income students, and first-generation college students at a four-year Hispanic Serving Institution (HSI) in Southern California. Drawing upon more than 700 undergraduate surveys, our univariate, bivariate and multivariate results revealed textbook costs to be a substantial barrier for the vast majority of students. However, those barriers were even more significant among historically underserved college students; thus, confirming textbook affordability as a redistributive justice issue, and positing OER as a potential avenue for realizing a more socially just college experience.20202020/05/11EnglishJournal of Interactive Media in Education202013United States10.5334/jime.549yesOERopen education resourcesstudent equityredistributive justiceHispanic Serving Institution549-4529-1-PB.pdfUnited States, North America