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Texas textbooks technically taxed

Texas math textbooks found with over one hundred thousand mistakes, leading to hefty fines for Houghton Mifflin. Discover more here!

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Reviewers looking over math textbooks to be used in Texas found a few errors in them... like, 109,263. You didn't not read that incorrectly. They found over one hundred thousand mistakes. Turns out that there is a fine per mistake, to the tune of $5k. So technically the textbook publisher (Houghton Mifflin) owes $500 million in fines... unless you go by the math in their books, which would give that figure as $430 million. HAHAHAHAHA! I laugh at Houghton Mifflin's expense, yes. Still, good thing the books won't get sent out to students just yet. HM still has time to find and correct the mistakes; they only pay for the ones that are left when classes begin. So Texas isn't doomed just yet. Anyway, since Texas has a creationist governor and a creationist as the head of their State Board of Education, I would assume math mistakes wouldn't concern them any more than science mistakes do. They want to teach mistakes, and that's a mistake in itself. I wonder if anyone would fine those guys for each error they make...?

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Tip o' the propeller beanie to Greg Laden.

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