http://dltj.org/article/textbook-disclosure-rules/
July 1st, 2010 is the date that schools have to comply with the new law. Yay!
July 1st, 2010 is the date that schools have to comply with the new law. Yay!
My French book last semester cost $195.Thankfully, I am taking French II this semester. I have the same professor and she is using the same book. It doesn't "sting" as much knowing I am getting two semesters out of it.
http://dltj.org/article/textbook-disclosure-rules/
July 1st, 2010 is the date that schools have to comply with the new law. Yay!
I wish ours would have done it this way. DD16 just started her dual credit course today. I got the paperwork from the school counselor (she was in charge of assigning all the students to the courses and took care of registration). We thought we got lucky because we found a copy of the $120 textbook that we needed for $40 on Craigslist from a local student who took the course.
So, DD texts me from class about an hour ago to tell me that the counselor wrote down the wrong course number on our registration paper and we bought the wrong book.
I pulled out the paper just to double check ~ yep, sure enough, the paper says History 250 and it's actually something like History 152. I am fuming right now.
Luckily, I bought the other one used and deeply discounted but what a hassle. DD hates being unprepared for anything in school and I could tell she was really stressing over it.![]()
Sounds just like my dd...she freaks out if she is missing something..!
As I said above, the college she is attending, she won't have to pay for her books even as an actual college student. Nobody pays for books, it's rolled into the tuition which is actually very reasonable.
The annual tuition for this year is $6375I'm sure it will go up some before she starts as a freshmen in 2011, but from what I have seen from other colleges in our area its still going to be a bargain! When we lived in Ohio , the Univ. she was planning on going to was that for a quarter!
I am so much more relaxed now that we may actually be able to afford sending her to college! lol
It's been a long time since I graduated from college and in the back of my mind I know textbooks were just as expensive but I just spent $400 bucks for 3 lousy textbooks for my son, who is a freshman.
Jeez, what a racket....
Thanks for letting me vent...![]()
Tell me about it!!!!
What makes it worse for me is my school does mostly special editions of a textbook specific to my school so I can't find them on any textbook resale site!
I spent $133 on a book 1/2 inch thickconveniently, they get new editions all the time and there are hardly any used books left at the bookstore.
Nothing is worse though when I spend $100 on a textbook and a teacher almost never uses it i.e. my $133 Bio 112 book!
Bio lecture: $133
Bio lab: $2 packet
Writing: $79 book & $94 book
Math: $179
Considering my books only totaled $487, perhaps I got off easy as this is for 13 credits.
I know A&P classes won't be the same though![]()
This is one of the reasons that I am a huge fan of ebooks and I am hoping beyond hope that they take over the textbook world. It makes MUCH more sense to pay less than $500 for a Kindle DX and download textbooks instantly (and updated versions!!) and pay MUCH less for them.
It would open up the textbook world to many more options (they don't have to deal with the big publishers!) and ebooks SHOULD cost a lot less. Think of the trees that would be saved!
I'm so glad my school does do interlibrary loan for text books. It might not work for large classes, but for small grad classes that are taught at only one other school in the state, it's been great. I had a class last term that had 3 required books and one optional--all with only a chapter or three used out of each. Most of what we read are research articles anyway, so I can't see spending a lot of money on books. I was very grateful that one professor put the text on reserve. I needed it for about 10 minutes a week to pull a chart or some data out of it, and I would have been kicking myself if I'd paid for it.I'm an academic librarian. Today was our usual first day of the semester, with hundreds of students coming to the library to see if we had their textbooks. As a rule, we don't buy textbooks, period. If you are a student, you can ask your faculty member if they can put a copy on reserve if they have an extra.
We will not get textbooks through Interlibrary Loan for students. It's just too big of a dissatisfier. In most case, you can't find the textbook at another library, and if they do have it, it gets recalled immediately and your student has to send it back just when they need it. ILL loan periods tend to only be a couple of weeks, and it can be difficult to get the books back to the loaning institution if students won't return them.
We tell students their best bet is to rent, shop around or share with a friend. Our university didn't used to publish the book list, but after a lawsuit, we do now.
The whole thing is just an incredible racket.
Thanks for the chegg.com website. I was really dreading buying books this semster as the total would be over $500. I am going to rent them for less than $200. It does not bother me that I can not highlight or write in them as I usually don't anyways.