My daughter's books were only $600 this semester and I was thrilled. Why thrilled? Because they were $1,300 last semester.
yeah in that NPR segment, they did say prices are trending slightly down
700$ savings is a lot more than slightly though!
in my last couple of years of college i just started getting everything i could off of half.com, saved probably 1$k that way
my last couple years in college i simply stopped buying books, that saved a lot of money as well!
- principal-agent problem: profs choose books without factoring in price because they dont have to pay for them.
I went into the bookstore last week, they wanted about $300 for a new copy of my Discrete Math book. I checked the prices on my other books and went across the street where I spent $200 to rent this semester's books. The campus bookstore's rental prices were better of course, about 120-80 for that one math book (don't remember exactly). Only noobs, idiots, and people that aren't spending their own money buy from a campus bookstore.
yeah in that NPR segment, they did say prices are trending slightly down
700$ savings is a lot more than slightly though!
in my last couple of years of college i just started getting everything i could off of half.com, saved probably 1$k that way
Unless I misunderstood my niece, when she bought the books for one of her classes, she had to buy them through the bookstore, because that's the only way to get the included online portion for the books - and the online portion was required for the class.
Unless I misunderstood my niece, when she bought the books for one of her classes, she had to buy them through the bookstore, because that's the only way to get the included online portion for the books - and the online portion was required for the class.
Unless I misunderstood my niece, when she bought the books for one of her classes, she had to buy them through the bookstore, because that's the only way to get the included online portion for the books - and the online portion was required for the class.
One of my instructors started out the class with an apology about the book. He said something about not being allowed to specify out-of-print books.this is a pretty interesting 15-minute NPR segment on why they're so high:
http://www.npr.org/blogs/money/2014/10/03/353300404/episode-573-why-textbook-prices-keep-climbing
TLDL:
- principal-agent problem: profs choose books without factoring in price because they dont have to pay for them. high school books are a lot cheaper (%5-%10 profit margin vs %20-%25) because the school is both choosing and buying the books.
- ease of reselling: publishers used to get a few years out of a textbook, but with ebay/half.com/etc, the majority of students buy used after the first year a book is out. so they have less time to make money on a given book
Alright you have me there. The one redeeming feature of that scheme is that you can often rent an electronic version of the book, which is around a third or less of the cost of a new paper text.
And somehow I don't mind that as much, because the online services add (some) value in addition to what the text offers. They're still price gouging, but it's less bad.
Even better when it comes to Latin.One of my instructors started out the class with an apology about the book. He said something about not being allowed to specify out-of-print books.
Some of these things have such widely-varying release schedules.
My thermodynamics book was originally published in 1996. The second edition came out 10 years later. I don't know what changed though, as I had already taken those classes.
Others average a new revision every 1-3 years.
The fundamentals of calculus have changed again! Update the books!
The fundamentals of calculus have changed again! Update the books!
There is no electronic rental feature available to any of my daughter's books the last two semesters. Most of them don't even offer a rental option for the physical book with the online code, just an option for used (rare) and new books with an online code provided inside the shrinkwrapped book.
On top of that, this is the second semester where at least one code didn't work and had to go through hoops to get them working. One had to have the professor work with the company for a week to finally get them all activated.
Colleges have finally figured out how to maintain a monopoly on book sales under the guise of "we need to have online components of classes, because kids have to be online for everything they do, else they won't have the skills for the workplace." They're no longer non-profit institutions, except in name. And as long as students can get virtually unlimited student loans...
That's BS. I am a prof, and there is nothing stopping profs from telling the bookstore that there is no textbook for the class. I do this for almost all of my classes. I then email the class before the beginning of the semester and tell them to buy the slightly out of date older edition of the book that I want to use for $20 on Amazon.One of my instructors started out the class with an apology about the book. He said something about not being allowed to specify out-of-print books.
Jeez. I never spent that much on books in a quarter, and I have a fair number of textbooks from my major. Also, I only graduated from college 5 years ago come June.My daughter's books were only $600 this semester and I was thrilled. Why thrilled? Because they were $1,300 last semester.