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Look to your wallet, young graduate! These days you need to incorporate the cost of textbooks when planning college finances. No longer can you buy your books with help from the “Ramen noodle diet”. Today’s textbook prices call for more extreme solutions, like the “sell blood plasma savings plan". Granted, textbooks can’t be cheap because they cost a lot to produce. They’re expensive because they have to be. This isn't a pulp paperback, and production values skyrocket for large, hardcover, full-color books, often accompanied by CD-ROM and DVDs. However, this doesn’t change the fact the textbook publishing industry sits in the middle of a pretty sweet (but metaphorical) piece of cake. And lucky for them, they get to eat it, too. It’s as close to a perfect monopoly as you can get: There are no price controls. No significant competition or incentive to drop prices. Their audience is in continual demand for the product. We’re broke and we’re not going to take it anymore. Many textbooks or their equivalents are available online. Some are free, others are available used at steep discounts. One advantage of a world-spanning information source like the Internet is it introduces the “have-nots” to the “haves”. College textbooks don't need to be (and shouldn't be) relegated to just your local campus bookstore and student body. When saving money on textbooks, remember The Three R’s: Research, Review, and Roverseas. (Please allow me creative alliteration to preserve my pretentious pontificating.) Research: You’ll need to know what books are required for a course. Talk to the instructor, or look online to see if a syllabus has been posted. Research this information as soon as possible, so if you have to order a book you can have it arrive ideally before class starts. If possible, get the ISBN numbers for the books you need. Review: Use this list of free and discount college textbook providers:
This list will help you narrow down your search to the cheapest, most reliable sellers who can ship the fastest. Who are you purchasing from? Some resellers are similar to eBay, where a good faith reputation can be built by making past buyers happy. This is important, particularly when buying from an individual. Some resources on the list are discount textbook sellers. Some are services connecting used book sellers and buyers. Some actually provide free textbooks, syllabi, videos and training for self-education. Ambitious students could use this material to completely replace required textbooks with similar free equivalents. Roverseas: Many textbooks are available in an “international version”. This is generally a lower-production value of a textbook. Sometimes a hardcover will be demoted to paperback, or color pages will be black and white. Check to verify the text or content hasn’t changed too dramatically. Generally this is a remarkably cheap way of replacing a standard high-priced textbook. International versions of college textbooks can approach a 90% savings! Textbook publishers have no incentive to help us find lowest prices, so the job is up to us. If there’s one thing the Internet really does well, it’s making people mad. Textbook publishers, it’s your turn. |
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