Students fight book costs
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Marisa O’Neil
A student group, backed by 500 college professors, announced
Wednesday that it is putting further pressure on textbook publishers
to lower costs or make cheaper alternatives available.
At a UC Irvine news conference, members of the California Student
Public Interest Research Group said that the average student pays
about $900 for textbooks each year. They accused one textbook
publisher of driving prices up and releasing newer, costlier editions
more frequently than necessary.
“It’s time for them to get their head out of the sand and admit
there is a problem and engage in an open dialogue with students and
faculty,” said Jared Wigginton, of the UCI student group.
Students at the news conference singled out Thompson Learning
Inc., which publishes a calculus textbook that costs $122 on their
website. The student group has sent the publisher letters, including
one signed by 500 faculty members from 100 colleges, urging them to
take student costs into account.
“People who are poor and having a hard time making expenses don’t
need to spend that much on textbooks,” UCI math professor Howard
Tucker said at the news conference.
The group also called into question the company’s practice of
pricing books differently in other markets. In Canada, they said, the
same calculus textbook costs the equivalent of $96 and just $59 in
the United Kingdom.
That’s because students in those countries would never stand for
the high price American students accept as something they feel is an
unavoidable part of college life, Tucker said. If students here made
faculty members aware of the high textbook costs, he said, professors
could choose other methods.
For his math classes, Tucker has created source materials on his
website. Students don’t have to buy any textbooks.
The group’s other main concern is that the publisher is releasing
newer editions before new material justifies major revisions. Jamal
Siddiqi, a UCI math major, said he used the fourth edition of the
calculus book and saw few changes in the new fifth edition, despite a
roughly $40 price difference.
“Is it really fair for students to pay extra for a few extra math
problems?” Wigginton said.
Wednesday’s announcement followed a study about textbook costs the
California Student Public Interest Research Group released in
January. A month later, Thompson Higher Education announced that it
was releasing a series of lower-cost textbooks.
A spokeswoman denied at the time that that the line was a result
of the study. But UCI students feel like their voices and letters are
being heard.
“At least we’re on their radar,” said 22-year-old sociology major
Jamie Dow.
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