I received an email from a textbook salesman. This isn’t a rarity, but today this line lept out at me:

“Ideal for students learning concepts and reasonably priced at $144.95,”

No. Just no. $144.95 is not reasonably priced. This is the first of what is likely a lot of emails that I get to respond with the line in the sand that I’ve drawn:

“Reasonably priced” at $144.95?

No thank you. I won’t subject my students to materials, including books, equipment, and any online tool licensing, that cost more than $60 per course. Until your offerings are in this range, please do not contact me again.

Even my $60 per course number is high as far as I’m concerned.

  • xiao
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    81 year ago

    Open source textbooks are the future (I hope so) 😎

    https://openstax.org/subjects

    With philanthropic support, our books have been used in 38,143 classrooms, saving students $1,783,506,230 since 2012

  • @[email protected]
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    71 year ago

    Yep. Any course that I have control over, I try to switch to OERs to save students money. Unfortunately, it’s a ton of investment to do that for our largest courses, where our TAs depend on the homework services that come integrated with the textbooks. And I don’t have a clue how much that textbook costs, because it’s embedded in their tuition. I just hate that they don’t have access to it after the semester is over, which is why I casually mention not to use library genesis to acquire a PDF of the textbook for posterity’s sake, because that violates copyright law.

  • darkstar
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    31 year ago

    This is exactly why I got into piracy in the first place, I could not afford textbooks and neither could my sister. They are ridiculously priced

  • @KendoCalrissian
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    11 year ago

    I only use open source materials, or texts that are available via pdf in the library system. Extra cost to students? $0