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Students explore textbook options

Nicole Taylor & Jamie Reed

Issue date: 9/6/07 Section: News
Northern students staking 12 credits can expect to pay &250 per semester for their textbooks.
Media Credit: Jeff Kitson
Northern students staking 12 credits can expect to pay &250 per semester for their textbooks.
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Many students have approached a new semester in college looking for the best prices when buying or selling their textbooks.

An NMU student can expect to pay an average of $42 per book, and needs an average of two books per class said Paul Wright, assistant manager of the NMU Bookstore.

This means that a full-time student taking 12 credits can expect to pay about $250 per semester for textbooks. This estimate can be much higher for students who take more than 12 credits.

The College Textbook Affordability Act, approved by the Senate in 2007 and pending review by the House of Representatives, would require institutions to list the ISBN and price of course books on class schedules.

If passed, it would also require publishers to make available the nature of revisions made in new editions of a book. This could drastically lower the prices of textbooks since a professor decides that a new edition is not necessary. For example, Wright said that the latest edition of PH 201 "Physics" by Cutnell and Johnson sells at $146.67 new and $110 used, while the previous edition sells for $37.50, used. And it's up to the professor which one they will choose.

Karla Meredith, an undeclared sophomore, said she despises the price of textbooks.

Through the NMU Bookstore, she pays approximately $400 per semester for her textbooks, and last semester she received around $90 at buybacks.

That's $310 out of her pocket for textbooks, on average. As a result, she said she has tried to find them elsewhere for a better price. She said she prefers to purchase her textbooks from vendors other than the school bookstore.

"Prices are high, and you can get the same book for half the price or less someplace else," she said.

According to www.nacs.org (National Association of College Stores), 16 percent of students currently buy their textbooks online.
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