Make Textbooks Affordable

Everyone knows that textbooks costs are out of control. The average student spends $900 per year, and prices are rising four times the rate of inflation!

It’s no accident that textbooks are so expensive.  Publishing companies have been raking in huge profits while engaging in bad practices that drive up costs: issuing new editions that make used books hard to find, bundling textbooks with unnecessary CDs and pass-codes, and more.  They get away with it because students don’t have a choice -- we’ve got to buy the book they’re selling, even if the price is outrageous.

The good news is that we have all of the technology we need to make textbooks affordable. Already, there are rental programs at more than 1,500 colleges, hundreds of sites selling used books and more ways to save than ever before. There's also new solutions like open-source textbooks, which could literally revolutionize how much students pay for their books.

We're fighting to rein in costs by promoting cost-saving solutions on campus, while also tackling publishers' stranglehold on the market to change prices for good.  We're educating students, faculty and bookstores, and raising awareness through researchand the media. We're also calling on publishers, colleges and foundations to support the creation of more open-source textbooks that could save students millions each year.

Issue updates

Resource | Textbooks

Textbooks Project Packet

Summary

Want to join the fight to make textbooks affordable?  Download this resource for everything you need to know to organize the textbooks campaign on your campus. 

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Blog Post | Consumer Protection, Corporate, Democracy, Energy, Energy Service Corps, Foods, Health Care, Higher Ed, Hunger, Oceans, Other, Parks, Student Debt, Sustainability, Textbooks, Transit, Waste, Water

Vote Yes for MASSPIRG!

 

Listen to Yoda: Please vote yes for MASSPIRG during the Student Government Elections on April 17th and 18th.

Every two years, Westfield State students vote to continue funding MASSPIRG through a $9 per student per semester waivable fee.

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Blog Post | Consumer Protection, Higher Ed, Textbooks

How To Save Money on Textbooks

Some of the most important things that a student needs to succeed in college are the textbooks. Prices can range from free, if the professor doesn’t require one or offers online readings; or up to two hundred dollars or more for just one book. To see how much a student can spend on textbooks for a semester, the MassPIRG Consumer Action Campaign team created a sample of 25 freshman schedules.

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Blog Post | Textbooks

Big Day for Open Education! | Nicole Allen

Today was a big day in the movement for free and open textbooks! A conference call featuring U.S. Under Secretary of Education Martha Kanter, CALPIRG textbook affordability activist Arthur Karadzhyan, and other leaders kicked off two exciting new initiatives for open education: 

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Resource | Textbooks

Federal Textbook Price Disclosure Law

Summary

The HEOA, short for the Higher Education Opportunity Act, is a higher education reform bill passed by Congress in 2008.  Among the many provisions in HEOA was a set of important regulations to help make textbooks affordable, which went into effect July 1, 2010

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