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In the News Debate Over Textbook Costs Isn't Just Academic
As students pay more each year, publishers and professors blame each other for rising prices that partly reflect CDs and other add-ons.

By Kathy M. Kristof, LA Times Staff Writer
August 21, 2005

Textbook prices have been rising at about twice the rate of inflation - largely the result of special add-ons like CDs and workbooks - according to a General Accountability Office report released last week.

That's no surprise to Courtney Morse, a political science major in Portland, Ore., who says paying for textbooks loaded with little-used bells and whistles is becoming an overwhelming struggle.

"This report confirms what we have been saying all along," said Morse, a Portland State University sophomore who has joined the Student Public Interest Research Group, an advocacy organization. "The price of textbooks is devastating, and publishers are doing it on purpose."

While some students simply call Mom and Dad when textbooks have blown their budget, Morse said she doesn't have that luxury - she's paying her college bills on her own. "When you are trying to come up with $200 for books every semester and still pay for food and rent and classes, it's just horrendous," she said. "Last year, I was looking at whether I would pay for books or make my rent."

Textbook publishers, who have been asked to explain their pricing practices to Congress, contend they're being made into scapegoats. They say their own studies indicate their prices have climbed more modestly than the 6% average annual hike reported in the GAO study.

To be sure, some books are pricey, added J. Bruce Hildebrand, executive director for higher education at the Assn. of American Publishers in Washington. But the high costs largely reflect professors' demands for constant updating, photographs, graphics and interactive tools that can help struggling students at any hour of the day or night over the Internet.

"Professors want these materials because it improves the success rate of their students," Hildebrand said. "Yes, books can be expensive, but they don't have to be. We are like a car dealer. We ask do you want leather or do you want cloth? Do you want the cheap radio or the expensive one? Whatever you want, we've got it."

Hildebrand added that publishers make low-cost versions of books. Some of the cut-rate options include custom books - which print only the chapters that professors want - and black-and-white (rather than full-color) texts. If a student is paying hundreds of dollars for a book, it's because the professor has ordered the Cadillac edition, he added.

Ronald Miech, a math professor at UCLA, countered that if he had choices in ordering textbooks, it would be news to him. "I have never heard of a scaled-back version," he said.

Indeed, he contended that he's often forced to order books that come bundled with workbooks and software that he never uses. "I've tried the software," he said. "I don't like it and I never use it. But we don't seem to have an option of buying the book without it."

U.S. Rep. David Wu (D-Ore.) wants to change that. When the Higher Education Act is debated next month, it will include an amendment offered by Wu encouraging publishers to "unbundle" their books, selling the text, the workbooks and software "a la carte." He also wants publishers to provide more cost information to the professors who assign their books, and professors to pay more attention to the prices.

While Wu's amendment is advisory rather than mandatory - and it's in pending legislation, not law - he has vowed to continue tracking the issue and introduce stronger legislation if the advisory steps are not heeded.

In the meantime, enterprising students have many ways to cut the cost of buying textbooks. Among them:


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Kathy M. Kristof, author of "Investing 101" and "Taming the Tuition Tiger," welcomes your comments and suggestions but regrets that she cannot respond individually to letters or phone calls. Write to Personal Finance, Business Section, Los Angeles Times, 202 W. 1st St., Los Angeles, CA 90012, or e-mail kathy.kristof@latimes.com. For previous columns, visit latimes.com/kristof.

 

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