But for vet school there's a few problems. One, none of our books are cheap. Two, a lot of the books are a really good idea to keep for future reference. After all, there's just no possible way for most people to remember every little detail that is crammed into our skulls over these four years. So the books are always expensive, and the used books are always hard to scrounge up
And in undergrad I had it easy anyways, so I never learned good textbook-hunting skills I had a small academic scholarship with our NCAA Equestrian team, so they took care of my books. If I wanted to keep them, I could buy them back for half price.
And in undergrad I had it easy anyways, so I never learned good textbook-hunting skills I had a small academic scholarship with our NCAA Equestrian team, so they took care of my books. If I wanted to keep them, I could buy them back for half price.
Still Empress of the Poofy Purple Pillow Pile Palace!!
Continued Love of my Aussie <3
Continued Love of my Aussie <3
Textbooks are expensive
15/01/2010 05:44:35 PM
- 587 Views
Usually best to just buy used ones...
15/01/2010 05:55:24 PM
- 426 Views
yah, that works fine for undergrad.
15/01/2010 05:59:18 PM
- 546 Views
Buying and selling back to the bookstore is the worst option
15/01/2010 06:35:31 PM
- 374 Views
That doesn't apply beyond freshmen and sophomore classes or popular majors I tihnk
15/01/2010 07:17:25 PM
- 524 Views
Possibly. Campus bookstores are still a ripoff, though
15/01/2010 08:23:56 PM
- 450 Views
While it depends on the major, you're a bit dated.
16/01/2010 01:55:06 AM
- 442 Views
Definetly dated then, thanks for making me feel old *NM*
16/01/2010 02:42:49 AM
- 167 Views
Happy to.
16/01/2010 03:55:59 AM
- 381 Views
How about chegg, or another rental site? I've used chegg for many semesters.
15/01/2010 05:56:36 PM
- 677 Views
You can by them from my wife we she takes on to many classes and then has to drop half
20/01/2010 07:06:11 PM
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