Possibly. Campus bookstores are still a ripoff, though
beetnemesis Send a noteboard - 15/01/2010 08:23:56 PM
It might be that Amazon et al aren't good either, but campus bookstores are still terrible.
Honestly, my senior year I mostly just made use of the library. Half of my classes were electives that didn't need a textbook, one was a class where we barely used the textbook, and for the other two I just went to the library or online if I needed something.
You get bitter realllllllll fast if you pay 70 bucks for a hardcover textbook that you end up using twice in the semester. And then get 5-10 dollars reselling it.
Honestly, my senior year I mostly just made use of the library. Half of my classes were electives that didn't need a textbook, one was a class where we barely used the textbook, and for the other two I just went to the library or online if I needed something.
You get bitter realllllllll fast if you pay 70 bucks for a hardcover textbook that you end up using twice in the semester. And then get 5-10 dollars reselling it.
I amuse myself.
Textbooks are expensive
15/01/2010 05:44:35 PM
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Usually best to just buy used ones...
15/01/2010 05:55:24 PM
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Buying and selling back to the bookstore is the worst option
15/01/2010 06:35:31 PM
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That doesn't apply beyond freshmen and sophomore classes or popular majors I tihnk
15/01/2010 07:17:25 PM
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Possibly. Campus bookstores are still a ripoff, though
15/01/2010 08:23:56 PM
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While it depends on the major, you're a bit dated.
16/01/2010 01:55:06 AM
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Definetly dated then, thanks for making me feel old *NM*
16/01/2010 02:42:49 AM
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Happy to.
16/01/2010 03:55:59 AM
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How about chegg, or another rental site? I've used chegg for many semesters.
15/01/2010 05:56:36 PM
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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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