You are here
Home ›In the news
The great textbook robbery
In recent weeks, on campuses all across America, students have been enrolling in university. Ah, what an experience — the camaraderie of college spirit, the titillating possibilities of higher learning! Then these eager innocents go to buy their textbooks, and — wham! — the dispiriting reality of corporate greed whacks them upside the head. Students, already beleaguered by skyrocketing tuition and fees, now face sticker shock when purchasing required texts. A congressional study finds that students today are averaging $900 per semester for books. A watchdog group called CALPIRG has issued a report called Ripoff 101, documenting that the giant publishers are raising prices of college texts at a rate three times higher than the prices of general books.
CALPIRG finds three main reasons for the inflated costs. One, the publishers issue new, higher-priced editions every three years or so, even though there’s little substantive change in the material. Second, at least half of the books are now sold “bundled” with unnecessary CD-ROMs and flashy workbooks that drastically bloat the price — even though two-thirds of college faculty say that they “rarely” or “never” use these add-ons. Third, publishers jack up the price simply because they can. Students are a captive market. Professors say, “Buy this book,” and there’s little choice but to pay the ripoff price. Also, like drug companies, publishers have been charging Americans more than they charge consumers overseas. On average, the exact same books cost 20 percent more here than in England, for example. In many cases, the overcharge is much greater — a calculus textbook, for example, sells for $132 here but only $62 in Britain. The good news is that students, some faculty, and a few lawmakers are fighting the gouging. To learn what steps you can take, go to this Web site:www.maketextbooksaffordable.com.
Internships

Work on important issues, learn valuable skills, get hands-on experience, and make a difference.
Media Hits by Campaign
Newsroom
-
The Hunger and Homelessness Campaign makes meals at the Ocean Park Community Center with food they gathered at a donation drive earlier in the week. -
CALPIRG interns after making meals at the Ocean Park Community Center. -
This Halloween, the Hunger and Homelessness Campaign collected over 150 canned food items for local food banks during their Trick-Or-Can event. -
UC Davis students kick off a TEXT-2-GIVE table for Somalia Famine Relief on the quad – our efforts statewide raised thousands of dollars for famine relief. -
he Improv Group at UCR came to our Open Mic Night to fundraise for the famine in Somalia. -
The UC Davis Hunger and Homelessness campaign raised hundreds of dollars for famine relief in Somalia.
-
Hunger and Homelessness intern Roua Aboukhadijeh collecting interview footage on campus for a short film on poverty. -
Volunteers make props for upcoming hunger and homelessness events. -
The Hunger and Homelessness campaign tabling at the Davis Farmer's Market for the Davis Empowerment Project to help reintegrate the homeless back into the workforce. -
CALPIRG volunteers handing out homemade lunches to those in need.