I just went to my first class, where I learned that we don't have textbooks or tests. It's a good way to start the day, let's hope it stays that way.
Though I've already gotten sick
![Very Happy :-D](./images/smilies/icon_biggrin.gif)
Hmmmm. Sounds like you are at one of those "Everyone passes with A's" colleges. Do they have a Ph.D. course in car driving? Or trailer reversing?Nitrofox125 wrote:I just went to my first class, where I learned that we don't have textbooks or tests.
Man... if I were more vulgar, I'd have lots of ammo from that one.Nitrofox125 wrote:Though I've already gotten sick
Especially when you can get hardcover books of a similar size from Borders for no more than $30-$40. Textbook publishers are practically printing their own money.Darktalyn1 wrote:My experiences involved a lot of professors requiring the brand new edition of a textbook, which killed the chance of buying it used or getting a hand-me-down copy from a friend.
Most expensive book I had to buy in college ran me 160$, but I heard that's nothing compared to what some people have had to deal with. Pretty ridiculous how much they charge for some of those books.
Agreed, the classes that actually count towards your major are a whole other ballgame from your average blowoff classes. I'm taking Dynamics right now, widely acknowledged to be one of the big flunkout classes in engineering here at SIU, so I just have to grit my teeth and plug away at it. Doing homework or studying with people in your class helps a lot. So does having friends who are upperclassmen who have taken the same courses beforeZoop! wrote:Enjoy those classes while you can. Once you get into the core classes, of a real major, that's when the professors move in for the kill. Buy lots of ointment and remember the words, "volume discount."
Are we assuming then that the knowledge contained within the books is only worth the face value? hmmm..seems like you could consider it an investmentTop Gun wrote:Especially when you can get hardcover books of a similar size from Borders for no more than $30-$40. Textbook publishers are practically printing their own money.Darktalyn1 wrote:My experiences involved a lot of professors requiring the brand new edition of a textbook, which killed the chance of buying it used or getting a hand-me-down copy from a friend.Most expensive book I had to buy in college ran me 160$, but I heard that's nothing compared to what some people have had to deal with. Pretty ridiculous how much they charge for some of those books.
It depends on the class actually. Sometimes, books need 13,535 different editions just to stay current. My accounting textbooks (which I got to use for three classes, yipee), purchased back in January, are already out of date and have lots of incorrect material. It depends on your major...will_kill wrote:ahhh...well that does sukJagori wrote:My problem isn't the price of a textbook; it's the way they go through editions. I know of more than one textbook where the only difference between editions was a re-ordering of the chapters. Everything else was word-for-word identical.
Wow! that's starting to sound more fishy with each post...but I'll stay on topicZoop! wrote:It depends on the class actually. Sometimes, books need 13,535 different editions just to stay current. My accounting textbooks (which I got to use for three classes, yipee), purchased back in January, are already out of date and have lots of incorrect material. It depends on your major...
I'm not so sure that would be an A class for me!Or trailer reversing?
Go for it, I wanna hear these...Man... if I were more vulgar, I'd have lots of ammo from that one.