South Carolina
Related: About this forumTextbook 'scam' alleged in federal lawsuit against SC's biggest technical college
A used textbook seller is taking South Carolinas largest public technical college to federal court alleging it ran a scam on its own students by inking a deal with one of the countrys leading textbook publishers.
Trident Technical College and President Mary Thornley misled students about textbook pricing and prevented them from shopping around for secondhand classroom materials, according to the lawsuit filed Thursday in U.S. District Court in Charleston.
The lawsuit comes as seismic shifts are restructuring the college textbook industry. Textbook prices could grow out of control in the long run if other colleges continue to sign such exclusive deals with publishers and edge out the secondhand market, according to the lawsuit.
I think the bigger picture of what theyre trying to do here is theyre trying to eliminate competition, and once that happens they can charge whatever they want, said Jeremy Cucinella, regional manager of Virginia Pirate Corp., which owns Textbook Brokers in North Charleston.
Read more: https://www.postandcourier.com/news/textbook-scam-alleged-in-federal-lawsuit-against-sc-s-biggest/article_d266c94a-262e-11e9-a6dd-ab6ac37fa3d1.html
bobbieinok
(12,858 posts)A Spanish teacher got in trouble because she had bought in Spain copies of a book she used in a class. Bookstore saw that she had ordered no text for a class and freaked out. They complained to admin, which came down hard on every prof.
Some on faculty investigated and learned the school's bookstore was run by a national chain that had this policy everywhere. (The school's contract with the chain was recent. No one on faculty realized that books would now be sold by a monopoly.)
bobbieinok
(12,858 posts)This meant students could not use the text owned by a friend who had recently taken the course. The page numbers, exercise sentence numbers, etc would not be the same. The cover might be the same, just a different edition number in small print.
bobbieinok
(12,858 posts)When asked why, company representative said each bookstore would raise the price by maybe 20% or so.
They paid the publisher the price quoted to the inquiring prof but needed to make a profit. Each store had its own policy about how much profit to charge.
And then the reason textbooks don't have the price embedded in the book's format became clear! That's so students and parents will not see how much mark-up the store adds.
Boy did it upset the store if a commercially sold book was chosen by the prof. The store was stuck with the price printed on the book.
How 'economically naive' profs learn some business 'facts of life'!!