A Book-Smart Idea at Pierce College
- Share via
Coming up with money to buy textbooks can be a problem for any college student, but high prices pose a particular obstacle to students at Los Angeles’ community colleges, where 40% come from homes below the poverty level. New textbooks can cost as much as $70 and full-time students can spend $300 to $500 every semester just buying books.
Pierce College, then, deserves applause for coming up with a pilot book-leasing program to help keep costs down.
Under the program, which will debut in January, students will be able to lease a new $70 textbook for $45, with the book’s price dropping to $34 in subsequent semesters.
No one loses out in the transaction. The leased book will return a profit for the bookstore by its third semester of use.
Sure, students have long resold their used textbooks, getting money back at the end of the semester. But a lease program means they don’t have to come up with hundreds of dollars at the start of a semester. It also ensures that textbooks will be available at lower cost. Without a lease program, used books might sell out or otherwise not be available. Additionally, Pierce officials estimate that students will save about 10% by leasing rather than buying a used book.
Pierce officials don’t know of any other California colleges that lease books. Its pilot program, then, deserves scrutiny by other state schools, particularly other cost-conscious community colleges.
More to Read
Sign up for Essential California
The most important California stories and recommendations in your inbox every morning.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.