Anonymous

Changes

1914 Library

5 bytes added, 23:31, April 23, 2006
m
Free Books: typos
At the beginning of each semester, and especially at the beginning of the academic year, the Library puts all the books that it will be discarding out on tables, for any interested person to take. These tables hold an assortment of all kinds of things, and sometimes include stacks of textbooks -- equivalent to gold bricks to the wise student.
How do dozens of valuable, usable textbooks end up on the discard pile? Sometimes the books really are out of date, and its it's time to get rid of them. But very often, and in the cases most valuable to students, the textbook is the second-to-last edition of a textbook that just got revised, and the professor(s) of the relevant course is /are demanding that students use the most updated version. In these cases, the coordinator of the 1914 Library always asks the instructors if the editions she has on hand will be usable, and in if they say yes, she'll loan what she has.
But sometimes a professor will insist that students must have the new edition. Some professors have even demanded that the 1914 Library refrain from lending what they have at all, under pain of suit. This leads to the discards. By all means, if you feel you need to be on the cutting edge of, say, introductory-level [[psychology]], go ahead and shell out $110 for the latest version of the [[Easy_Classes#PSYC_101|PSYC 101]] text. But if you can handle the rearrangement of a few page numbers and maybe some photocopying time in [[Schow Library|Schow]], check the free books tables early and often.
938
edits