
Some of you might be willing to participate, but leery of spending hours researching how much your books cost. Here's an easy way to cut that time to seconds. Seconds!

Alright, the poll goes live tomorrow morning. If you don't have your original textbook reciepts, you can get a ballpark idea of what a book costs new by going to Amazon or Half.com and plugging in either the title or the ISBN number.

Ok, so here's a roundup of the discussion so far:
People seem game to do this so long as it doesn't jeopardize their academic standing (i.e., they fail the course for not having the textbook). It has been suggested that professors need to be invited to be a part of this, and ways of distributing course materials amongst students need to be devised.
Here's my idea for figuring out which publisher to go after:
Does this make sense to everyone? Is there anything painfully obvious that I'm missing?

Textbook prices are ridiculous. I remember paying well over $500 a semester for maybe five or six books, all in new editions which had maybe 10 pages of text changed from the old edition. There were several books that cost me well over $100 that I never even opened. And it pissed me off, but I bent over and took it because I didn't see any better option. Hell, I'm still paying off credit card debt accrued by purchasing textbooks.
Well, it seems to me that nobody's done anything effective about it, and I'm about to start buying textbooks again. Or not.
Here's my idea:
1. Pick one textbook publisher. The big ones seem to be Pearson, McGraw-Hill, Houghton Mifflin, and Cengage (formerly Thomson Learning). Ideally, this would be done by looking at syllabi for the upcoming semester and marking a tally on a poll hosted here.
2. Boycott that publisher all semester. If the textbook isn't a first edition (such as for a new course), don't buy it new. If you can, buy the textbook second hand or share with a friend.
3. (this step is optional, but would probably help to get our point across) Email/write/call that publisher and tell them that you're boycotting their product because the price makes it almost unaffordable.
It's a big problem, boycotting is easy (what's easier than not doing something?) and it's something that any student can do. Anybody willing to work on this with me?