What can I do with like-new, recent-edition textbooks that I'm not allowed to sell?
My employer is sponsoring most of the tuition and fees for my master's degree (in aerospace engineering), including required textbooks. Thus, it is unethical and against policy for me to sell those books once I'm done with the corresponding courses. Specifically, the policy is that I cannot "make a profit on" them, but other than that I am free to do with them as I please. I find that having the physical book is helpful when I'm taking the course, but afterwards if I need to reference it a digital copy will suffice. And while having my office/residence full of these high-level materials certainly makes me feel good about myself, it's not practical. Thus, what can I do with these textbooks that will have the biggest, most positive impact on academia?
graduate-school united-states students books engineering
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show 5 more comments
My employer is sponsoring most of the tuition and fees for my master's degree (in aerospace engineering), including required textbooks. Thus, it is unethical and against policy for me to sell those books once I'm done with the corresponding courses. Specifically, the policy is that I cannot "make a profit on" them, but other than that I am free to do with them as I please. I find that having the physical book is helpful when I'm taking the course, but afterwards if I need to reference it a digital copy will suffice. And while having my office/residence full of these high-level materials certainly makes me feel good about myself, it's not practical. Thus, what can I do with these textbooks that will have the biggest, most positive impact on academia?
graduate-school united-states students books engineering
31
Its not that many books is it? (1) Prominently display in your office as evidence of your company-supported education. (2) Lend to others in the company, and don't care if they come back. (3) Start a local library of technical books.
– Jon Custer
2 days ago
7
I like @JonCuster's suggestion #2, but if you're looking for biggest impact on academia, donating the books to a relevant department or deserving students probably goes further.
– Anyon
2 days ago
5
I doubt that the policy is worded in precisely that way because "any way" would include gaining knowledge from them.
– stendarr
yesterday
4
I've found they can make great monitor stands.
– T.E.D.
yesterday
3
@Mazura Since its the employer paying, they would have to treat the sales from the textbooks as wages to the employee for tax and other legal purposes; they might not even really care about the employee profiting from selling a textbook, but having this policy makes sure the company stays in compliance with the laws. Could also prevent fraud where an employee purchased unnecessary books to then resell them, but I think this is highly unlikely to be the true motivation for the policy.
– Bryan Krause
yesterday
|
show 5 more comments
My employer is sponsoring most of the tuition and fees for my master's degree (in aerospace engineering), including required textbooks. Thus, it is unethical and against policy for me to sell those books once I'm done with the corresponding courses. Specifically, the policy is that I cannot "make a profit on" them, but other than that I am free to do with them as I please. I find that having the physical book is helpful when I'm taking the course, but afterwards if I need to reference it a digital copy will suffice. And while having my office/residence full of these high-level materials certainly makes me feel good about myself, it's not practical. Thus, what can I do with these textbooks that will have the biggest, most positive impact on academia?
graduate-school united-states students books engineering
My employer is sponsoring most of the tuition and fees for my master's degree (in aerospace engineering), including required textbooks. Thus, it is unethical and against policy for me to sell those books once I'm done with the corresponding courses. Specifically, the policy is that I cannot "make a profit on" them, but other than that I am free to do with them as I please. I find that having the physical book is helpful when I'm taking the course, but afterwards if I need to reference it a digital copy will suffice. And while having my office/residence full of these high-level materials certainly makes me feel good about myself, it's not practical. Thus, what can I do with these textbooks that will have the biggest, most positive impact on academia?
graduate-school united-states students books engineering
graduate-school united-states students books engineering
edited yesterday
Peter Schilling
asked 2 days ago
Peter SchillingPeter Schilling
9491415
9491415
31
Its not that many books is it? (1) Prominently display in your office as evidence of your company-supported education. (2) Lend to others in the company, and don't care if they come back. (3) Start a local library of technical books.
– Jon Custer
2 days ago
7
I like @JonCuster's suggestion #2, but if you're looking for biggest impact on academia, donating the books to a relevant department or deserving students probably goes further.
– Anyon
2 days ago
5
I doubt that the policy is worded in precisely that way because "any way" would include gaining knowledge from them.
– stendarr
yesterday
4
I've found they can make great monitor stands.
– T.E.D.
yesterday
3
@Mazura Since its the employer paying, they would have to treat the sales from the textbooks as wages to the employee for tax and other legal purposes; they might not even really care about the employee profiting from selling a textbook, but having this policy makes sure the company stays in compliance with the laws. Could also prevent fraud where an employee purchased unnecessary books to then resell them, but I think this is highly unlikely to be the true motivation for the policy.
– Bryan Krause
yesterday
|
show 5 more comments
31
Its not that many books is it? (1) Prominently display in your office as evidence of your company-supported education. (2) Lend to others in the company, and don't care if they come back. (3) Start a local library of technical books.
– Jon Custer
2 days ago
7
I like @JonCuster's suggestion #2, but if you're looking for biggest impact on academia, donating the books to a relevant department or deserving students probably goes further.
– Anyon
2 days ago
5
I doubt that the policy is worded in precisely that way because "any way" would include gaining knowledge from them.
– stendarr
yesterday
4
I've found they can make great monitor stands.
– T.E.D.
yesterday
3
@Mazura Since its the employer paying, they would have to treat the sales from the textbooks as wages to the employee for tax and other legal purposes; they might not even really care about the employee profiting from selling a textbook, but having this policy makes sure the company stays in compliance with the laws. Could also prevent fraud where an employee purchased unnecessary books to then resell them, but I think this is highly unlikely to be the true motivation for the policy.
– Bryan Krause
yesterday
31
31
Its not that many books is it? (1) Prominently display in your office as evidence of your company-supported education. (2) Lend to others in the company, and don't care if they come back. (3) Start a local library of technical books.
– Jon Custer
2 days ago
Its not that many books is it? (1) Prominently display in your office as evidence of your company-supported education. (2) Lend to others in the company, and don't care if they come back. (3) Start a local library of technical books.
– Jon Custer
2 days ago
7
7
I like @JonCuster's suggestion #2, but if you're looking for biggest impact on academia, donating the books to a relevant department or deserving students probably goes further.
– Anyon
2 days ago
I like @JonCuster's suggestion #2, but if you're looking for biggest impact on academia, donating the books to a relevant department or deserving students probably goes further.
– Anyon
2 days ago
5
5
I doubt that the policy is worded in precisely that way because "any way" would include gaining knowledge from them.
– stendarr
yesterday
I doubt that the policy is worded in precisely that way because "any way" would include gaining knowledge from them.
– stendarr
yesterday
4
4
I've found they can make great monitor stands.
– T.E.D.
yesterday
I've found they can make great monitor stands.
– T.E.D.
yesterday
3
3
@Mazura Since its the employer paying, they would have to treat the sales from the textbooks as wages to the employee for tax and other legal purposes; they might not even really care about the employee profiting from selling a textbook, but having this policy makes sure the company stays in compliance with the laws. Could also prevent fraud where an employee purchased unnecessary books to then resell them, but I think this is highly unlikely to be the true motivation for the policy.
– Bryan Krause
yesterday
@Mazura Since its the employer paying, they would have to treat the sales from the textbooks as wages to the employee for tax and other legal purposes; they might not even really care about the employee profiting from selling a textbook, but having this policy makes sure the company stays in compliance with the laws. Could also prevent fraud where an employee purchased unnecessary books to then resell them, but I think this is highly unlikely to be the true motivation for the policy.
– Bryan Krause
yesterday
|
show 5 more comments
9 Answers
9
active
oldest
votes
As an academic librarian, I am frequently asked similar questions. First, please don't just drop them off at the library. Unwanted donations are a significant problem at libraries—it's very difficult to recycle books, so libraries end up having to pay to get rid of books we don't need, on top of the time and effort it takes to deal with a big pile of books on our doorstep.
Do feel free to contact a librarian to see if they would be interested, but be prepared for the answer to be no: textbooks, which change edition quickly and tend to be most useful only to people taking specific classes, are fairly low on the list for most libraries. Some large university libraries do have policies of obtaining a copy of every required textbook, but they will already have a mechanism for purchasing those in a timely manner. If you do go this route, please also be as tentative as possible in your offer: Librarians also tend to dislike telling people "no", so if you push, the librarian is likely to take your books and then quietly dumpster them.
There are some charities that take donations of (some) books. Our library uses Better World Books, which I believe is currently accepting recent textbooks, and you could also look around for programs close to your home.
The most straightforward option might be to pass the books on to another student or students in your program. If you want your donation to have an impact beyond just the student who receives them you could ask them to "pay it forward" by passing along some other books at some future date. (You could also just ask that they pass your books along gratis, but the value of this gift will decrease with every iteration as the books get older and new editions come out.)
If you don't care about keeping any value within academia, you could offer the books for pick-up through something like Craig's List. Whether people want your books for study or a book art program or as kindling for their wood-burning stove, the books will at least have value beyond gathering dust in a box in your closet.
If you want to recycle some or all of your books, you will need to deconstruct them first, or locate a service that specializes in books (these are very hard to find, and may have a charge). If you want to do it yourself, a box cutter or utility knife to cut the pages out works pretty well. The pages can go to any paper recycling service. The cover itself may also be recyclable, but any glue and/or stitching will probably need to go into the trash. You probably shouldn't compost the books, as page coatings and inks can be toxic.
Re donating to another student: Some fraternities (including APO, I believe) operate book exchanges and will happily facilitate this kind of donation.
– Kevin
4 hours ago
add a comment |
Ask your employer.
You should be able to work out a solution both parties are happy with pretty easily. The obvious one is to sell the books and then give your employer the profits. If they don't care, you can also pocket the profits yourself, perhaps recycle the books or donate them to your university's library.
24
The correct answer. Also rather than "recycling" the books, I'd also see if donating them is possible. When I was attending university, I had a few professors donate a few copies of the textbook to the school library as reference books so that there was "always" a copy available. Then again, those professors never assigned any reading from those books, and they were mostly math textbooks for the homework exercises...
– sharur
2 days ago
1
You can also sell them, and donate the profit to charity, if your sale directly contributed to the charity, that would be even better (such as an eBay charity auction). From the sound of it, the problem would be you profitting, so this should be acceptable.
– ThomasRedstone
yesterday
@ ThomasRedstone - Before doing this, make a comprehensive printed list of the books you are donating. Get the charity to sign this in the form of a receipt. That way you have proof you didn't make a profit.
– chasly from UK
15 hours ago
add a comment |
Give them to the professor. It is often useful to be able to lend the course book to future students who cannot afford the books.
This would be my preferred answer; they might be able to send an e-mail to current/future students offering them out.
– Dan
18 hours ago
add a comment |
Keep those books that you believe will be valuable as reference material; donate the rest to the university library where you are earning your degree. You know that particular institution uses those particular books. Students less fortunate than you will be able to check them out of the library rather than buying them.
1
I almost wrote this in my answer and I am not sure if it is better to give them to the professor or directly to the library. I think there are advantages to both.
– StrongBad♦
yesterday
2
@StrongBad Right. The library will make the books more widely available, but the professor can lend for an entire term, which most libraries will not do. I came down on the side of libraries because they're equipped to manage the lending of books. The library at my school has a "two hour reserve" category; that makes the same book available to many students during a school term.
– Bob Brown
yesterday
See the answer from the librarian, about most likely not wanting them.
– WendyG
yesterday
1
@WendyG What the librarian actually said was ask first, don't just drop the books off.
– Bob Brown
15 hours ago
@BobBrown but expect the answer to be no, as they have most of the books already
– WendyG
12 hours ago
add a comment |
Donate to other countries
I'm not sure if this kind of donation is available in other countries, but in my country (Vietnam), there is an organization collects donated English textbooks from the US and ship to libraries in universities in our country. This solves the need of English textbooks in poor and developing countries.
You can visit Vietnam Book Drive if you are interested in this idea.
Disclaimer: I used to work here as a webmaster a couple years ago.
add a comment |
Options:
In priority order:
Put them in a bookcase in your office and use them as desk references. Textbooks are valuable resources. You become familiar with them. So good to retain them. Have your assistant order bookcase if needed.
Box them and store them.
Give them to the company/site library.
Give them away to other students, professors, etc.
The reason for the priority is that the company funded your education and you are most familiar with the books. So the most fitting is for you to retain them.
Finally something about this question strikes me as strange. As if you want the $$. Or don't appreciate the company funded education. Or have a pointed aversion to physical texts.
New contributor
4
Of course I appreciate the subsidized education! In fact, my reason for asking this question is an awareness of my good fortune and desire to extend it as far as possible.
– Peter Schilling
2 days ago
21
Consider deleting the last paragraph of your answer ("Finally ..."). It doesn't contribute to your answer and seems to be based on having misread the OP's motives.
– Lawrence
2 days ago
add a comment |
Provided you clear it with the appropriate person, sell the books and give the proceeds - in your name and/or in the name of your employer - to a good cause run by your university: scholarship fund etc.
add a comment |
If there are graduate students or PhD studens working as TAs at the university, they might have use for it when teaching.
I recall teaching a class as a post-doc, and had difficulties finding the book I was supposed to be teaching on (I did of course not want to buy it with my private money). There might even be a small collection of course books available to TAs, so your book might be a good addition there.
add a comment |
Some colleges & universities have "textbook libraries", separate from the main academic library, that will accept donations of textbooks. In later semesters, these libraries then lend the textbooks back out to students for whom buying the textbooks would present a financial hardship.
Such initiatives can be difficult to track down, as they're often run on a volunteer basis. To find whether your institution has such a program, search on Google for "[institution name] textbook library", or make inquiries at the dean of students' office, the academic library, the office of financial aid, and/or the student government association.
add a comment |
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9 Answers
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9 Answers
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As an academic librarian, I am frequently asked similar questions. First, please don't just drop them off at the library. Unwanted donations are a significant problem at libraries—it's very difficult to recycle books, so libraries end up having to pay to get rid of books we don't need, on top of the time and effort it takes to deal with a big pile of books on our doorstep.
Do feel free to contact a librarian to see if they would be interested, but be prepared for the answer to be no: textbooks, which change edition quickly and tend to be most useful only to people taking specific classes, are fairly low on the list for most libraries. Some large university libraries do have policies of obtaining a copy of every required textbook, but they will already have a mechanism for purchasing those in a timely manner. If you do go this route, please also be as tentative as possible in your offer: Librarians also tend to dislike telling people "no", so if you push, the librarian is likely to take your books and then quietly dumpster them.
There are some charities that take donations of (some) books. Our library uses Better World Books, which I believe is currently accepting recent textbooks, and you could also look around for programs close to your home.
The most straightforward option might be to pass the books on to another student or students in your program. If you want your donation to have an impact beyond just the student who receives them you could ask them to "pay it forward" by passing along some other books at some future date. (You could also just ask that they pass your books along gratis, but the value of this gift will decrease with every iteration as the books get older and new editions come out.)
If you don't care about keeping any value within academia, you could offer the books for pick-up through something like Craig's List. Whether people want your books for study or a book art program or as kindling for their wood-burning stove, the books will at least have value beyond gathering dust in a box in your closet.
If you want to recycle some or all of your books, you will need to deconstruct them first, or locate a service that specializes in books (these are very hard to find, and may have a charge). If you want to do it yourself, a box cutter or utility knife to cut the pages out works pretty well. The pages can go to any paper recycling service. The cover itself may also be recyclable, but any glue and/or stitching will probably need to go into the trash. You probably shouldn't compost the books, as page coatings and inks can be toxic.
Re donating to another student: Some fraternities (including APO, I believe) operate book exchanges and will happily facilitate this kind of donation.
– Kevin
4 hours ago
add a comment |
As an academic librarian, I am frequently asked similar questions. First, please don't just drop them off at the library. Unwanted donations are a significant problem at libraries—it's very difficult to recycle books, so libraries end up having to pay to get rid of books we don't need, on top of the time and effort it takes to deal with a big pile of books on our doorstep.
Do feel free to contact a librarian to see if they would be interested, but be prepared for the answer to be no: textbooks, which change edition quickly and tend to be most useful only to people taking specific classes, are fairly low on the list for most libraries. Some large university libraries do have policies of obtaining a copy of every required textbook, but they will already have a mechanism for purchasing those in a timely manner. If you do go this route, please also be as tentative as possible in your offer: Librarians also tend to dislike telling people "no", so if you push, the librarian is likely to take your books and then quietly dumpster them.
There are some charities that take donations of (some) books. Our library uses Better World Books, which I believe is currently accepting recent textbooks, and you could also look around for programs close to your home.
The most straightforward option might be to pass the books on to another student or students in your program. If you want your donation to have an impact beyond just the student who receives them you could ask them to "pay it forward" by passing along some other books at some future date. (You could also just ask that they pass your books along gratis, but the value of this gift will decrease with every iteration as the books get older and new editions come out.)
If you don't care about keeping any value within academia, you could offer the books for pick-up through something like Craig's List. Whether people want your books for study or a book art program or as kindling for their wood-burning stove, the books will at least have value beyond gathering dust in a box in your closet.
If you want to recycle some or all of your books, you will need to deconstruct them first, or locate a service that specializes in books (these are very hard to find, and may have a charge). If you want to do it yourself, a box cutter or utility knife to cut the pages out works pretty well. The pages can go to any paper recycling service. The cover itself may also be recyclable, but any glue and/or stitching will probably need to go into the trash. You probably shouldn't compost the books, as page coatings and inks can be toxic.
Re donating to another student: Some fraternities (including APO, I believe) operate book exchanges and will happily facilitate this kind of donation.
– Kevin
4 hours ago
add a comment |
As an academic librarian, I am frequently asked similar questions. First, please don't just drop them off at the library. Unwanted donations are a significant problem at libraries—it's very difficult to recycle books, so libraries end up having to pay to get rid of books we don't need, on top of the time and effort it takes to deal with a big pile of books on our doorstep.
Do feel free to contact a librarian to see if they would be interested, but be prepared for the answer to be no: textbooks, which change edition quickly and tend to be most useful only to people taking specific classes, are fairly low on the list for most libraries. Some large university libraries do have policies of obtaining a copy of every required textbook, but they will already have a mechanism for purchasing those in a timely manner. If you do go this route, please also be as tentative as possible in your offer: Librarians also tend to dislike telling people "no", so if you push, the librarian is likely to take your books and then quietly dumpster them.
There are some charities that take donations of (some) books. Our library uses Better World Books, which I believe is currently accepting recent textbooks, and you could also look around for programs close to your home.
The most straightforward option might be to pass the books on to another student or students in your program. If you want your donation to have an impact beyond just the student who receives them you could ask them to "pay it forward" by passing along some other books at some future date. (You could also just ask that they pass your books along gratis, but the value of this gift will decrease with every iteration as the books get older and new editions come out.)
If you don't care about keeping any value within academia, you could offer the books for pick-up through something like Craig's List. Whether people want your books for study or a book art program or as kindling for their wood-burning stove, the books will at least have value beyond gathering dust in a box in your closet.
If you want to recycle some or all of your books, you will need to deconstruct them first, or locate a service that specializes in books (these are very hard to find, and may have a charge). If you want to do it yourself, a box cutter or utility knife to cut the pages out works pretty well. The pages can go to any paper recycling service. The cover itself may also be recyclable, but any glue and/or stitching will probably need to go into the trash. You probably shouldn't compost the books, as page coatings and inks can be toxic.
As an academic librarian, I am frequently asked similar questions. First, please don't just drop them off at the library. Unwanted donations are a significant problem at libraries—it's very difficult to recycle books, so libraries end up having to pay to get rid of books we don't need, on top of the time and effort it takes to deal with a big pile of books on our doorstep.
Do feel free to contact a librarian to see if they would be interested, but be prepared for the answer to be no: textbooks, which change edition quickly and tend to be most useful only to people taking specific classes, are fairly low on the list for most libraries. Some large university libraries do have policies of obtaining a copy of every required textbook, but they will already have a mechanism for purchasing those in a timely manner. If you do go this route, please also be as tentative as possible in your offer: Librarians also tend to dislike telling people "no", so if you push, the librarian is likely to take your books and then quietly dumpster them.
There are some charities that take donations of (some) books. Our library uses Better World Books, which I believe is currently accepting recent textbooks, and you could also look around for programs close to your home.
The most straightforward option might be to pass the books on to another student or students in your program. If you want your donation to have an impact beyond just the student who receives them you could ask them to "pay it forward" by passing along some other books at some future date. (You could also just ask that they pass your books along gratis, but the value of this gift will decrease with every iteration as the books get older and new editions come out.)
If you don't care about keeping any value within academia, you could offer the books for pick-up through something like Craig's List. Whether people want your books for study or a book art program or as kindling for their wood-burning stove, the books will at least have value beyond gathering dust in a box in your closet.
If you want to recycle some or all of your books, you will need to deconstruct them first, or locate a service that specializes in books (these are very hard to find, and may have a charge). If you want to do it yourself, a box cutter or utility knife to cut the pages out works pretty well. The pages can go to any paper recycling service. The cover itself may also be recyclable, but any glue and/or stitching will probably need to go into the trash. You probably shouldn't compost the books, as page coatings and inks can be toxic.
answered yesterday
1006a1006a
3,0481817
3,0481817
Re donating to another student: Some fraternities (including APO, I believe) operate book exchanges and will happily facilitate this kind of donation.
– Kevin
4 hours ago
add a comment |
Re donating to another student: Some fraternities (including APO, I believe) operate book exchanges and will happily facilitate this kind of donation.
– Kevin
4 hours ago
Re donating to another student: Some fraternities (including APO, I believe) operate book exchanges and will happily facilitate this kind of donation.
– Kevin
4 hours ago
Re donating to another student: Some fraternities (including APO, I believe) operate book exchanges and will happily facilitate this kind of donation.
– Kevin
4 hours ago
add a comment |
Ask your employer.
You should be able to work out a solution both parties are happy with pretty easily. The obvious one is to sell the books and then give your employer the profits. If they don't care, you can also pocket the profits yourself, perhaps recycle the books or donate them to your university's library.
24
The correct answer. Also rather than "recycling" the books, I'd also see if donating them is possible. When I was attending university, I had a few professors donate a few copies of the textbook to the school library as reference books so that there was "always" a copy available. Then again, those professors never assigned any reading from those books, and they were mostly math textbooks for the homework exercises...
– sharur
2 days ago
1
You can also sell them, and donate the profit to charity, if your sale directly contributed to the charity, that would be even better (such as an eBay charity auction). From the sound of it, the problem would be you profitting, so this should be acceptable.
– ThomasRedstone
yesterday
@ ThomasRedstone - Before doing this, make a comprehensive printed list of the books you are donating. Get the charity to sign this in the form of a receipt. That way you have proof you didn't make a profit.
– chasly from UK
15 hours ago
add a comment |
Ask your employer.
You should be able to work out a solution both parties are happy with pretty easily. The obvious one is to sell the books and then give your employer the profits. If they don't care, you can also pocket the profits yourself, perhaps recycle the books or donate them to your university's library.
24
The correct answer. Also rather than "recycling" the books, I'd also see if donating them is possible. When I was attending university, I had a few professors donate a few copies of the textbook to the school library as reference books so that there was "always" a copy available. Then again, those professors never assigned any reading from those books, and they were mostly math textbooks for the homework exercises...
– sharur
2 days ago
1
You can also sell them, and donate the profit to charity, if your sale directly contributed to the charity, that would be even better (such as an eBay charity auction). From the sound of it, the problem would be you profitting, so this should be acceptable.
– ThomasRedstone
yesterday
@ ThomasRedstone - Before doing this, make a comprehensive printed list of the books you are donating. Get the charity to sign this in the form of a receipt. That way you have proof you didn't make a profit.
– chasly from UK
15 hours ago
add a comment |
Ask your employer.
You should be able to work out a solution both parties are happy with pretty easily. The obvious one is to sell the books and then give your employer the profits. If they don't care, you can also pocket the profits yourself, perhaps recycle the books or donate them to your university's library.
Ask your employer.
You should be able to work out a solution both parties are happy with pretty easily. The obvious one is to sell the books and then give your employer the profits. If they don't care, you can also pocket the profits yourself, perhaps recycle the books or donate them to your university's library.
edited 2 days ago
answered 2 days ago
AllureAllure
28.4k1586138
28.4k1586138
24
The correct answer. Also rather than "recycling" the books, I'd also see if donating them is possible. When I was attending university, I had a few professors donate a few copies of the textbook to the school library as reference books so that there was "always" a copy available. Then again, those professors never assigned any reading from those books, and they were mostly math textbooks for the homework exercises...
– sharur
2 days ago
1
You can also sell them, and donate the profit to charity, if your sale directly contributed to the charity, that would be even better (such as an eBay charity auction). From the sound of it, the problem would be you profitting, so this should be acceptable.
– ThomasRedstone
yesterday
@ ThomasRedstone - Before doing this, make a comprehensive printed list of the books you are donating. Get the charity to sign this in the form of a receipt. That way you have proof you didn't make a profit.
– chasly from UK
15 hours ago
add a comment |
24
The correct answer. Also rather than "recycling" the books, I'd also see if donating them is possible. When I was attending university, I had a few professors donate a few copies of the textbook to the school library as reference books so that there was "always" a copy available. Then again, those professors never assigned any reading from those books, and they were mostly math textbooks for the homework exercises...
– sharur
2 days ago
1
You can also sell them, and donate the profit to charity, if your sale directly contributed to the charity, that would be even better (such as an eBay charity auction). From the sound of it, the problem would be you profitting, so this should be acceptable.
– ThomasRedstone
yesterday
@ ThomasRedstone - Before doing this, make a comprehensive printed list of the books you are donating. Get the charity to sign this in the form of a receipt. That way you have proof you didn't make a profit.
– chasly from UK
15 hours ago
24
24
The correct answer. Also rather than "recycling" the books, I'd also see if donating them is possible. When I was attending university, I had a few professors donate a few copies of the textbook to the school library as reference books so that there was "always" a copy available. Then again, those professors never assigned any reading from those books, and they were mostly math textbooks for the homework exercises...
– sharur
2 days ago
The correct answer. Also rather than "recycling" the books, I'd also see if donating them is possible. When I was attending university, I had a few professors donate a few copies of the textbook to the school library as reference books so that there was "always" a copy available. Then again, those professors never assigned any reading from those books, and they were mostly math textbooks for the homework exercises...
– sharur
2 days ago
1
1
You can also sell them, and donate the profit to charity, if your sale directly contributed to the charity, that would be even better (such as an eBay charity auction). From the sound of it, the problem would be you profitting, so this should be acceptable.
– ThomasRedstone
yesterday
You can also sell them, and donate the profit to charity, if your sale directly contributed to the charity, that would be even better (such as an eBay charity auction). From the sound of it, the problem would be you profitting, so this should be acceptable.
– ThomasRedstone
yesterday
@ ThomasRedstone - Before doing this, make a comprehensive printed list of the books you are donating. Get the charity to sign this in the form of a receipt. That way you have proof you didn't make a profit.
– chasly from UK
15 hours ago
@ ThomasRedstone - Before doing this, make a comprehensive printed list of the books you are donating. Get the charity to sign this in the form of a receipt. That way you have proof you didn't make a profit.
– chasly from UK
15 hours ago
add a comment |
Give them to the professor. It is often useful to be able to lend the course book to future students who cannot afford the books.
This would be my preferred answer; they might be able to send an e-mail to current/future students offering them out.
– Dan
18 hours ago
add a comment |
Give them to the professor. It is often useful to be able to lend the course book to future students who cannot afford the books.
This would be my preferred answer; they might be able to send an e-mail to current/future students offering them out.
– Dan
18 hours ago
add a comment |
Give them to the professor. It is often useful to be able to lend the course book to future students who cannot afford the books.
Give them to the professor. It is often useful to be able to lend the course book to future students who cannot afford the books.
answered 2 days ago
StrongBad♦StrongBad
83.1k23210411
83.1k23210411
This would be my preferred answer; they might be able to send an e-mail to current/future students offering them out.
– Dan
18 hours ago
add a comment |
This would be my preferred answer; they might be able to send an e-mail to current/future students offering them out.
– Dan
18 hours ago
This would be my preferred answer; they might be able to send an e-mail to current/future students offering them out.
– Dan
18 hours ago
This would be my preferred answer; they might be able to send an e-mail to current/future students offering them out.
– Dan
18 hours ago
add a comment |
Keep those books that you believe will be valuable as reference material; donate the rest to the university library where you are earning your degree. You know that particular institution uses those particular books. Students less fortunate than you will be able to check them out of the library rather than buying them.
1
I almost wrote this in my answer and I am not sure if it is better to give them to the professor or directly to the library. I think there are advantages to both.
– StrongBad♦
yesterday
2
@StrongBad Right. The library will make the books more widely available, but the professor can lend for an entire term, which most libraries will not do. I came down on the side of libraries because they're equipped to manage the lending of books. The library at my school has a "two hour reserve" category; that makes the same book available to many students during a school term.
– Bob Brown
yesterday
See the answer from the librarian, about most likely not wanting them.
– WendyG
yesterday
1
@WendyG What the librarian actually said was ask first, don't just drop the books off.
– Bob Brown
15 hours ago
@BobBrown but expect the answer to be no, as they have most of the books already
– WendyG
12 hours ago
add a comment |
Keep those books that you believe will be valuable as reference material; donate the rest to the university library where you are earning your degree. You know that particular institution uses those particular books. Students less fortunate than you will be able to check them out of the library rather than buying them.
1
I almost wrote this in my answer and I am not sure if it is better to give them to the professor or directly to the library. I think there are advantages to both.
– StrongBad♦
yesterday
2
@StrongBad Right. The library will make the books more widely available, but the professor can lend for an entire term, which most libraries will not do. I came down on the side of libraries because they're equipped to manage the lending of books. The library at my school has a "two hour reserve" category; that makes the same book available to many students during a school term.
– Bob Brown
yesterday
See the answer from the librarian, about most likely not wanting them.
– WendyG
yesterday
1
@WendyG What the librarian actually said was ask first, don't just drop the books off.
– Bob Brown
15 hours ago
@BobBrown but expect the answer to be no, as they have most of the books already
– WendyG
12 hours ago
add a comment |
Keep those books that you believe will be valuable as reference material; donate the rest to the university library where you are earning your degree. You know that particular institution uses those particular books. Students less fortunate than you will be able to check them out of the library rather than buying them.
Keep those books that you believe will be valuable as reference material; donate the rest to the university library where you are earning your degree. You know that particular institution uses those particular books. Students less fortunate than you will be able to check them out of the library rather than buying them.
answered yesterday
Bob BrownBob Brown
18.3k85379
18.3k85379
1
I almost wrote this in my answer and I am not sure if it is better to give them to the professor or directly to the library. I think there are advantages to both.
– StrongBad♦
yesterday
2
@StrongBad Right. The library will make the books more widely available, but the professor can lend for an entire term, which most libraries will not do. I came down on the side of libraries because they're equipped to manage the lending of books. The library at my school has a "two hour reserve" category; that makes the same book available to many students during a school term.
– Bob Brown
yesterday
See the answer from the librarian, about most likely not wanting them.
– WendyG
yesterday
1
@WendyG What the librarian actually said was ask first, don't just drop the books off.
– Bob Brown
15 hours ago
@BobBrown but expect the answer to be no, as they have most of the books already
– WendyG
12 hours ago
add a comment |
1
I almost wrote this in my answer and I am not sure if it is better to give them to the professor or directly to the library. I think there are advantages to both.
– StrongBad♦
yesterday
2
@StrongBad Right. The library will make the books more widely available, but the professor can lend for an entire term, which most libraries will not do. I came down on the side of libraries because they're equipped to manage the lending of books. The library at my school has a "two hour reserve" category; that makes the same book available to many students during a school term.
– Bob Brown
yesterday
See the answer from the librarian, about most likely not wanting them.
– WendyG
yesterday
1
@WendyG What the librarian actually said was ask first, don't just drop the books off.
– Bob Brown
15 hours ago
@BobBrown but expect the answer to be no, as they have most of the books already
– WendyG
12 hours ago
1
1
I almost wrote this in my answer and I am not sure if it is better to give them to the professor or directly to the library. I think there are advantages to both.
– StrongBad♦
yesterday
I almost wrote this in my answer and I am not sure if it is better to give them to the professor or directly to the library. I think there are advantages to both.
– StrongBad♦
yesterday
2
2
@StrongBad Right. The library will make the books more widely available, but the professor can lend for an entire term, which most libraries will not do. I came down on the side of libraries because they're equipped to manage the lending of books. The library at my school has a "two hour reserve" category; that makes the same book available to many students during a school term.
– Bob Brown
yesterday
@StrongBad Right. The library will make the books more widely available, but the professor can lend for an entire term, which most libraries will not do. I came down on the side of libraries because they're equipped to manage the lending of books. The library at my school has a "two hour reserve" category; that makes the same book available to many students during a school term.
– Bob Brown
yesterday
See the answer from the librarian, about most likely not wanting them.
– WendyG
yesterday
See the answer from the librarian, about most likely not wanting them.
– WendyG
yesterday
1
1
@WendyG What the librarian actually said was ask first, don't just drop the books off.
– Bob Brown
15 hours ago
@WendyG What the librarian actually said was ask first, don't just drop the books off.
– Bob Brown
15 hours ago
@BobBrown but expect the answer to be no, as they have most of the books already
– WendyG
12 hours ago
@BobBrown but expect the answer to be no, as they have most of the books already
– WendyG
12 hours ago
add a comment |
Donate to other countries
I'm not sure if this kind of donation is available in other countries, but in my country (Vietnam), there is an organization collects donated English textbooks from the US and ship to libraries in universities in our country. This solves the need of English textbooks in poor and developing countries.
You can visit Vietnam Book Drive if you are interested in this idea.
Disclaimer: I used to work here as a webmaster a couple years ago.
add a comment |
Donate to other countries
I'm not sure if this kind of donation is available in other countries, but in my country (Vietnam), there is an organization collects donated English textbooks from the US and ship to libraries in universities in our country. This solves the need of English textbooks in poor and developing countries.
You can visit Vietnam Book Drive if you are interested in this idea.
Disclaimer: I used to work here as a webmaster a couple years ago.
add a comment |
Donate to other countries
I'm not sure if this kind of donation is available in other countries, but in my country (Vietnam), there is an organization collects donated English textbooks from the US and ship to libraries in universities in our country. This solves the need of English textbooks in poor and developing countries.
You can visit Vietnam Book Drive if you are interested in this idea.
Disclaimer: I used to work here as a webmaster a couple years ago.
Donate to other countries
I'm not sure if this kind of donation is available in other countries, but in my country (Vietnam), there is an organization collects donated English textbooks from the US and ship to libraries in universities in our country. This solves the need of English textbooks in poor and developing countries.
You can visit Vietnam Book Drive if you are interested in this idea.
Disclaimer: I used to work here as a webmaster a couple years ago.
answered yesterday
OokerOoker
4,54053191
4,54053191
add a comment |
add a comment |
Options:
In priority order:
Put them in a bookcase in your office and use them as desk references. Textbooks are valuable resources. You become familiar with them. So good to retain them. Have your assistant order bookcase if needed.
Box them and store them.
Give them to the company/site library.
Give them away to other students, professors, etc.
The reason for the priority is that the company funded your education and you are most familiar with the books. So the most fitting is for you to retain them.
Finally something about this question strikes me as strange. As if you want the $$. Or don't appreciate the company funded education. Or have a pointed aversion to physical texts.
New contributor
4
Of course I appreciate the subsidized education! In fact, my reason for asking this question is an awareness of my good fortune and desire to extend it as far as possible.
– Peter Schilling
2 days ago
21
Consider deleting the last paragraph of your answer ("Finally ..."). It doesn't contribute to your answer and seems to be based on having misread the OP's motives.
– Lawrence
2 days ago
add a comment |
Options:
In priority order:
Put them in a bookcase in your office and use them as desk references. Textbooks are valuable resources. You become familiar with them. So good to retain them. Have your assistant order bookcase if needed.
Box them and store them.
Give them to the company/site library.
Give them away to other students, professors, etc.
The reason for the priority is that the company funded your education and you are most familiar with the books. So the most fitting is for you to retain them.
Finally something about this question strikes me as strange. As if you want the $$. Or don't appreciate the company funded education. Or have a pointed aversion to physical texts.
New contributor
4
Of course I appreciate the subsidized education! In fact, my reason for asking this question is an awareness of my good fortune and desire to extend it as far as possible.
– Peter Schilling
2 days ago
21
Consider deleting the last paragraph of your answer ("Finally ..."). It doesn't contribute to your answer and seems to be based on having misread the OP's motives.
– Lawrence
2 days ago
add a comment |
Options:
In priority order:
Put them in a bookcase in your office and use them as desk references. Textbooks are valuable resources. You become familiar with them. So good to retain them. Have your assistant order bookcase if needed.
Box them and store them.
Give them to the company/site library.
Give them away to other students, professors, etc.
The reason for the priority is that the company funded your education and you are most familiar with the books. So the most fitting is for you to retain them.
Finally something about this question strikes me as strange. As if you want the $$. Or don't appreciate the company funded education. Or have a pointed aversion to physical texts.
New contributor
Options:
In priority order:
Put them in a bookcase in your office and use them as desk references. Textbooks are valuable resources. You become familiar with them. So good to retain them. Have your assistant order bookcase if needed.
Box them and store them.
Give them to the company/site library.
Give them away to other students, professors, etc.
The reason for the priority is that the company funded your education and you are most familiar with the books. So the most fitting is for you to retain them.
Finally something about this question strikes me as strange. As if you want the $$. Or don't appreciate the company funded education. Or have a pointed aversion to physical texts.
New contributor
New contributor
answered 2 days ago
guestguest
1533
1533
New contributor
New contributor
4
Of course I appreciate the subsidized education! In fact, my reason for asking this question is an awareness of my good fortune and desire to extend it as far as possible.
– Peter Schilling
2 days ago
21
Consider deleting the last paragraph of your answer ("Finally ..."). It doesn't contribute to your answer and seems to be based on having misread the OP's motives.
– Lawrence
2 days ago
add a comment |
4
Of course I appreciate the subsidized education! In fact, my reason for asking this question is an awareness of my good fortune and desire to extend it as far as possible.
– Peter Schilling
2 days ago
21
Consider deleting the last paragraph of your answer ("Finally ..."). It doesn't contribute to your answer and seems to be based on having misread the OP's motives.
– Lawrence
2 days ago
4
4
Of course I appreciate the subsidized education! In fact, my reason for asking this question is an awareness of my good fortune and desire to extend it as far as possible.
– Peter Schilling
2 days ago
Of course I appreciate the subsidized education! In fact, my reason for asking this question is an awareness of my good fortune and desire to extend it as far as possible.
– Peter Schilling
2 days ago
21
21
Consider deleting the last paragraph of your answer ("Finally ..."). It doesn't contribute to your answer and seems to be based on having misread the OP's motives.
– Lawrence
2 days ago
Consider deleting the last paragraph of your answer ("Finally ..."). It doesn't contribute to your answer and seems to be based on having misread the OP's motives.
– Lawrence
2 days ago
add a comment |
Provided you clear it with the appropriate person, sell the books and give the proceeds - in your name and/or in the name of your employer - to a good cause run by your university: scholarship fund etc.
add a comment |
Provided you clear it with the appropriate person, sell the books and give the proceeds - in your name and/or in the name of your employer - to a good cause run by your university: scholarship fund etc.
add a comment |
Provided you clear it with the appropriate person, sell the books and give the proceeds - in your name and/or in the name of your employer - to a good cause run by your university: scholarship fund etc.
Provided you clear it with the appropriate person, sell the books and give the proceeds - in your name and/or in the name of your employer - to a good cause run by your university: scholarship fund etc.
answered 2 days ago
ZeroTheHeroZeroTheHero
90311
90311
add a comment |
add a comment |
If there are graduate students or PhD studens working as TAs at the university, they might have use for it when teaching.
I recall teaching a class as a post-doc, and had difficulties finding the book I was supposed to be teaching on (I did of course not want to buy it with my private money). There might even be a small collection of course books available to TAs, so your book might be a good addition there.
add a comment |
If there are graduate students or PhD studens working as TAs at the university, they might have use for it when teaching.
I recall teaching a class as a post-doc, and had difficulties finding the book I was supposed to be teaching on (I did of course not want to buy it with my private money). There might even be a small collection of course books available to TAs, so your book might be a good addition there.
add a comment |
If there are graduate students or PhD studens working as TAs at the university, they might have use for it when teaching.
I recall teaching a class as a post-doc, and had difficulties finding the book I was supposed to be teaching on (I did of course not want to buy it with my private money). There might even be a small collection of course books available to TAs, so your book might be a good addition there.
If there are graduate students or PhD studens working as TAs at the university, they might have use for it when teaching.
I recall teaching a class as a post-doc, and had difficulties finding the book I was supposed to be teaching on (I did of course not want to buy it with my private money). There might even be a small collection of course books available to TAs, so your book might be a good addition there.
answered 19 hours ago
Per AlexanderssonPer Alexandersson
2,6151419
2,6151419
add a comment |
add a comment |
Some colleges & universities have "textbook libraries", separate from the main academic library, that will accept donations of textbooks. In later semesters, these libraries then lend the textbooks back out to students for whom buying the textbooks would present a financial hardship.
Such initiatives can be difficult to track down, as they're often run on a volunteer basis. To find whether your institution has such a program, search on Google for "[institution name] textbook library", or make inquiries at the dean of students' office, the academic library, the office of financial aid, and/or the student government association.
add a comment |
Some colleges & universities have "textbook libraries", separate from the main academic library, that will accept donations of textbooks. In later semesters, these libraries then lend the textbooks back out to students for whom buying the textbooks would present a financial hardship.
Such initiatives can be difficult to track down, as they're often run on a volunteer basis. To find whether your institution has such a program, search on Google for "[institution name] textbook library", or make inquiries at the dean of students' office, the academic library, the office of financial aid, and/or the student government association.
add a comment |
Some colleges & universities have "textbook libraries", separate from the main academic library, that will accept donations of textbooks. In later semesters, these libraries then lend the textbooks back out to students for whom buying the textbooks would present a financial hardship.
Such initiatives can be difficult to track down, as they're often run on a volunteer basis. To find whether your institution has such a program, search on Google for "[institution name] textbook library", or make inquiries at the dean of students' office, the academic library, the office of financial aid, and/or the student government association.
Some colleges & universities have "textbook libraries", separate from the main academic library, that will accept donations of textbooks. In later semesters, these libraries then lend the textbooks back out to students for whom buying the textbooks would present a financial hardship.
Such initiatives can be difficult to track down, as they're often run on a volunteer basis. To find whether your institution has such a program, search on Google for "[institution name] textbook library", or make inquiries at the dean of students' office, the academic library, the office of financial aid, and/or the student government association.
answered 9 hours ago
Michael SeifertMichael Seifert
1,515514
1,515514
add a comment |
add a comment |
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31
Its not that many books is it? (1) Prominently display in your office as evidence of your company-supported education. (2) Lend to others in the company, and don't care if they come back. (3) Start a local library of technical books.
– Jon Custer
2 days ago
7
I like @JonCuster's suggestion #2, but if you're looking for biggest impact on academia, donating the books to a relevant department or deserving students probably goes further.
– Anyon
2 days ago
5
I doubt that the policy is worded in precisely that way because "any way" would include gaining knowledge from them.
– stendarr
yesterday
4
I've found they can make great monitor stands.
– T.E.D.
yesterday
3
@Mazura Since its the employer paying, they would have to treat the sales from the textbooks as wages to the employee for tax and other legal purposes; they might not even really care about the employee profiting from selling a textbook, but having this policy makes sure the company stays in compliance with the laws. Could also prevent fraud where an employee purchased unnecessary books to then resell them, but I think this is highly unlikely to be the true motivation for the policy.
– Bryan Krause
yesterday