| COLLEGE |
 |
Beyond Tuition
To cut costs, buy textbooks
online and leave the car at home.By Vickie
Elmer
|
Julie Davis is one college student who knows the
value of a dollar. Davis is working three part-time jobs
this summer to pay for her fall semester at Indiana
University-Purdue University Indianapolis. She estimates
it will cost her almost $7,000 in tuition, apartment
rent and miscellaneous expenses. To save money last
year, Davis rarely ate meals on campus (too pricey) and
sometimes borrowed textbooks from friends rather than
shelling out $125 or more for new ones. "I buy stuff,
but I make sure it's what I really want," says Davis,
19, a health-administration major who saved the money to
buy her 1999 Pontiac Sunfire.
Not every student needs to be as thrifty as Davis,
but every family can trim college expenses beyond
tuition and housing. The College Board estimates that a
moderate budget for miscellaneous expenses (excluding
transportation) is $3,700 per school year. Mark
Kantrowitz, of FinAid.org, says that families should
budget $250 a month for incidentals other than
books.
In a survey conducted by Zogby International,
students and parents agreed that their biggest expense
other than tuition, room and board, and books was car
upkeep. You'll save a bundle if your kids hoof it or
follow Bianca Glenn's example: She buys a monthly bus
pass for $50 to attend Oakland Community College, which
is 13 miles from her home in Detroit.
Buy the book
Cars may cost more, but the price of textbooks was
the most shocking expense to the parents and students
Zogby surveyed. A study last year by the State Public
Interest Research Groups estimates students spend an
average of $900 per year on books. To save money,
students like Davis share texts. Others set up more
formal systems for cutting out the middleman. At the
University of Michigan, students auction books at
TheDiag.com.
The Internet is fertile ground for textbook bargains.
Before you start shopping, get the title, author and
ISBN number of each book you need. Then head to sites
such as Craigslist.org, eBay's Half.com
and PIRG's CampusBookSwap.com. BigWords.com will search the Web for
the best prices on textbooks.
Take a look at return policies before buying. Some
sellers give a full refund if a book is returned within
30 days -- a boon if your child decides to drop the
class. Keep in mind that textbook prices are highest
online in August, September, January and February,
according to Half.com. So if your kids know they will be
taking a class the following semester, they should
confirm the text with the professor and buy it online in
mid semester.
Students can recoup some money by selling their used
books informally or online. But if they plan to do so,
they should use their books gently, says Marie O'Malley,
of Nellie Mae, the student-loan-financing agency.
"Bookstores and students don't want books that are
heavily marked, or that have torn pages or broken
bindings."
The Zogby study reports that 89% of college students
have cell phones. One dad complained that the most
shocking cost he encountered was "that darned cell-phone
bill." To avoid surprises, compare cell-phone plans this
summer at sites such as BillSaver.com and MyRatePlan.com. And check sites such
as Cellreception.com to make sure that
there's good service on campus; some carriers entice
students with special discounts or enhanced service.
Above all, let your kids know that if they exceed
their plan's allotted minutes, they'll pay the extra
charges.
|