Highlights

  • Faculty became more cost conscious over the course of the pandemic.
  • Usage of open educational resources increased by between 10 % and 15 %.
  • The percentage of students spending less than $100 a semester doubled to 33 %.
  • First-year students are spending the most and saw no savings since 2020.
  • More first and second-year students are going without required materials.

 

Abstract

This article compares the results of a pair of course material surveys for faculty and students conducted before and after the COVID-19 pandemic by academic librarians at a private liberal arts college in the northeastern U.S. Findings indicate that overall students are spending significantly less per semester on required course materials, but some are going without significantly more required materials due to cost. Furthermore, first-year students were not found to be spending any less than prior to the pandemic and, as a result, spent significantly more in 2023 than most of their more experienced peers. The decrease in average student spending corresponds with our findings that faculty became more cost conscious and expanded efforts to make required materials affordable by assigning more OER and fewer materials which they consider to be overpriced or unaffordable. As a result of these and other strategies, by 2023 significantly more faculty had been able to develop courses for which the required materials cost nothing for students. The authors discuss the importance of these and additional findings, placing them in the context of similar surveys and suggesting ways that the data can be used to inform current library practices and future research.

 

Christopher A. Barnes, Scott Vine, Ryan Nadeau, Assessing textbook affordability before and after the COVID-19 pandemic: Results of student and faculty surveys, The Journal of Academic Librarianship, Volume 50, Issue 2, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.acalib.2024.102864