The University plans to introduce UR Essentials — a program that will provide textbooks and other class materials to undergraduate students as part of their tuition starting Fall 2025.

Through the program, students will rent their course materials, from any publisher, from Barnes & Noble.

Once students have registered for classes, Barnes & Noble will receive course lists and begin preparing materials. One month before classes start, students will receive an email asking if they would prefer to pick up their materials in the store or have them shipped directly. Digital materials will be made available through Blackboard.

Undergraduate students will be automatically enrolled in the program, though they can choose to opt out. Opting out will not reduce fees, as the cost of the program is wrapped into tuition.

If students decide to drop a class, and have already picked up their materials, they should return those materials within 48 hours. Barnes & Noble will swap out the old materials for new ones for any switched classes.

While the program will provide all textbooks, e-textbooks, manuals, and access codes, it will not provide single use materials such as lab goggles, dissection kits, molecular model kits, engineering kits, and nursing kits.

Students will be required to return textbooks before the last day of final exams in a given semester, regardless of the length of the course.

If students want to keep their textbooks at the end of the semester, they can purchase them at a reduced price point.

 



UR Essentials to provide textbooks for free

The motivation for TOOP’s production is the opposite of the traditional gender roles the plot reifies. It is a painting of contradictions. Read More

UR Essentials to provide textbooks for free

One quiet season for U.S. impacts does not mean climate scientists were wrong. It means that we got lucky. Scientists predicted favorable conditions for intense hurricanes, and we got three Category 5 hurricanes. Read More

UR Essentials to provide textbooks for free

Perhaps if this movie had good music or better dialogue it would be slightly enjoyable, but the real culprit was the exceedingly cliche plot lines, uninspired characters, and the overwhelming lack of Christmas authenticity.  Read More