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3 answers

As a teacher I can say no, since you can call the company and order more copies anyway (sometimes for free). Half.com is part of E-bay and I've even bought teacher's editions there. It's not quite like Ferris Buller's Day Off, LOL. Teachers editions get lost all the time- or a school system switches texts. A good teacher doesn't just use a textbook to judge whether a student has mastered standards of leraning. The only one a student using a teacher text would be cheating would be his/her self since this work is generally for review and the answers are there anyway. Also, other than math texts, the teacher's guide wouldn't help you on tests or with higher level thinking questions which show a student's knowledge and understanding. As an experienced teacher, I'd know exactly who was cheating from a teacher's manual the moment I noticed a discrepancy between the homework answers and the verbal answers in class and the essays or projects they submitted. As far as college texts go, I'm thinking that professors wouldn't really use textbook answers or teacher guides, for that matter. I've never had one who did. They usually create the curriculum themselves and ask more complex assessments or long term projects. You can order many teacher guides via the internet.

2007-03-15 09:04:15 · answer #1 · answered by CandyLandCondoResident 3 · 0 0

Are you selling High School or College level books? If they are college, you can contact Texas Book Company and they will give you a premium price for books they are looking for. Contact me if you would like more details.

2007-03-14 13:55:41 · answer #2 · answered by Snides 2 · 0 1

Why would it be? I'm sure teachers may be interested and for that matter some students may be interested as well.

I don't see an issue with it-- you still have to pass the tests.

2007-03-14 13:50:34 · answer #3 · answered by dapixelator 6 · 0 1

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