Posted on 08/26/2006 10:22:51 PM PDT by jdm
A new policy by Internet trading behemoth eBay that bans homeschool teachers' texts from its auctions is prompting a tirade of complaints from the company's faithful customers.
"Really the homeschooling community is a huge participant in eBay when you get to thinking about it," said one customer who was identified as "Angelwings" on an eBay blog. "We buy textbooks naturally but we also purchase items like microscopes, slides, globes, maps, manipulatives, educational games, reading books, supplies for our classrooms stickers, idea books, folders, sheet protectors, school supplies, software, educational movies, models, post cards the list is enormous."
The policy, which is inclusive of all teachers' texts, was made known recently as those who were auctioning various books watched as their postings were deleted.
Another homeschooler on the blog said she questioned eBay when her listings were cancelled.
"They told me that it fell under their heading of 'illegal, dangerous, offensive, or potentially infringing,'" she said. "What are they thinking? I have a mess of curriculum here that I can't sell, and needing money from it to buy curriculum for the new school year."
The response from the company was posted for others to see.
"As you may know, eBay does not permit items that are illegal, dangerous, offensive, or potentially infringing. Additionally, eBay has just recently made the decision to prohibit the sale of Teacher's Editions of textbooks and solutions manuals that are intended solely for use by teachers. Since eBay strives to be a level-playing field, all Teacher's Edition textbooks, manuals and guides will be covered under this policy. Unfortunately, home schooling Teacher's Editions are not exempt from this policy and this policy will apply to all grade levels."
The company continued that those products often contain "special answer keys, exams, teaching tips, and guides."
And, it noted, "multiple organizations and publishers have voiced their concern to us over such books that may only be purchased through educational institutions by teachers."
"Where do they get off telling me that I don't have the right to buy, sell, or own a teacher's manual??? How could I teach my children without it???" another blogger asked.
Still another reported having a few 2006 teachers' edition textbooks for college classes pulled from the site.
"Now I'm stuck with them," the writer said.
"We are a major buying and selling force on eBay & once I got to thinking of all the things we purchase just for ourselves and our school it's amazing," said Angelwings. "I'm in the same boat as many of you .I've got three grade levels of books here I need to sell in order to purchase our supplies for next year."
WorldNetDaily did not get an immediate response from eBay about the situation. The website accepts e-mail questions but responds in 24-48 hours.
Its website explanation is straightforward.
"Teacher's editions of textbooks and solutions manuals that are intended solely for use by teachers are not permitted by eBay."
And it notifies users that "listing cancellation, forfeit of eBay fees on cancelled listings, limits on account privileges, account suspension" are all possible results.
"As a homeschooler I believe this directly discriminates against me since I have used Ebay numerous times to both buy and sell homeschool curricula. As a budget conscious homeschooling mother I like to buy used materials as often as possible. This means buying the teacher's materials used on Ebay and purchasing new workbooks directly from the publisher or distributor," Dana wrote.
eBay did offer a recourse for further concerns:
"We appreciate the fact that you may disagree with eBay's decision to establish this policy. If you would like to see these policies change, or have suggestions on how to make the site better, you may want to submit your feelings by completing the form at the following URL."
eBay's overview of prohibited items includes animals, artifacts, autographed items, academic software, bootleg recordings, credit cards, drugs and paraphernalia, government IDs, lockpicking devices, human remains, police-related items, used clothing and used cosmetics, among others.
One blogger noted that public school interests have been opposing homeschooling more and more, as homeschooling as grown substantially in recent years. Recent estimates have put homeschool attendance in the U.S. at more than 2.5 million. And the same comment noted book publishers also dislike having the products re-sold.
A public school teacher defended the policy, saying she cannot get a teacher's edition from a publisher unless she provides proof of her teaching employment. "It is quite costly for publishers to research and develop curricula and it is copyrighted."
But there also are other auctions that do allow the sale of homeschool texts. One location, which does require purchasers to be 18, is Schoolbookauction.com. Another one is Homeschoolbid.com and observers said there are many more available through an Internet search.
The Home School Legal Defense Association said it was aware of the situation.
"We have received many complaints about the eBay policy and we are actively working on a solution," Media Relations Director Ian Slatter told WND. That group is the largest organization of homeschoolers in the United States, with more than 80,000 member families.
ping.
Standards should be met somewhere...
This is a bunch of horse hockey. I'm not a home schooler, but my kid attends a private Christian school and I needed to replace an a Beka book of his, and a Beka is one of the more popular curriculums for home schoolers as well, and I found it on eBay and I just did a search on eBay after seeing this post, and there are 2,056 a Beka textbooks up for auction and 1,573 available for a set price at this very moment. And a whole bunch of them have "home school" in the listing.
Strange, seeing I've sold TONS of used baby clothing on ebay as recently as 2 weeks ago dating to 3 years ago.
What eBay needs to do is set up a system of certifying home school parents and certified teachers, and then limiting the bidding for such items to those users.
Then again, the cost of setting up such a system would be more than the fees generated, probably.
Boycott them and make it to the news so their stock drops like Saddam into a spider hole.
Boycott them and make it to the news so their stock drops like Saddam into a spider hole.
craigslist.org
Careful not to check the wrong box or you will get "adult content" you might not want, but you can sell almost ANYTHING on craigslist.
And unless it's real estate, it's FREE!
I would be prepared to wager that this person's auctions were probably pulled for another reason than home schooling.
The policy refers to teacher's editions of textbooks.
Don't sell them as textbooks. Sell them as Guides to Learning, with a note to contact seller as to content. Or, sell them on Bidville or AllBookStores.com
Just had this happen to a friend and she sent me a copy of the email.
It's the teacher's editions and solution manuals they've prohibited.
I noted that in post 12.
The title you created had to be changed to the published title.
Please do not alter titles.
What are they trying to prevent? Does eBay think some student is going to fork over the $ to buy the book(s) particular to his/her class(es) - and note, the correct printing/editions of them to match his/her course. Then what, read them (heaven forbid!) or simply memorize the answers?
Or is it more likely kids these days would forgo spending real $ and print media in general and just google what he/she needed to know?
The only slice they are stopping (while frustrating many teachers) is the very small percentage of kids bent on rote memorization. All the teachers have to do to thwart that is mix up the questions, don't ask them in the same order as in the guide/examples. Then, if the kids memorize the questions and answers such that they can handle them any any order... Yikes, they've actually learned something in spite of their best efforts to cheat! Ok, maybe they haven't learn the topic as thoroughly nor as in-depth as you might like but still... With that demographic, I'd take even that as a win.
Really silly, ill-concieved policy IMHO eBay.
How do you propose to supply the home school teacher with the appropriate book to check the work of the homeschool student? That is the purpose of the teacher's edition. eBay is making it impossible for the homeschool teacher to purchase the required editions.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.