Welcome to the home of the Canadian Roundtable on Academic Materials!
Simply by participating in the national dialogue about academic materials you are already part of the solution. If there is any way we may better facilitate your participation in CRAM please do not hesitate to contact us.
A federal election means that politicians are listening. It is important to reach out to them and explain how a simple regulatory change will mean more money in your pocket, without them having to spend a single tax dollar. Click here to find a web form that lets you send candidates in your riding a message asking them to support lower textbook prices. Please take a second to fill it out, and help make textbooks cheaper.

In November 2007, representatives from a number of Canadian student associations, university bookstores and publishers met to discuss issues relating to academic materials. The meeting was arranged by the University of Alberta, and reflected the cooperative relationship between the Bookstore and the Students’ Union at that school. It also reflected a joint desire by those parties to establish a national forum to address the fact that the price of academic materials is proving to be a large and increasing barrier to affordable education. The meeting was so successful that the participants decided to create an ongoing medium for cooperation between Canadian bookstores, student associations and faculty representatives; know as the Canadian Roundtable on Academic Materials (CRAM).
On August 22nd, 2008 CRAM passed another milestone with the formal adoption of a set of Key Principles. The Key Principles are the first product of the national dialogue on academic materials and they will guide the dialogue into the future as CRAM expands to include more post-secondary schools from across Canada.
For the full document, please read: CRAM_KeyPrinciples.pdf