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Watson, Bruce – Phi Delta Kappan, 1990
Between the infancy and the adulthood of online communications stand years of generational haggling between educators raised on the book and those hooked on the byte. The telecommunications infrastructure (phone lines, electronic bulletin boards, and international networks) can already help teachers bring within reach a world of people and…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Educational Technology, Electronic Mail, Elementary Secondary Education
Riel, Margaret – Writing Notebook: Visions for Learning, 1993
Describes how, by participating in telecommunication networks such as the Learning Network, students benefit through defining themselves for other students who live in distant regions, and through new understandings of themselves in relationship to others. (SR)
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Cultural Differences, Culture Contact, Electronic Mail
Peer reviewedRogers, Ken W. – Internet Research, 1993
Describes how the Commerce Department's Economic Bulletin Board has been linked to the Internet to further the dissemination of government information. Topics discussed include network services; operational constraints; technical issues; costs; identifying potential customers and their information needs; and future plans. (Contains six…
Descriptors: Computer Networks, Costs, Electronic Mail, Futures (of Society)
Peer reviewedReynolds, Nedra; And Others – College Composition and Communication, 1994
Presents a transcript of the electronic discourse in response to Lester Faigley's recent book, "Fragments of Rationality," produced by a networked graduate seminar in composition studies. Discusses the impact of postmodernism on the composition classroom and the potential usefulness of similar networked attempts to write collaboratively.…
Descriptors: Electronic Mail, English Curriculum, English Instruction, Higher Education
Peer reviewedSernak, Kathleen S.; Wolfe, Carol S. – Journal of Technology and Teacher Education, 1998
Examines e-mail as a viable instructional tool to enable preservice teachers to bridge multicultural-education theory and practice. Explores students' construction of knowledge about diversity, and considers the development of community, professional and personal links between Saginaw Valley State University and Purdue University students…
Descriptors: Community Development, Community Role, Cultural Pluralism, Electronic Mail
Adams, Helen – Book Report, 1999
Describes the Hewlett Packard (HP) E-Mail Mentoring Program. Lists the program's four main components (teacher contacts, student participants, HP employee members, HP itself) and the application process. Relates how a library media specialist at Rosholt (Wisconsin) High School experienced the program. Concludes with the benefits of…
Descriptors: Computer Mediated Communication, Computer Uses in Education, Electronic Mail, High Schools
Peer reviewedDale, Jack – Canadian Social Studies, 1999
Illustrates the pros and cons of e-mail in the social studies classroom; in particular, the problems concerning what e-mail service a school should subscribe to. Lists different precautions schools must take when finally deciding on the appropriate e-mail system. Provides names of organizations that have established databases of e-mail projects.…
Descriptors: Electronic Mail, Elementary Secondary Education, Internet, School Funds
Peer reviewedRhodes, David G. – American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education, 1999
Describes an approach to problem-based learning (PBL) in the pharmacy curriculum that utilizes electronic communications to reduce the personnel costs associated with PBL. Comparison with convention PBL found substantial reduction in personnel time. Discusses application as a supplement to didactic instruction and the method's feasibility for both…
Descriptors: Cost Effectiveness, Curriculum Development, Distance Education, Electronic Mail
Peer reviewedZhang, Yin – Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 2000
Reviews previous studies that used the Internet for survey research, discusses new methodological issues and problems, and presents a case study that seeks possible solutions. Topics include biased samples and biased returns, access to the Internet, effect of self-selection, validity of respondents, Web browsers, authentication, log files, and…
Descriptors: Access to Computers, Bias, Case Studies, Electronic Mail
Peer reviewedDale, Jack – Canadian Social Studies, 1999
Characterizes the Internet as a resource that contains both good and bad information. Provides a variety of educational websites, such as the National Council for the Social Studies home page, with accompanying descriptions in order to demonstrate that there are good resources that social studies teachers can utilize in their classrooms. (CMK)
Descriptors: Electronic Mail, Elementary Secondary Education, Geography, Information Sources
Muswazi, Paiki – Information Outlook, 2000
Reviews the history of libraries in Swaziland and discusses the introduction of computers in 1974 and Internet access in 1996. Topics include censorship laws that have restricted access; e-commerce; e-mail; obstacles, including limited user access in libraries and lack of computer literacy; and suggestions for extending Internet information…
Descriptors: Access to Computers, Access to Information, Censorship, Computer Literacy
Peer reviewedMalinsky, Kathleen P. – Journal of Gay and Lesbian Social Services, 1997
E-mail interviews with 27 self-identified lesbian and bisexual female high school students define homophobia and heterosexism in high schools, explore the impacts of homophobia and heterosexism on students, and propose ways to combat both homophobia and heterosexism in the schools. (SLD)
Descriptors: Bisexuality, Educational Experience, Educational Practices, Electronic Mail
Peer reviewedStrever, Jan; Newman, Kathryn – Journal of College Reading and Learning, 1997
Describes an extension of dialog journals, audience journals. States that, with the advent of e-mail, English-as-a-Second-Language (ESL) students can send their journals to an "E-partner," and they can also make meaning by summarizing their E-partners' journal entries which are sent to both E-partner and instructor. Suggests that this…
Descriptors: Audience Response, Cooperative Learning, Dialog Journals, Discourse Communities
Bergan, Helen – Momentum, 1997
Reviews four key areas of funding development that can be enhanced through Internet use: communication, in particular E-mail; networking through listservs and mailing lists; research, using search engines such as Alta Vista; and promotion, through the creation of Web sites. (JDI)
Descriptors: Catholic Schools, Educational Finance, Educational Strategies, Educational Technology
Peer reviewedSullivan, Laura L. – Computers and Composition, 1997
Describes a series of encounters resulting from a World Wide Web hypertext project created in a graduate course on electronic culture. Discusses implications of the "male gaze" in the milieu of the Web. Concludes that ending cybersexism entails structural and psychological changes. Intersperses personal reflections and e-mail posts from men with a…
Descriptors: Electronic Mail, Graduate Study, Higher Education, Hypermedia


