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Trushell, John; Reymond, Christine; Burrell, Clare – Computers & Education, 1998
Considers questions posed by students during e-mail tutorials to elicit information from guest lecturers and the use of that information by students in their essays. Findings indicate: tutees tend to pose questions to elicit information or clarification rather than to elicit opinions of the guest lecturer; and two-thirds of tutees' essays cited…
Descriptors: Computer Mediated Communication, Computer Uses in Education, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Electronic Mail
Kassel, Amelia – Online, 1998
Discusses accessing the Internet via satellite with the Hughes Network Systems DirecPC satellite dish, focusing on applications for satellite dishes, pricing, how it works, siting and hardware requirements, disadvantages, security issues, and availability. Provides tips for enhancing DirecPC speed and compares DirecPC and integrated services…
Descriptors: Access to Information, Communications Satellites, Comparative Analysis, Computer Peripherals
Jasinski, Marie; Thiagarajan, Sivasailam – Educational Technology, 2000
Focuses on the use of e-mail games for learning. Discusses terminology; reasons for using virtual games; promoting person-to-person interaction online; how to play an e-mail game, including three examples of specific games; player reactions; design components; the functions for facilitating an e-mail game; and the game as an excuse for debriefing.…
Descriptors: Computer Games, Computer Oriented Programs, Computer Software, Electronic Mail
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Dougherty, William V. – NASSP Bulletin, 2000
When assessing teacher candidates, there are eight computer-literacy areas to consider: word processing, databases, spreadsheets, presentation programs, online service access, e-mail, trouble-shooting common computer problems, and computer software usage and evaluation. Finalists should be able to demonstrate these competencies. (MLH)
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Computer Literacy, Electronic Mail, Elementary Secondary Education
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Hahn, Karla – Internet Research, 1998
A qualitative study of a successful e-mail mediated help service which incorporated content analysis of service logs and interviews with staff and users revealed two models of ideal service exchanges: concise question/response dyads and extended dialog. Staff tend to consider dialog typical, while users almost exclusively consider the minimum…
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Computer Mediated Communication, Computer Oriented Programs, Electronic Mail
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Tao, Liqing; Reinking, David – Reading and Writing Quarterly: Overcoming Learning Difficulties, 2000
Highlights some tentative conclusions that can be drawn from current research, providing a starting point for considering what e-mail may have to offer literacy educators. Suggests: e-mail facilitates positive classroom interactions; e-mail creates a more democratic context for discussion; e-mail enhances opportunities for collaboration; e-mail…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Classroom Environment, Electronic Mail, Elementary Secondary Education
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Spires, Hiller A.; Mason, Cheryl; Crissman, Cris; Jackson, Alecia – Research and Teaching in Developmental Education, 2001
Reports on a study at North Carolina State University that examined the use of electronic mail to encourage critical literacy among college developmental reading students. States that randomly selected students were paired with professionals who served as online mentors. Reports that, after one semester, this group scored higher than the control…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Developmental Studies Programs, Educational Technology, Electronic Mail
Stiver, Jan – Phi Delta Kappan, 1996
Using ingenuity and an IBM grant, an assistant professor of special education paired 40 teacher education students in her methods courses with middle-school writing partners from the teachers' classes for moderately handicapped students. Using electronic mail, the pairs communicated often on various topics. Friendships developed, along with…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Education Majors, Electronic Mail, Friendship
Scott, Jane – School Library Media Activities Monthly, 1996
Provides examples of Internet lessons for elementary school students using electronic mail. Projects include sending messages to a listserv to ask schools to send temperature reports; seeking contacts at a school where a story took place; assembling a list of spring-related words and pictures; and soliciting greetings for a school's anniversary.…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Mediated Communication, Electronic Mail
Laughon, Sally; Hanson, William R. – MultiMedia Schools, 1996
Alerts educators to potentially objectionable Internet materials. Electronic mail, newsgroups, file transfer protocol sites, Internet Relay Chat (IRC), Multiuser Dungeons (MUDs), and Multiuser Object Oriented (MOOs) are services whose user anonymity can embolden discussions regarding sex, prejudice, religious dogma, and gambling. Teachers may wish…
Descriptors: Access to Information, Child Welfare, Computer Uses in Education, Electronic Mail
Thomasson, Suzanne; Truett, Carol, Ed. – Learning & Leading with Technology, 1996
The Internet offers high schools access to a variety of up-to-date information on any subject and the ability to communicate worldwide. Discussion includes electronic mail; Telnet, Gopher, and Veronica; the World Wide Web; types of Internet connections; and problems with Internet use. (AEF)
Descriptors: Access to Information, Computer Mediated Communication, Computer Uses in Education, Electronic Mail
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Whitaker, Elaine; Hill, Elaine – Action in Teacher Education, 1996
A high school and a university teacher converse via e-mail concerning their cooperative project in electronic literacy. The conversation highlights the frustrations of system crashes, student successes and failures, and the beginning of one teacher's dissertation. References to technology include experiences with e-mail, an LCD panel, and closed…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Computer Literacy, Computer Uses in Education, Electronic Mail
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Bromley, Rebekah V.; Bowles, Dorothy – Newspaper Research Journal, 1995
Explores the question of whether time spent on the Internet and other online services will come at the expense of traditional media. Shows that during the start-up period for Internet use, the use of traditional media remained the same. (TB)
Descriptors: Broadcast Journalism, Electronic Mail, Higher Education, Internet
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Inglis, Alistair – British Journal of Educational Technology, 1998
Reports on providing visual feedback to art students by sending compressed digital video clips as attachments to e-mail messages. Concludes that, although bandwidth constraints of dial-up links and the time taken for compression limit the amount of video that can be transmitted, the transmission of video by e-mail is technically feasible. (PEN)
Descriptors: Art Education, Assignments, Computer Assisted Instruction, Distance Education
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Boreen, Jean; Niday, Donna – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2000
Describes a project which set up mentoring conversations via e-mail to support the developmental growth of preservice teachers in secondary English teaching methods courses. Examines in depth the e-mail correspondence of a mentoring veteran teacher, showing how she mentored by modeling, illustrating, affirming, questioning, qualifying, and…
Descriptors: Beginning Teacher Induction, Educational Research, Electronic Mail, English Teacher Education
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