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Gunaratne, Shelton A.; Lee, Byung S. – Journalism and Mass Communication Educator, 1996
Focuses on the issues associated with introducing e-mail and other Internet tools into the journalism classroom. Discusses the instructor's role and shows how instructors can use the Internet in reporting, editing, and international communication courses as an effective teaching device. (SR)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Electronic Mail, Higher Education, Instructional Innovation
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Walsh, John P.; Kucker, Stephanie; Maloney, Nancy G.; Gabbay, Shaul – Journal of the American Society for Information Science, 2000
Summarizes the preliminary findings from a recent study of scientists in four disciplines with regard to computer-mediated communication (CMC) use and effects. Findings from surveys of 333 scientists indicate that CMC use is central to both professional and research-related aspects of scientific work, and that this use differs by field. CMC use is…
Descriptors: Computer Mediated Communication, Electronic Mail, Information Dissemination, Information Networks
Lifto, Don – American School Board Journal, 2001
Increasing numbers of school employees are stumbling and/or crashing and burning on the Internet superhighway. Employees should understand that their e-mail and Internet accounts are not really theirs or private, since their employer pays for access for work purposes. Storing, sending, or forwarding inappropriate messages is verboten. (MLH)
Descriptors: Electronic Mail, Elementary Secondary Education, Employee Responsibility, Ethics
Van Horn, Royal – Phi Delta Kappan, 2000
Peeping software takes several forms and can be used on a network or to monitor a certain computer. E-Mail Plus, for example, hides inside a computer and sends exact copies of incoming or outgoing e-mail anywhere. School staff with monitored computers should demand e-mail privacy. (MLH)
Descriptors: Computer Software, Electronic Mail, Elementary Secondary Education, Internet
Vail, Kathleen – American School Board Journal, 2002
Describes several legal issues involving school board member use of electronic mail, especially violation of state open-meeting laws. Offers several tips to avoid legal pitfalls. Briefly describes Freedom on Information Act issues related to electronic communication. Provides sample policies on e-mail use. (PKP)
Descriptors: Board of Education Policy, Electronic Mail, Elementary Secondary Education, Legal Problems
Zisow, Marcie – Learning & Leading with Technology, 2002
Considers ways in which technology can be used by teachers to improve the quality of homework assignments and to positively affect students' home learning experiences. Topics include using e-mail; types of homework; technology-based assignments; homework management; and rules for teachers and students. (LRW)
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Electronic Mail, Homework, Student Role
Norton-Powers, Jennifer – School Administrator, 2002
Describes the Missouri Sunshine Law; discusses a Missouri appellate court decision indicating that the sunshine law may prohibit the electronic exchange (voice or email) of information concerning public matters among a quorum of school board members. (PKP)
Descriptors: Boards of Education, Court Litigation, Electronic Mail, Elementary Secondary Education
Harrison, Dale – Communication: Journalism Education Today, 2000
Interviews several college journalists and college journalism advisers about developing and working with news sources. Discusses the necessity of teaching interpersonal skills, and looks at the advantages and disadvantages of using email to interview sources. (SR)
Descriptors: Electronic Mail, Higher Education, Interpersonal Communication, Interpersonal Competence
Barack, Lauren – School Library Journal, 2005
This article briefly describes how 20 students at Libertyville High School in Lake County, IL, are billing the new peer-counseling program they launched online in January. Students are able to e-mail questions about anything that's troubling them without revealing their identities, and their counterparts get back to them just as anonymously. The…
Descriptors: Internet, Peer Counseling, High School Students, Counseling Techniques
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Hilt, Michael L.; Lipschultz, Jeremy H. – Educational Gerontology, 2004
Older Americans, like other groups, vary in their use of the Internet. The participants for this study-elderly computer users from a Midwestern mid-size sample-used e-mail and considered it the most important Internet function. It was common for them to use e-mail with family and friends on a regular, if not daily, basis. When this group of older…
Descriptors: Older Adults, Interests, Mass Media, Internet
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Christie, Christina A.; Azzam, Tarek – American Journal of Evaluation, 2004
Listservs have become a popular computer-mediated method for communicating with others who share a common interest. They offer subscribers quick feedback and provide a forum for ideas and beliefs to be exchanged, discussed, and modified. Although rarely studied, in some practical fields listserves have been shown to increase communication of best…
Descriptors: Electronic Mail, Computer Mediated Communication, Discourse Analysis, Evaluation Methods
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Palomares, Nicholas A. – Human Communication Research, 2004
Using self-categorization theory, the effects of sex, chronic gender accessibility (i.e., gender schematicity), and gender identity salience on gender-linked language use in e-mail are examined. Results confirmed interactive effects only. Gender schematic men and women whose gender was salient used typical gender-linked language (e.g., men used…
Descriptors: Sexual Identity, Computer Mediated Communication, Gender Differences, Self Concept
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Khoo, Pek Ne; Senn, Charlene Y. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2004
This study was designed as a first step to explore sexual harassment in the electronic domain. One hundred six students read 10 e-mail messages ranging from jokes to spam to a sexual proposition from a stranger and rated them on an offensiveness evaluative scale. Participants also completed social desirability and attitudes toward sexual…
Descriptors: Females, Familiarity, Social Desirability, Males
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Boerger, Michael A. – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2005
Various studies have demonstrated that the mode by which people communicate affects the content of their messages. The present study examines the ways in which one aspect of language use, namely figurative language, differs as a function of mode of communication. Subjects worked together in pairs to build a small household appliance, with an…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Language Usage, Task Analysis, Interpersonal Communication
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Kubota, Ryuko; Catlett, Shawna – Foreign Language Annals, 2008
Teaching Spanish has become increasingly popular in the United States due to demographic shifts. This study focuses on a Spanish-only initiative for an existing Foreign Language in the Elementary School (FLES) program proposed by a southeastern public school district's school board. It analyzes discourses underlying the policymakers' rationales…
Descriptors: African American Students, FLES, Language Planning, Second Language Learning
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