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Parry, Marc – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2013
The e-mail drill was one of numerous mind-training exercises in a unique class designed to raise students' awareness about how they use their digital tools. Colleges have experimented with short-term social-media blackouts in the past. But Ms. Hill's course, "Information and Contemplation," goes way further. Participants scrutinize their…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Internet, Electronic Mail, Consciousness Raising
Mangan, Katherine – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
While e-mail remains the official method of communication on most campuses, colleges are expanding their presence in the virtual world, trying to reach students where they hang out. But without careful planning, that can lead to a scattershot approach as new platforms keep popping up and students' attention becomes increasingly dispersed. The…
Descriptors: Electronic Mail, Computer Mediated Communication, Network Analysis, Social Networks
Young, Jeffrey R. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
An e-mail scam has hit tens of thousands of users at dozens of colleges over the past few weeks, leaving network administrators scrambling to respond before campus computer accounts are taken over by spammers. Students, professors, and staff members at the affected colleges received e-mail messages that purported to come from the colleges' help…
Descriptors: Electronic Mail, Computer Security, Colleges, Crime
Parry, Marc – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
Blue State Digital, the company that helped catapult Barack Obama into the White House, is courting colleges. Some are welcoming the political rainmaker inside their wrought-iron gates. But some skeptics question whether what works in the digital war room of a political campaign can translate into the academic arena. The world of college fund…
Descriptors: Fund Raising, Alumni, Alumni Associations, Political Campaigns
Carnevale, Dan – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Frantic troubleshooting by an overworked staff versus someone else fixing problems smoothly. A sliver of server space per person versus a five-gigabyte chunk. Half a million dollars versus free. That's what colleges are faced with as they decide whether to continue running their own e-mail services or outsource them to a professional service like…
Descriptors: Electronic Mail, Information Technology, Professional Services, Internet
Young, Jeffrey R. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Cloud computing, one of the latest technology buzzwords, is so hard to explain that Google drove a bus from campus to campus to walk students through the company's vision of it. After students sat through a demo at computers set up nearby, they boarded the bus and got free T-shirts. The bus only stopped at colleges that had already agreed to hand…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Internet, Information Technology, Electronic Mail
Young, Jeffrey R. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Some professors, librarians, and administrators have begun using Twitter, a service that can blast very short notes (up to 140 characters) to select users' cell phones or computer screens. The practice is often called microblogging because people use it to send out pithy updates about their daily lives. No need to wait until you are back at your…
Descriptors: Management Systems, Electronic Mail, Computer Mediated Communication, Web Sites
Young, Jeffrey R. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
For years college administrators have warned students to watch their step in online social realms, noting that sharing too much could hurt them later on if future employees saw their drunken party pictures or boorish writings. Now that professors and administrators are catching Facebook fever, they should heed their own advice. The author…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Social Networks, Computer Mediated Communication, Web Sites
Kolowich, Steve – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
Few academic debates are as contentious as those surrounding the Dead Sea Scrolls. These fragments of some 800 ancient documents include portions of all but one book of the Hebrew Bible. The first ones were discovered in 1947 by shepherds in caves on the northwestern shore of the Dead Sea, and are believed to be the oldest surviving Judaic…
Descriptors: Middle Eastern History, Web Sites, Jews, Electronic Publishing
Whitmire, Richard – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
As the Internet continues to drain readers and advertising, newspapers are left with no choice but to cut back on coverage. Many papers have settled on higher education as an expendable beat. At the National Education Writers Association, which represents education reporters and editors around the country, the e-mail list for elementary- and…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Editing, Economic Impact, Labor Force
Hoover, Eric; Lipka, Sara – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
At the University of Chicago, the third Monday in November began with an hour of violence. Around 12:30 a.m., an assailant fired a shot at a staff member who was walking on the campus. At 1:15 a group of men robbed two female students on a nearby street. Just before 1:30, Amadou Cisse, a doctoral student, was shot and killed while walking to his…
Descriptors: Electronic Mail, Higher Education, Violence, Telecommunications
Foster, Andrea L. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
To get money flowing from alumni, colleges try to keep them feeling plugged in to their alma mater--even if the "plug" becomes wireless. Bucknell University rolled out a new service this month that pushes cell phone text messages to its 47,000 alumni. So far only a few dozen alumni have signed up for the service. If the service, which is…
Descriptors: Alumni, Electronic Mail, Discussion Groups, Electronic Equipment
Mangan, Katherine – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
Because today's students are used to a culture of informality, they sometimes show a lack of respect for authority. This article details a workshop presented by two professors from Drake University Law School to educate law students on professionalism and courtesy. Their workshop touched on topics such as public versus private communications and…
Descriptors: Workshops, Law Students, Law Schools, Legal Education (Professions)
Olson, Gary A. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
Many professors, staff members, and even administrators see campus computers and e-mail accounts as their own private property--a type of employment benefit provided with no constraints on use. The fact is, universities "assign" computer equipment to personnel as tools to help them perform their jobs more effectively and efficiently, in the same…
Descriptors: Ethics, College Faculty, Computer Security, Electronic Mail
Turner, Judith Axler – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1988
Many suggestions by two researchers at Rand Corporation, who published a paper on etiquette for news networks, have been incorporated into bulletin-board conventions, but with new users coming online all the time socialization is slow. Some suggestions for e-mail users are provided. (MLW)
Descriptors: Bulletin Boards, Communications, Computer Networks, Electronic Mail
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