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Showing 151 to 165 of 283 results Save | Export
Alvarez, Marino C. – 2001
This action research study focused on electronic exchanges initiated by students who were asked to reflect and enter narratives that expressed their thoughts, feelings, and questions. The study was conducted through a systematic recursive cycle of identifying the idea or problem area, studying it by gathering data, and reflecting on the data in…
Descriptors: Action Research, College Faculty, Electronic Mail, Feedback
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Monroe, Barbara – English Journal, 2003
Suggests the use of e-mail in the place of writing comments on individual papers. Notes the importance of using e-mail and the listserv in a student's writing experience. Considers some of the implications for professional benefit by exploring the relationship between online communication and oral discussion and between private and public…
Descriptors: Computer Uses in Education, Electronic Mail, Feedback, Higher Education
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Anderson, Jim; Lee, Andrea – Reading Research and Instruction, 1995
Concludes that electronic mail played a major role in building a sense of community in a graduate reading class of non-experts in computer technology, facilitated the sharing of ideas and resources, encouraged risk taking, helped students reflect on their learning, and encouraged cooperative learning. Notes that problems included accessibility of…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Electronic Mail, Higher Education, Preservice Teacher Education
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Baer, Kathy – English Journal, 1994
Gives an account of how one English teacher used the Internet, and particularly electronic mail, to stay in touch with graduates from her high school. (HB)
Descriptors: Electronic Mail, English Curriculum, English Instruction, High School Graduates
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Marbach-Ad, Gili; Sokolove, Phillip G. – Journal of Science Education and Technology, 2002
Examines student instructor communication in freshman classes taught either in traditional lecture style or by using a variety of student-centered, active learning approaches to engage students in the learning process (cooperative learning groups, wireless microphones, permanent name tags, in-class and out-of-class writing). Encourages students to…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Biology, Educational Technology, Electronic Mail
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Ragan, Tillman J.; White, Patricia R. – Computers and Composition, 2001
Addresses how online instructors can improve their email communications with students. Describes the characteristics and demands of online instruction as depending on the instructor's ability to communicate in writing. Presents a model to guide instructors in their online communications. Underscores the importance of instructors' writing skills in…
Descriptors: Distance Education, Electronic Mail, Higher Education, Internet
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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O'Neill, R.; Colley, A. – Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 2006
This study aimed to examine gender and status effects in the kind of e-mails used to manage course administrative issues in an educational setting. Students were asked to respond to an e-mail presented as being from a member of staff, informing them of failure to submit coursework and asking for an explanation to be provided. The sex and status of…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Status, Electronic Mail, Social Class
Coogan, David – 1994
Electronic mail-based tutoring of undergraduate writing students upsets the temporal basis of the face-to-face paradigm for writing tutorials. Taking place in real time in a specified place, the face-to-face tutorial session has a beginning, middle and end. Further, the session must have a tangible point. By contrast, in on-line tutoring, time is…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Electronic Mail, Higher Education, Teacher Student Relationship
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Cohen, Lance – Bulletin of the Association for Business Communication, 1994
Outlines ways in which instructors of business communication can use the Internet more effectively while teaching. Argues that by augmenting business communication courses with e-mail and Internet protocols, instructors can reach larger segments of their classes, stimulate discussions, create simulations, and strengthen their relationships with…
Descriptors: Business Communication, Class Activities, Electronic Mail, Higher Education
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Kelly, Lynne; Duran, Robert L.; Zolten, J. Jerome – Communication Education, 2001
Investigates the effect of reticence on college students' use of electronic mail to communication with faculty. Notes the difference in the frequency of using electronic mail by reticent and non-reticent students. Considers how reticent students prefer to use electronic mail over speaking to faculty at their offices. (SG)
Descriptors: College Students, Communication Apprehension, Communication Research, Electronic Mail
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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Clingerman, Tamara L.; Bernard, Janine M. – Counselor Education and Supervision, 2004
The authors investigated the use of student-initiated e-mail as a supplemental modality for supervision. Nineteen students e-mailed their instructors weekly during their 15-week practicum: these e-mails were analyzed across 3 time periods using the categories of the discrimination model (J. M. Bernard, 1979, 1997) and an adaptation of W. Lanning's…
Descriptors: Psychology, Practicums, Electronic Mail, Counselor Training
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Razfar, Aria – AACE Journal, 2008
Over the last 10 years, information technology has been the fastest growing sector in the global economy. Nevertheless, technology and computer-based instruction have not been sufficiently integrated into the curriculum especially at institutions that serve primarily language minority, low income, and first generation, female college populations.…
Descriptors: Low Income Groups, Technology Integration, Student Surveys, Interaction
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Boulware, Beverly – Reading and Writing Quarterly: Overcoming Learning Difficulties, 2002
Examines second-graders' use of email to share with the researchers favorite parts of books they read, or any other aspect of stories they read. Finds appropriate use of e-mail communication offers teachers opportunities to identify instructional focus and take advantage of instructional moments to fit the developmental needs of their students in…
Descriptors: Electronic Mail, Grade 2, Literacy, Primary Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Bell, Shirley – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2002
Discusses how to grade papers online. Proposes that students whose papers are graded online internalize information more readily than students whose papers are not. Concludes that through meeting on the Internet, many students sense a narrowing culture gap between teachers and students. (PM)
Descriptors: Electronic Mail, Grading, Higher Education, Student Improvement
Hensel, Jan – Communication: Journalism Education Today, 1996
Considers some of the problems posed by electronic mail systems when the identity of the user is protected by the server. Suggests that high school instructors and administrators have good reason to circulate electronic messages through a central site, as students need to be protected from exploitative users and prohibited from sending abusive…
Descriptors: Censorship, Computer Uses in Education, Computers, Electronic Mail
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