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Re: student email--help



At Ball State, students have free access to the same system faculty,
administrators, staff, and grad students do.  A lot of writing
teachers ask students to send journal assignments via e-mail or to use
e-mail as another means of communication.  Faculty in other
departments often send announcements and study guides via e-mail.

Being on the same system is another small way to build a campus-wide
community of learners and writers!!!

Cindy

You wrote:  
>
>
>
>---------- Forwarded message ----------
>Date: Thu, 10 Sep 1998 07:25:01 -0600 (MDT)
>From: WILL HOCHMAN <hochman@meteor.uscolo.edu>
>To: acw-l@ttacs6.ttu.edu
>Subject: student email--help
>
>At the University of Southern Colorado, my educational leaders want to
>stop giving students email and will suggest instead that students use free
>email for the web...is this happening anywhwere else?  I got into using
>computers in school because I thought I was "wiring" already existing
>learning networks...now it seems like my leaders are going to stratify
>email users at my school (while telling students to get free email,
>faculty will be "given" microsoft exchange).  Students and some teachers
>currently use Pine and though some complain about it being old, it is free
>and I don't have any probs with it...please help me with news of how how
>email is served on your campus.
>
>1) Do your students have supported email on your campus?
>
>2) Do you use the same email system as your students use?
>
>Thanks in advance for your reply, will hochman
>