A Class about Email?
Feb 28th, 2008 by Janice Stearns
A few years ago, I agreed to write an online course about email. It was based on our previous email system, EPals. Even at the time I wrote it, I threw in a few articles written about the Pew Internet study about how email was considered by teenagers as something to be used with old people. I also made the last of the six sessions one about using collaborative tools like blogs and wikis as part of the process. The class was approved and then we switched to Google Apps for Education.
Now I need to rewrite the class. As I look at what I’ve written just two years ago, I am amazed at all that’s changed. I can’t just write a course about email anymore. Email is just part of a collection of tools that we use to communicate, collaborate, and share. Even with Google Apps for Education, I don’t consider email as the most important part of the set of tools. Together with docs and the calendar sharing, it’s a move in the right direction. Add the ability to sign up for other collaborative tools that allow students to be contributors of their learning to a network of producers, and the world opens up.
So, it’s back to hours of rewriting for me. Sigh. It’s a good thing. It’s growth. I hope the people who want the class rewritten think it’s okay to write a class about more than email.

Interesting project. I’m curious how you convince people who only use e-mail that there are other ways of communicating.
Hi Mathew,
Thanks for the comment. I hope we can convince them. It’s hard to find sites who only have email projects anymore, aside form Epals and Global SchoolHouse Network. The collaborative projects available now are so rich in content, I’m hoping that the possibilities are convincing.