[When I said I'd blog once a week, I meant it. And I do mean to have at least one post a week, but school life is just too hectic. I will try to actually schedule more frequent postings here.]
This is the first year with students having school-issued email. It has of course made communicating with students easier. We have had a few hiccups, like not all students understood (understand?) that they are required to use their school email for schoolwork. Or students deleting emails (to keep a clean inbox) that they then needed again and again. These type of minor problems are easily resolved over time.
But one problem I do recognize is that email does not hold the same importance to younger generations, as it does to those who have been in the workplace for several years. This was illustrated wonderfully by during a conversation between Jimmy Wales (Wikipedia co-founder) and Charlie Rose:
I'm a dinosaur too, but learning how to properly use and, more importantly, juggle a work/school email is a skill they will need for the foreseeable future. Email is the main communication tool in work life today and the next generation needs to master these tools.
A survey by Plantronics found the use of email by professionals has increased 78 percent over the past five years. Nearly 83 percent surveyed use email as a primary communication tool for business, and nearly 57 percent say they are overwhelmed by the volume. Email isn't going away.
This is the first year with students having school-issued email. It has of course made communicating with students easier. We have had a few hiccups, like not all students understood (understand?) that they are required to use their school email for schoolwork. Or students deleting emails (to keep a clean inbox) that they then needed again and again. These type of minor problems are easily resolved over time.
But one problem I do recognize is that email does not hold the same importance to younger generations, as it does to those who have been in the workplace for several years. This was illustrated wonderfully by during a conversation between Jimmy Wales (Wikipedia co-founder) and Charlie Rose:
(Jimmy Wales interview Charlie Rose)JIMMY WALES: [snip] One problem with e-mail is spam and you get junk mail and the nice thing about Facebook is that everybody’s identified and there’s a way to identify if people are spammers or not. And it’s interesting when you talk to young people these days they hardly use e-mail. It’s a dinosaur thing to some extent. So it’s remarkable.CHARLIE ROSE: What happened? How did they come to that?JIMMY WALES: I think they’re using Facebook to communicate with friends and using instant messenger to chat, and e-mail didn’t seem useful. I live on my e-mail. I’m a dinosaur.
I'm a dinosaur too, but learning how to properly use and, more importantly, juggle a work/school email is a skill they will need for the foreseeable future. Email is the main communication tool in work life today and the next generation needs to master these tools.
A survey by Plantronics found the use of email by professionals has increased 78 percent over the past five years. Nearly 83 percent surveyed use email as a primary communication tool for business, and nearly 57 percent say they are overwhelmed by the volume. Email isn't going away.


