-----Original Message-----
>From: "Joel S. Freund" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Sent: Feb 22, 2006 6:53 AM
>To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences <[email protected]>
>Subject: Email vs. Phone
>
>One of my gripes is not with voice mail per se', but returning calls. Many
>students request that I return their call, and sometimes clearly leave
>their phone number. In most instances the phone number they leave is their
>cell phone, which in many instances is a different area code than my office
>phone. For me to return the call is long distance, even though they are on
>campus.
>
>               Joel
>
>
>
>       Joel S. Freund          216 Memorial Hall
>                               Department of Psychology
>                               Fayetteville, AR 72701-1201
>
>       Phone:  (479) 575-4256
>       FAX:    (479) 575-3219
>       E-MAIL: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
>
>
>Paul Smith wrote:
>:-)I find the telephone an annoyingly impersonal means of communication, as it
>:-)generally involves talking to something through a series of recordings.
>:-)Worse is when the caller wants to know a good time to reach me. That
>:-)question presumes that I will rearrange my schedule to take the call, and
>:-)it's usually something that could be handled in two minutes in email anyway.
>
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