I have never and will never allow emailing of assignments.  My first
concern was that it could get "lost" in the mail so why create that
potential pitfall.  And yes m, having you do the printing & stapling is
silly.  Just ask for hard copies just like the "olden days."

Joan
Joan Warmbold Boggs
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

> Yes!
>     I just adopted a "hard copy" only policy (that I bend at my
> discetion).
> However, in the case of some statistics things I now require they email
> their "minitab project" which contains their spreadsheet of data, as well
> as
> running summary of what they did, when (date and time), and the output.
> This
> prevents a student from photocopying the computer output of a buddy.
>
>
> -----------------------------
> John W. Kulig
> Professor of Psychology
> Director, Psychology Honors
> Plymouth State University
> Plymouth NH 03264
> -----------------------------
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Marc Carter [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Wednesday, March 07, 2007 12:27 PM
> To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
> Subject: [tips] A (curmudgeonly) question
>
>
> Hi, All --
>
> Quick question: is anyone else getting annoyed at the number of students
> who
> email assignments to you, leaving you to do the printing and stapling?
>
> I am considering a "no emailed assignments" policy, but just wonder if I'm
> being school-marmish and mean.
>
> Do you regularly allow students to do this?
>
> Thanks for any help you can provide.  I don't want to turn into a bitter
> old
> man.
>
> m
>
> -------



---
To make changes to your subscription go to:
http://acsun.frostburg.edu/cgi-bin/lyris.pl?enter=tips&text_mode=0&lang=english

Reply via email to