Computers & Education
1997 Volume 29, Number 4
Table of Contents
Number of articles: 7
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The reflective colleague in e-mail cyberspace: A means for improving university instruction
Anne L. Russell & Leonora M. Cohen
Two university academics living in countries on different sides of the world captured their e-mail communications during a ten-week teaching course. The power of e-mail over face-to-face... More
pp. 137-145
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Do you have an internet acceptable use policy?
Dennis J. Perks, Donna R. Gavitt & John J. Olivo
No longer is the question if the Internet will be used in the classroom but when the Internet will be used in the classroom. Superimposing this technology on procedural teaching methods in the... More
pp. 147-151
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Computer conferencing; discourse, education and conflict mediation
Roger Austin
Computer conferencing can aid in conflict resolution by developing discourse skills. This article examines conflict resolution and computer conferencing as a channel for discourse and describes... More
pp. 153-161
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Conversation rebuilding: From the foreign language classroom to implementation in an intelligent tutoring system
Alessandro Micarelli & Patrick Boylan
This paper shows how an innovative “communicative” technique in teaching foreign languages—Conversation Rebuilding (CR)—readily lends itself to implementation in an Intelligent Tutoring System (ITS... More
pp. 163-180
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ComWeb: An electronic classroom for teaching computer literacy
Michael Kress, Anatoliy Gordonov, Albert Blank & Marsha Moroh
We have developed an electronic classroom environment based on an analog/digital hybrid network, ComWeb. This environment supplements traditional methods of presentation by providing powerful... More
pp. 181-187
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KIDLINK: A place for children in the internet
Patricia Martínez Falcón
We present in this paper the experience that we have had with a group of “street children” using the Internet, in an international project for children called KIDLINK, a global net of communication... More
pp. 189-194
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PASS: An automated system for program assessment
Gareth Thorburn & Glenn Rowe
This paper describes PASS (Program Assessment using Specified Solutions), a software system which is used to assess C programs produced by students on an introductory programming course. In... More
pp. 195-206