> > ヽ(´ー`)ノ> I don't think profs with classes over 200 students are really willing to
> > Not him, but there's no difference with using email besides students
> > not having to sign up to sum additional (and notoriously sucky) 3rd-
> > party spyware crApp. How bout Anonymous-san give sensei the assignment
> > of lerning how 2 email filters and/or kissing his a$$? ヽ(´ー`)ノ
> > BAK IN MAI DAY (a billion yrs ago) there was email, the school's own
> > portal site, or you could hand things over in person via CD/DVD,
> > memory stick, or teh paper. Not that I did much cuz I was 2 k00l 4
> > sk00l (lazy) ヽ(´∇`)ノ
> Mails aren't used only for assignments, it's mostly for asking the sensei
> about stuff so mail groups wouldn't effectively werk. Services like
> Teams also allows them to easily grade the work, which is probably good
> for more tech-illiterate profs.
> The alternative to Teams isn't e-mail anyways. I think since internets
> became wide-spread enough, apparently other alternatives to teams were
> already in the use until some authority forced using Teams, though I
> can't name any specifically. I think using school's portal sites for
> assignments would make the most sense ( ´ω`)
> To (at least mine) school's defense, the e-mail they give us is based
> on outlook, so you don't need to sign up an extra and Teams also works
> from inside browser, without needing to install anything.
That's what email filters/rules are for! They just have to tell stu-
dents to include a certain thing in the subject for completed assign-
ments, set up a filter/rule for it, and then all emails containing that
thing will go to it's own folder
And this brings up an additional argument against Teams (and similar):
kids today (and even so-called "PROFESSORS"!) apparently don't know how
email works (;´Д`)
It's contributing to this shitty world where open internet standards
liek email are getting replaced with proprietary corpo crap (;´Д`)
Reference: 2022/12/18(Sun) 16:51:51