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Colleges axing student eMail accounts
Annual EDUCAUSE survey shows that campuses of all sizes are re-evaluating the necessity of campus eMail service for students

 

Primary Topic Channel:  Research , Campus-based , Educause

 

Up to 6 percent of universities surveyed offer 24-7 computer help-desk support.

Some campuses are doing away with school-issued eMail addresses as students increasingly enter college with a personal eMail account, according to a nationwide survey by education-technology group EDUCAUSE. The survey also showed that more colleges and universities are offering 24-7 help-desk support for students and staff, and the vast majority employ some kind of bandwidth-shaping practices to manage traffic on their networks.

EDUCAUSE's annual survey of 930 higher-education institutions showed that about 10 percent of respondents are considering getting rid of student eMail accounts. For doctoral institutions, the number is 25 percent. In 2004, only 1 to 2 percent of colleges surveyed said they were considering such a move.

"This may affect the ability of faculty and/or administrators … to reach all students in a particular class, or all students on campus, to inform them of policies, events, and so forth," the report said.

Community colleges run counter to the eMail trend, as 90 percent of two-year schools issued student eMail addresses in 2008--the highest percentage since EDUCAUSE first conducted the survey five years ago. In 2004, about 60 percent of community colleges offered students eMail accounts.

Other notable findings in EDUCAUSE's "Core Data Service Fiscal Year 2009 Report" show that 2 to 6 percent of universities surveyed offer 24-7 computer help-desk support, which continues a steady increase in all-day technical support for faculty members and students.

Doctoral institutions offer an average of 77 hours of help-desk assistance every week, while baccalaureate schools average 56 hours weekly. Two-year schools remained steady with 60 hours of help-desk operation. About 90 percent of respondents said they offer some form of computer help-desk support.

Only 5 percent of doctoral, master's, and baccalaureate respondents do not shape internet bandwidth, according to the survey--a practice that protects campus networks from large downloads. Ten percent of community colleges refrain from bandwidth shaping, which also has become a tool in the battle against illegal file sharing on college campuses.

Congress pressured college IT departments to take measures to stop file sharing in last year's reauthorization of the Higher Education Act. The law asks colleges and universities to implement network administration technologies that deter illegal peer-to-peer file sharing. These technologies can include bandwidth shaping, traffic monitoring that identifies the largest bandwidth users, or products designed to reduce or block illegal file sharing, according to the legislation.

Although some schools say they might stop creating student eMail addresses, other institutions have gravitated to commercially popular eMail services that are hosted off campus.

Many schools that have switched from campus-run eMail accounts to commercial accounts made the decision before last year's economic recession hit, slashing campus budgets. But as IT dollars have dwindled, officials say the long-term savings of converting to an eMail provider that offers hosted, web-based service has proven critical to avoiding job cuts and maintaining IT staffing.

 
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