Custom Search

Netiquette
Netiquette, the religion of the internet.
eStore

College Netiquette

College Netiquette

College Netiquette Rules

  1. Respect opinions because everyone is entitled to their own.

  2. Watch your tone because flames fly freely in college.

  3. Avoid sarcasm because it is typical of under class college students.

  4. Post appropriate educational material rather than fraternal material.

  5. Stay on topic because it helps everyone learn more.

  6. Contribute often to move the discussions forward.

  7. Be forgiving of those who offend because everyone makes up their own mind.

  8. Don't post jokes because they are easily misunderstood.

  9. Be culturally sensitive because college is all about cultural diversity and learning.

  10. Respect the privacy of students and classmates. Don't share personal info.






University Netiquette

College Netiquette is the social code of using the internet in college. College students created many of the largest internet corporations, Microsoft, Google, and Facebook. Netiquette is the social code of the internet. Therefore, College Netiquette is the social code of discovery on the internet because colleges are creating the most successful internet companies.

College Netiquette Rules

eLearning

Online learning is not limitted to online classes. It's what you do online for a structured class. If your doing research for an English paper or participating in an online class it's all online learning. Many people use the internet for online learning purposes and some classes require it. Online learning is good netiquette.

The rules of netiquette for college start with the ones your school and professors provide. The real rules are the ones students make up on their own. Follow the guidelines of your college and professors and whatever happens on the internet is netiquette because you say so.

College is where we discover and develop good netiquette. It's the social code for communicating on the internet. The rules of the intenet superhighway.It is where all the real netiquette happens. It is all about netiquette. This is why college students found so many internet startups, netiquette rules. At its core social media is nothing more than netiquette rules. College internet etiquette, netiquette, is the social code of using the internet in college. Please be advised that college students do not act normal. College netiquette is quite different than other forms.

When your in college you get an email address that ends in .edu. This address is a license to do more than just drink beer with your friends. It identifies you as a student. Understand that the email you send from this address represents your college. Generally speaking, email between students is less formal than email from free or employer accounts.

Informality is not an excuse to be mean, bully, or negative in any way. The overall tone of your email messages should be positive and supportive. Use proper salutations when sending messages to your professors, administrators, and prospective employers. If your Professor is a Doctor, address her as one. Close the email with a signature that includes your name, school, class, and phone number. It should be three lines.

College

A college is an educational institution of higher learning. Students who apply and are accepted move on to higher learning after their primary education. Colleges grant degrees in specialized fields of study.

Everyone could use a little netiquette!

Internet Ed TV

Internet Ed TV

College Netiquette

Video Channels

YouTube:

Internet Ed TV

Teacher Tube:

Netiquette

Vimeo:

Netiquette

Veoh:

WSCM Productions

Voice Thread:

Netiquette

The Rules of Netiquette for College Students

Characters

Nancy and Noreen Netiquette

Duration

1:37

License

Standard YouTube License

Description

Yoko Netiquette shares small talk with Takako Tweet and Eric Email before class. The professor teaches the rules of college netiquette by David Chiles. Yoko, Graham, and Newman then walk home.  

Tags

netiquette, network etiquette, internet manners, school rules, education, online class, web based training, teacher, student, university, college, instructer, trainer, professor

Related Videos



Online Class Rules
Time 1:29

Web Based Training
Time 1:27

Kids Online Safety
Time 1:22

Netiquette
Time 1:37

Character Bios

Teacher, David Chiles:

I am a web designer and real estate agent. Netiquette is a hobby of mine. I am developing it with this site.

Takako Tweet:

Takako Tweet is no newbie. She has been around the internet for a while doing a lot of Tweeting. Now, that she is maturing she is bringing order to every domain she is in.

Yoko Netiquette:

Yoko Netiquette is a really really good woman. She is the kind of girl you study with. Yoko Netiquette does not go to bars. She has a good head on her shoulders and makes good decisions. Yoko practices good netiquette.

Graham Gray Mail:

Graham lives accross the street from Yoko and Newman Netiquette in the cyber sphere. Needless to say they are close, just like family. Graham is a good neighbor in cyber space.

Eric Email:

Eric Email is too cool for school. He has the most friends and coolest clothes. All of his messages are in fancy fonts becuase all his friends have really cool email apps.

Newman Netiquette:

Newman Netiquette is Yoko Netiquette's little brother. Unfortunately, that is his title because he has a smart and popular sister.

Nancy Netiquette:

Ms. Netiquette is the star of my netiquette animations. She has the netiquette name. Her character plays many different roles in many different forms because netiquette plays many different roles in the many different forms of internet communication.

Abraham Lincoln:

Past president of the United States of America. President Lincoln is known for honesty.

Animated Co-Workers:

Meeting participants in the Web Based Training netiquette video. They practice good netiquette by asking good questions, making nice comments, and confirming their understanding of comments through gestures and clarification.

Social Media

Social Media

Blogger


Twitter

Facebook

Digg

Home | FAQS | Terms of Service | Privacy| Sitemap