Source: http://www.bloomberg.com/, accessed 8/21/2008 at 6:11 PM EST |
Econ 223
Where Can I Find It? Where Should I Put It?
There is both an Internet site (http://www.wellesley.edu/Economics/econ223/) and a First Class Conference for the course. The First Class Conference is named Econ223-01-F10. You should put the course conference on your First Class Desktop.
Some things for the course are on the Internet site and some are in the First Class Conference. The list that follows tells you where everything is. Bookmark this page and come back here when you need to know where something is or where to put something (e.g., written assignments).
The Following Materials Are on The Course's Internet Site
Main Page for the Course's Internet Site
The Following Folders Are in the First Class Conference for the Course
Our Draft Class Presentation--Drafts of the Power Point presentations that we will use in class will be here.
Prototypes--This folder contains final papers from previous year, spreadsheet templates that you will need to complete your assignments & information on the prototypes that we will use in class.
Econ223-Drop--This is where you put your written assignments and supporting materials (e.g., the spreadsheet for your protoype.
Econ223-Information & Messages--This contains an archive of all of the messages that we send to the class during the semester. Don't ask us a question twice just go to this archive & retrieve the email that answered the questions.
Ask Ann & Saundra!-Econ223--This is where you should put questions for Ann & Saundra. Do not email us directly with questions related to the course. Neither Saundar nor Ann check their First Class email very frequently, but they check Ask Ann & Saundra every day.
Ask Betty!-Econ223--This is where you should put questions for Betty Febo, the economics' reference librarian who is part of the teaching team for the course & has developed the Course Page for Econ223.
There are a number of other folders in the course conference that you can use. You should skim all of them to determine when you will need each one.
© Ann Dryden Witte, 2006