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e-Tutoring Power Link for Students.
Eastern is experimenting with an on-line tutoring service, e-Tutoring. With this service students can access on-line help for math and writing.
Assistance with Math is available for courses from elementary algebra through Calculus I, and also for Introductory Statistics.
Assistance with writing is available for all courses other than English courses.
Access to e-Tutoring will be available through a link in the External Courses section of the MyBlackboard page. You must set up your account with e-tutoring.org before you use the link in Vista. Please read Article 1300 e-Tutoring for detailed instructions.
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Are you stuck in a loop trying to log in? Close the browser and start a new browser session. Read more in Article 1296 Blackboard Vista Login Loop.
Missing Courses?
Summer 2008 courses may not appear in your Vista account until the start date of the course. If the course is still not available after the start date read Article 1301 Missing Courses in Vista.
Problems with the Mail tool or other Blackboard Issues?
Mail tool errors and errors with other Blackboard features are caused by having the incorrect version of Java installed or by cancelling or closing the Java Security Warning popups when they occur. Please follow the instruction in Article 1285 Blackboard Issues to install the proper version.
Did your password suddenly stop working? Have you checked your Eastern Email? Checking your Eastern Email periodically will keep you aware of how many days you have until your password expires. Blackboard won't notify you, it will just stop working. If your Blackboard account suddenly stopped working, please log into your Eastern Email to see if the password expired. | | "In the winter of 1813 & 14, during my first college vacations, I attended a mathematical school kept in Boston by the Rev. Francis Xavier Brosius... On entering his room, we were struck at the appearance of an ample black board suspended on the wall, with lumps of chalk on a ledge below, and cloths hanging at either side. I had never heard of such a thing before. There it was—forty-two years ago—that I first saw what now I trust is considered indispensable in every school—the black board—and there that I first witnessed the process of analytical and inductive teaching." —Samuel J. May, abolitionist, 1855 | |