I had no idea what a chore it would be to keep up with school e-mail. Every time i walk away from my desk i come back to five or more new messages. Most of the e-mails fall into one of three categories. The first category is event announcements. There are a lot of lectures that take place each week and i'm sent an e-mail for each one. The second category is ticket brokering. Fellow students feel the need to flood the group e-mail lists with offers to sell or exchange their football tickets for a particular game. And the last category are messages i actually need for the research project i'm helping out with. These are the only messages that are actually useful to me.
The should be a rule about forwarding messages to distribution lists that you are not a member of. On separate occasions i've seen the exact same e-mail forwarded to one of the school e-mail lists multiple times by different people. Clearly the subsequent senders did not know that the information had already been passed along. Again, it's not a new message, it's just forwarded from somewhere else. I suppose i shouldn't complain too much about these messages as they are really easy to delete and be done with.
I like the whole Inbox Zero philosophy but i'm not quite there yet. Right now i've made a pledge to myself not to allow my inbox to scroll which limits me to roughly 30 e-mails max in my inbox at a time. Once i start nearing the limit i review what's still there and make adjustments. I'm sure i'll have the opportunity to improve my message triage skills over the course of the semester.
This weekend i purchased the books i will be using for my first semester of grad school. Actually, two of them i pick up earlier this summer to read in preparation for the semester. I only have three main classes to worry about. Nearly all the first-yea biostat master's students have the same schedule so it will be nice seeing the same faces on a regular basis. The fun begins this Tuesday.