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Online classes not for everyone, but can teach time management skills

May 14, 2014

Summer is here, and for some of us that means in addition to enjoying warm weather, beach vacations and extra hours to binge-watch Netflix, it’s time to start taking online courses from home.Summer is here, and for some of us that means in addition to enjoying warm weather, beach vacations and extra hours to binge-watch Netflix, it’s time to start taking online courses from home.

Online classes aren’t for everyone, even if you might need the extra credits. They come with a deceptive flexibility that teaches students something about their conscientiousness.

Although they can be convenient for freeing up schedules for busy students, such as athletes or job-jugglers, taking a class without actually attending a lecture requires much more responsibility on the students' part.

For some, taking on the responsibility of planning out homework and assigned readings without an in-class lecture isn’t a problem. For the rest of us, however, even keeping up with meticulously-planned lecture classes is a challenge.

In some ways, they’re more work than a simple lecture class despite the entire course taking place on one web page, in drop-down menus and online quizzes. Planning out and motivating yourself to actually sit down, close Facebook and Twitter and knock out all the work you have to do in order to understand the material takes a certain kind of person — but hey, maybe taking an online class can help make you into that kind of person.

Taking on the responsibility of an online class can help form better planning and study habits — granted, these skills might not emerge until after several weeks of slacking off and frantically trying to catch up on assignments.

So, when signing up for online classes, know your strengths and weaknesses. Online courses are mostly made up of self-taught material, and even if you get lucky with a professor who cares and will post additional resources, many students learn better watching someone else work through a problem.

Mathematics, for example, can be especially difficult for some to learn entirely on their own. Examples and one-on-one instruction are often extremely helpful when trying to figure out those annoyingly complicated formulas and mind-numbing algorithms. It’s like learning how to drive — you can read all the books on the planet about driving, but you won’t get the hang of it until you start the engine.

Hybrid classes, which meet in the middle to offer an interesting mix between online and lecture classes, are another option for students who want more flexibility in addition to access to professors.

Rather than an online course, then, perhaps some students would succeed more taking classes at a local community college. Grade points don’t transfer from other colleges either, so perhaps consider taking that math credit requirement at a community college, where it doesn’t have the potential to destroy your GPA.

Now, for fall or spring semesters when professors and students are on-campus and there are plentiful resources available to students for help in those classes, this isn’t a problem. But during summer sessions, many students use online courses to catch up or get ahead on credits while they’re at home, and those resources won’t be available to them.

In these situations, then, it’s mostly up to the student to teach themselves the material, so choose classes that you would be comfortable teaching yourself.

Professors also can either rise to the occasion of effectively teaching an online class, or allow themselves to slack off and call it a day by just posting lecture slides and maybe a video online.

Is it really fair, then, that we pay the same amount of money for a lecture class and an online class, when we don’t get a professor’s fullest capacity? Of course, if online classes were cheaper many students would be clamoring to take them, and that wouldn’t be fair, either. But the principle still stands that an online class can’t really replace a present, in-class learning experience.

Online classes lack the student-professor interactions that spark verbal debates and in-class discussions. Desire2Learn and Angel offer similar forums, but words on a screen can’t be compared to face-to-face interactions.

The online class platforms also offer a level of unreliability, with plenty of technical errors, crashes and other mishaps that could prevent a student from accessing their courses.

Online classes aren’t necessarily bad, but it’s important to keep in mind your strengths and weaknesses and if the subject matter is something one can handle on their own.

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