• Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Write For Us
IDEGRAAF
  • Home
  • Schools
  • Institutes
  • Scholarship
  • Distance Learning
  • Online Classes
  • Education Loans
  • Recruitment
  • Career
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Schools
  • Institutes
  • Scholarship
  • Distance Learning
  • Online Classes
  • Education Loans
  • Recruitment
  • Career
No Result
View All Result
IDEGRAAF
No Result
View All Result
Home Online Classes

Students ditch traditional classroom, turn to online learning

saheli by saheli
October 13, 2016
in Online Classes

whyballstatebanner

The traditional classroom setting isn’t for everyone so some students have turned to the option of taking classes online.

Online classes at Ball State have become increasingly popular, with around 38.9 percent of students participating in some form of distance or online learning last year, according to collegefactual.com. Over 3,000 students took classes exclusively online. Many of the classes available at Ball State are offered both online and in the traditional classroom setting.Students say one advantage of online classes is the convenience.

“I think the best advantage to online classes is that you can take them whenever you want,” said Ben Thatcher, a sophomore telecommunications major who is currently taking an online finance class. “They’ll usually give you a lot of time to do assignments, and if you’re busy during the day but have time at night that’s a nice advantage. You can do it anywhere, at any time.”

However, Thatcher explained that his experience was overall a negative one. Last semester, he missed the day of the final for one of his classes.

“It’s my only failed class and it was an online class,” Thatcher said. “If I was in a real class, in person, I would be more responsive to any assignments or tests, or for that instance, a final. It was open for one day, and then I forgot about it, so I failed.”

Garrett Harsh, a freshman telecommunications major, also sees the self motivation and discipline required as a drawback for him personally.

“I’m not really retaining it as well as I would if I was in a classroom setting,” Harsh said. “It’s not really my style of learning, and I don’t have the initiative because I don’t have the pressure to really focus on it or study it.”

Sally Brocksen, instructional design and technology consultant at Ball State, has been teaching online courses since 2009. She currently teaches SOC 100 in both an online and traditional classroom environment.

“I don’t think online courses are for everyone,” Brocksen said. “You have to be motivated and disciplined to be a good online student. Like all courses, you get out of online courses what you put into them.”

Online courses often involve reading texts, watching instructional videos and working through projects individually before applying knowledge through online exercises and tests. Though some students may feel that they are distanced from their professor in this style of learning, Brocksen said this is not always the case.

“I think that there is a misconception about online courses that you don’t get to know your students,” she said. “In my experience that has not been true. I might not recognize my students by sight, like I can in my face-to-face courses, but I feel like I know more about their experiences and interests.”

Brocksen also said online courses may offer more learning opportunities for students than in a regular classroom setting.

“In online courses it is difficult for students to ‘hide’ so I feel like my attention is more evenly distributed, whereas in a face-to-face class you tend to focus on those students who speak up,” she said. “The other thing I love about online education is the idea that students are gaining the flexibility they might not have with traditional face to face classes. Online courses opens up all kinds of opportunities for students.”

Brockton said overall there are strengths and drawbacks to both online and traditional classes but she is “glad that I get to spend time in both types of classrooms.”

[Source:-Ball State Daily]

Tags: classroomditchLearningOnlinestudents'totraditionalturn
Previous Post

Online and Homegrown

Next Post

Atlantic Cape Community College Earns Top Ranking for Online Degree Programs in New Jersey

Next Post

Atlantic Cape Community College Earns Top Ranking for Online Degree Programs in New Jersey

Recent Post

  • What is Web3 and How Could it Disrupt Education?
  • HPTET 2021 result declared: How to check scorecard and what’s next
  • USF team receives grant to help caregivers support preschoolers’ mental health
  • Why Repaying Your Education Loan is Important
  • Education Ministry Launches Online Module To Track, Re-Enrol Out-Of-School Children
  • MP govt and private schools come to a face-off over school fees issue
  • NBSE Result 2022: Nagaland Board HSLC, HSSLC Results Not Today; Details Here
  • Tata Sky Binge+, HD Set-Top Boxes Price Discounted Up to Rs. 400 Online
  • Digital University Kerala Partners With United Nations, World Health Organization On Disaster Preparedness
  • Unlimited opportunities, huge investments: India bets big as Expo 2020 Dubai kicks off

Calendar

September 2023
M T W T F S S
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
252627282930  
« Jul    
idegraaf

Navigate Site

  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Write For Us

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Schools
  • Institutes
  • Scholarship
  • Distance Learning
  • Online Classes
  • Education Loans
  • Recruitment
  • Career